swipe at the those who were tampering with history and the curricula. “Ideals postulated by our elders are not being passed on to the young generation because our curricula were ruined, in particular, by the Zia regime, when history was tailored to glorify just groups of usurpers and vested interests. People’s struggles and democratic movements were just eliminated from the curricula with the result that today the young generation are not at all acquainted with the actual history of the nation for which the elders made untold sacrifices,” Rabbani said. He said that so many facts of our history that highlighted the struggles of the masses for the progress of the country had been eliminated from the textbooks and in this regard, he particularly highlighted the democratic struggle spearheaded by Rana Fatehyab and his comrades for the restoration of genuine democracy and empowerment of the man on the street.
“Fatehyab’s life was a story of struggle, struggle not for oneself, but for noble ideals, for emancipation of workers, peasants, and the Federation of Pakistan,” he said.
In the process, he said, he had to face incarceration but still he never compromised on his principles. “Fatehyab never abandoned the path of truth and it was because of him and his associates that today we had a semblance of democracy in Pakistan,” Rabbani said.
Unfortunately, he said, the ideals of the likes of Rana Fatehyab had not been passed on to the younger generation.
Masooma Hassan, the widow of Rana Fatehyab, and chairperson Pakistan Institute of International Affairs (PIIA), and also former ambassador to Austria, spoke in the most nostalgic and tender tone about her late husband. In a visibly touching tone, she recalled her companionship of 50 years with her husband and recounted his qualities of head and heart.
“Fatehyab always suffered in his political life but never compromised on principles,” she said. The MRD Movement, she said, was the zenith of his political life. Her husband, she said, was a very brave person and never wilted under political or dictatorial pressure.
She pointed out another quality in him which, she said, was rare to come by and that was he never switched allegiances or parties. She said that Fatehyab started off his career with the Pakistan Workers Party and when the party was merged into the MKP, he remained part of it till his death.