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Adnan Siddiqui said Meray Paas Tum Ho's dialogues were problematic. He was right

Adnan Siddiqui said Meray Paas Tum Ho's dialogues were problematic. He was right

We take a look at Khalil ur Rehman's writing in the show that transgressed entertainment and seeped into discomfort.
Updated 12 Feb, 2020

It's no surprise that the controversial drama Meray Pass Tum Ho has broken the internet with its disparate storyline and character dynamics unfamiliar to the conventional ‘desi’ audience.

Naturally, the weekly episodes created havoc and audiences were excited to witness the karma that would come the protagonist’s way.

However, in the midst of chaotic debates and heated conversations, Adnan Siddiqui parted ways with his audience acknowledging that the project had loopholes in the script.

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"I understand the dialogues had some problematic leanings, and sometimes went a little far, sometimes quite far in painting women with a single brush stroke - I understand and take all of that on board. I wish the drama had consciously added nuance to the storyline," he wrote on Instagram.

While infidelity, adultery, broken marriages and inflicted childhood traumas are very real concerns that need to be addressed in a society that hushes important discourses under the umbrella of ‘shame’ and ‘honour', we’re concerned about all the ways in which the issues brought forward were gendered rather than societal.

Also read: Sindh High Court summons Humayun Saeed over Meray Paas Tum Ho's offensive dialogues

For us, cheating should never be condoned irrespective of who does it, and anyone involved in this betrayal, be it a man or a woman, should be called out for it. With this understanding, we hope the actor makes wiser cinematic choices in his upcoming projects.

Here are a few times Meray Paas Tum Ho's writing transgressed the boundaries of entertainment, and seeped right into discomfort.

Shehwaar: “Tum kyun lower-middle class larkiyon ki tarahsochti ho – muhabbat karne ke liay shadi ki duaein maangti ho.”

(Translation: why do you think like middle-class women who think marriage is a prerequisite for falling in love?)

Apart from being classist, this dialogue reeks of stereotype against what middle-class women are believed to romanticise.

Not only does it make them look desperate, clingy and regressively conservative but on the contrary implies that any woman belonging to a higher socioeconomic strata of society would probably be okay in exchanging sexual favours or love outside marriage. A correlation between companionship and finance is beyond us.

Shehwaar: “Khuda pe mat chorna, who talaq leni wali aurteinse khush nahi hota. Tou jo bhi karna us se bacha ke karna.”

(Translation: Don’t leave your matters on God – He is not pleased with women who opt for a divorce. Whatever you need to do, make sure you hide from Him.)

Conveniently enough, this one sentence shames all divorced women under the false pretext of religion. Not only does it point a finger at the millions of women who walk out of abusive marriages, stand up to domestic violence, voice their protest against their ill-treatment and protect their children from toxic households but also puts the blame of that on the victim.

It disregards the struggles of all those women who were forcefully left because they couldn’t conceive children, because they couldn’t get enough dowry, because they gave birth to only daughters, or because the tribal ‘watta-satta’ exchange could not work out for the other party – and unapologetically tells each one of them that they have made God unhappy.

We find this misinterpretation of religion and a very merciful God offensive and unjust.

Hania: “Dekhna chahti hoon – kya aisi aurat dikhnay mein aurat hoti hai?”

(Translation: I want to see if a cheating woman looks like a woman.)

A cheating woman is not an anomaly. A cheating woman is as much a person as a cheating man – or any cheating individual irrespective of his/her gender. A woman looks like a woman. A man looks like a man. A cheating woman also looks like a woman – and a cheating man also looks like a man because lucky for us, the sins we commit do not appear on our faces.

Hania: “Mardon se apnay haq zaroor mango, lekin unke huqooq se hissa na mango… aurat ke liay maaf karna asaan hota hai kyunke aurat apni kok se bachay paida karti hai.

(Translation: Ask men for your rights – but do not ask men for a part from their rights. It is easier for a woman to forgive because she gives birth.)

By spewing cheesy, pompous views under the pretense of broken, paused dialogues – Hania’s character attempts to sound philosophical while telling the audience that women are born with a forgiving gene simply because they have the ability to give birth.

The problem with such a statement is that it glorifies motherhood to a pedestal at which any error is considered hostile and unworthy of redemption. It places the burden of parenting solely on the mother, absolves fathers of their parenting duties, and further perpetuates the idea that men can get away with the ‘mistake’ of infidelity simply because of their gender. We do not understand the basis of this blatant discrimination.

Tahira Abdullah said it best when she said, "I am born from the same woman a man is born from and when I come into this world, I bring my rights with me, just like I'm born with a body, soul, brain and heart, they are a part of my existence. And those rights are protected by the Constitution of Pakistan. No one is going to give me my rights nor do I have to ask. Why should we ask men for them? We were born with them!"

Comments

Khaled Jan 31, 2020 04:09pm
Not only problematic, but degrading the dignity of a women. Don't know how woman tolerated this drama for so long without any protest?
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Ali Jan 31, 2020 04:52pm
Without these dialogues drama had no meaning
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Khalil Jan 31, 2020 05:09pm
Why all the fuss? Should a man loving his wife clap for her when she cheats him?
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rafiu Jan 31, 2020 05:10pm
why nobody is talking about those dialogues of this drama which enhance the dignity of a woman.
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Ahmed Jan 31, 2020 05:27pm
The writer is your typical, regressive, frustrated, trying-desperately-to-win-attention-through-shock-value, one-time-hit showbiz wonder playing the old Manto trope; though this time without any humility or far-reaching literary talent (no one in established Urdu literary or academic circles considers him a 'thing': just a pretender recycling an age-old formula for economic advancement). Kudos to the media for incessantly resurrecting him.
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Tahir Raouf Jan 31, 2020 05:36pm
Put the money in the pocket then say it’s problematic, what a logic, he should be assembly member
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haris Jan 31, 2020 06:01pm
Could you guys come out from this hangover? by the way, why after the finale, all of a sudden you guys realized that the dialogues were abusive?
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Ray Jan 31, 2020 06:08pm
Dramas don't need to be always politically correct. People need to learn to accept societal issues.
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Ali Asad Kazmi Jan 31, 2020 07:25pm
Thank you dawn for highlighting the disconcerting elements. This is ethical journalism: calling a spade a spade.
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Khaled Jan 31, 2020 07:38pm
@Khalil What about a man cheating on his wife?
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Mahmood Ahmad Jan 31, 2020 07:58pm
Drama did what it supposed to do We are all talking about the issue it raised in our society!! Lovely writing We need more drama like this!!
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Masood Haider Jan 31, 2020 08:24pm
It is not clear why actors, particularly women stoop to the low level of being part of such misogynistic dramas?
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Aqil Siddiqi Jan 31, 2020 08:47pm
How long we hide our heads under sand ? Just accept the reality of today and moves on. Why we are so shock to see a drama like this. These things happen all around us now.
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kinza Jan 31, 2020 09:24pm
@Khalil ... so should a loving wife clap when her husband cheats on her?
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Shiraz Bhojani Jan 31, 2020 10:05pm
It's a @#$_& drama, a work of fiction. People acted in it and got paid for it. ITS NOT REAL! Don't like it, don't watch it.
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WeCare Jan 31, 2020 10:18pm
I think people wouldn't be watching or taking so much interest, had this drama been according to all moral standards. Controversy sells, and causes people to ponder and critique.
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Farhan Jan 31, 2020 10:22pm
I don't understand Dawn's obsession with this drama. It was merely a drama and people can speak anything they want
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Elyas M. Malik Jan 31, 2020 11:03pm
This drama as many dramas, people will lose interest in because of the greed of the promoters. I know I could care less if it never comes on TV
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Fastrack Jan 31, 2020 11:54pm
You guys need help.
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Shagufta Yasmin Feb 01, 2020 12:49am
The drama was overrated. I am still puzzled whey everybody was going crazy for it. Once the hype was built on social media, more people started watching without questioning the story line, plot and dialogues.
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Sajjad Khan Feb 01, 2020 01:43am
The only reason I started watching this stupid drama was because of the quality of acting on display. When that out the window with the over the top antics of the lead and the terribly stunted acting abilities of the peripheral characters this show quickly became exposed for the misogynistic wet dream the writer's warped mind had been harboring his whole life. It's not the dialogues as much as the overly wrought attempts to make them sound like religious edict is what really makes this whole enterprise so regressive. Still, I'm glad this show was created and aired. It exposed the viewing public to something new and worthy of debate and perhaps educated the creators of their responsibilities as providers of entertainment.
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Safder Munir Nawaz Feb 01, 2020 03:53am
It,s a fact that our society occupying rural, semi-urban and families having their own whims for their setups, always try to deprive women of their inherited rights in the properties of theirs fathers/parents and irony is the vivid, ferocious and based on hatred inclination towards women/daughters while at the same time allowing undue hold and partisanship favoring men.Though these criticism have a good acceptance among genuinely literate families, but still our society seems marooned with old orthodox attitudes which still assign little importance to their females when it comes to counting financials resulting from inherited property.We must ponder over couple of decade developed cleavages of hatred of fiqa/faith preventing matrimonial relationships that has been causing extremism rather allowing its penetration in our society, relentlessly.Our writers must address this prevalent social curse,its very much essential eye-opening liability of our drama/film writers.
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manzer Feb 01, 2020 04:06am
I am surprised why Adnan Siddiqui doesn't see how his own character in the drama demeans men. Isn't it ultimate sexism when we think of such pathetic behavior coming from a man as normal and there is no outrage about it. Are we still living in the 'boys will be boys' world?
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Buzdar Feb 01, 2020 05:24am
Just take it as fiction girls!
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NN Feb 01, 2020 07:28am
@rafiu enlighten us?
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NAQAD Feb 01, 2020 10:22am
What happened to morality and ethics of so called people who called themselves as writers...rather they do not know an iota what writing is about! Who is scrutinizing writings of these people who are dishing out trash to society...belittling the honor of women!
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isha Feb 01, 2020 05:41pm
amazing first they read the script than act in the soap opera get their payments and after all this say "ops i agree its problematic" because after all i need to be woke now after public outrage
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Murtaza Feb 01, 2020 07:41pm
People, this is a TV drama with heroes and villains. The most questionable dialogues were uttered by a villain. Isn't that what villains a supposed to do? Had it been the good guys saying that then one could raise objections.
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Mnkhan Feb 01, 2020 08:11pm
Lol. If he thought some dialogues were unreasonable, why he did not question those while shooting? Too afraid of writer? While I agree with KRQ that he does not write conspiracy style saas bahu dramas which degrade those relationships, unfortunately his own writing is just becoming a way to degrade women. His philosophy of good vs bad woman is dated. How long just the cheesy and loaded dialogues would carry a drama? His scripts lack a good story from beginning to end and most dramas get rolled up abruptly in last episode. His claim's of real life stories also lacks credibility. In real life an educated woman do not turn back. She starts her new married life happily not an unmarried flirtious life shown in drama. And she never comes back!. A sensible and mature divorced husband how much broken he is would never get in touch with his ex wife. Overall a pathetic script only lifted by brilliant direction, acting and a great ost. Oh and I forgot huge promotional efforts.
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Adil Jadoon Feb 02, 2020 04:08am
The fact that so many people watched this rubbish, not for its quality or message but sexually explicit undertones shows what a sexually suppressed society we are where sex is dirty and a taboo. Jerry springer would be the number 1 show in Pakistan if dubbed in urdu...lol
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Jimmy Feb 02, 2020 04:24am
No one talks like the meaningful poetic way they all do in the drama.
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sahba omair Feb 02, 2020 07:28am
Too much hype! ITS A DRAMA and ITS OVER
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