Advertisement
Advertisement
Pakistan
Get more with myNEWS
A personalised news feed of stories that matter to you
Learn more
“The Conversation Behind the Canvas” by Ahmed ibn e Sakeena. Photo: Ahmed Ibn e Sakeena

Women from Pakistan’s Balochistan province hailed in artworks for their sacrifices amid insurgency

  • The struggles of Baloch women in coping with the loss of their loved ones were showcased in an art exhibition in Karachi
  • Pakistan was hit by a wave of militant attacks last year, including those targeting China-linked projects in Balochistan
Pakistan
Sonia Sarkar
In the past few years, Pakistan’s southwest province of Balochistan has experienced a spike in insurgent attacks amid widespread accusations of enforced disappearances and extrajudicial killings in the conflict.

For a group of artists from the province, art is the medium through which they can capture the agony suffered by women in the province as the decades-long separatist insurgency rages on.

Among them is Ahmed Ibn e Sakeena, whose painting The Conversation Behind the Canvas shows three women wearing pashk – a traditional embroidered long dress – and anguished expressions over the disappearances of their family members for many years due to the conflict.

“This painting unveils a conversation that spans three generations of women. My artwork strives to contribute to a deeper understanding of the connections between art, activism, and the resilient narratives of Baloch women,” 34-year-old Sakeena told This Week In Asia.

Latest Pakistan terror attack casts light on growing cost of Chinese investment

Works by Baloch artists were showcased at an exhibition in Karachi last week to commemorate 37-year-old Karima Baloch, a Baloch human rights activist who was found dead in Toronto, Canada in 2021. Karima’s family has alleged that she was killed because of her activism.

Artist Zihan Zahid, 24, portrayed a young girl holding a photo of a missing person in a digital creation that captures the heartbreak faced by families whose loved ones have disappeared. Another piece by Zahid shows a woman sitting on a page of Pakistan’s constitution that guarantees fundamental human rights to its citizens while holding a picture of a loved one.

“These not only provide an identity to Baloch women but also convey [their] untold stories that can be interpreted from various perspectives,” Zahid said.

The exhibition was held weeks after more than 200 Baloch women marched 860km from the provincial capital of Quetta to Islamabad to seek answers from the government about their family members who had disappeared. The protesters alleged that their family members were killed by state forces. The march was sparked by the killing of a 24-year-old Baloch man.

Stone art portrait of activist Mahrang Baloch, who was arrested by Pakistani police during a protest march. Photo: Farhaz Naseem Baloch

Farhaz Naseem Baloch, a 23-year-old artist, used the medium of stone to illustrate the unbreakable spirit of Baloch women. He created a stone portrait of activist Mahrang Baloch, who was arrested by police during the march but was later released.

“I want to use my art to lend a voice to the struggle and resistance of Baloch women since they have sacrificed a lot for society. As stones can endure any weather, Baloch women can resist any force and move forward,” Naseem Baloch said.

One such woman who epitomised this spirit is 25-year-old woman activist Sammi Deen Baloch, who also took part in the march.

Deen Baloch said she was only 10 years old when her father, Deen Muhammad Baloch, a political activist and a government-employed doctor, was picked up by Pakistani intelligence personnel in 2009. Since then, she has not heard from him or his whereabouts.

Artwork by Zihan Zahid of a young girl holding a photo of a missing person. Photo: Zihan Zahid

“As women, we find it crucial to resist and voice our demand for the release of our men from their illegal detention,” Deen Baloch said. “The state has left us with no option but to resist and advocate for our people.”

While Deen Baloch acknowledged that several Pakistani artists had created works that represented the anguish and sacrifices of Baloch women, she called for greater involvement from other creative industries ranging from film to music to tackle the subject.

“Baloch women have made significant sacrifices, leaving their homes, disrupting their education and abandoning personal dreams, but these are not highlighted enough in art,” said Deen Baloch.

The exhibition and the march were held after Pakistan was hit by a wave of unprecedented militant attacks last year, including in Balochistan.

Among them was an attack last August against a convoy of Chinese engineers who were travelling in four bulletproof vehicles while they were on their way to Gwadar Port in Balochistan.

China, Pakistan to hold Arabian Sea joint military drills in November

The Balochistan Liberation Army later claimed responsibility for the attack. The separatist insurgent group has been fighting Chinese investments and influence in Pakistan. The China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC) is the biggest project under Beijing’s Belt and Road Initiative, with the port designated as one of the major developments under CPEC.

Many Pakistanis, such as Sakeena, have accused authorities of ignoring the economic deprivation suffered by the women of Balochistan caused by the CPEC projects.

In a painting titled Broadcasting Dreams, Sakeena illustrated a woman who offers an empty plate to her hungry children with two imaginary fish. The creation symbolises the helplessness of Balochi women, who were unable to fish in their regional sea to feed their families because of a CPEC project.

“The struggle depicted in this artwork extends beyond the mere absence of physical nourishment. It becomes a symbolic representation of denied aspirations and thwarted dreams,” Sakeena added.

Women from Balochistan, Pakistan, taking part in a recent protest against enforced disappearances of their loved ones. Photo: Sammi Deen Baloch

Karachi-based artist Isma Gul Hasan, 29, chose posters to portray the determination and struggles of Baloch women.

In one poster designed for the annual “Aurat Azadi” march, or Women’s Freedom march, in Pakistan that took place on the occasion of International Women’s Day in 2021, Hasan depicted three Baloch women dressed in their traditional dress standing tall and gazing unflinchingly into the distance.

Baloch women have been ignored by mass media and art can play an important role in amplifying their narratives, Hasan said.

“I wanted to depict the women of Balochistan in a way that centered their voice and highlighted their struggle against years and years of injustice and gaslighting by the state,” she added.

2