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The Great Pakistani Identity Hunt: Or, How to Be Anyone But Your Neighbor

A Seven-Decade Quest to Escape the Subcontinent by Borrowing Persian, Arab, and Turkish Clothes Pakistan's search for a national identity since 1947 reveals a fascinating paradox: a nation physically rooted in the Indian subcontinent that has spent seventy years trying to prove it belongs anywhere else. From a Persianized national anthem that almost no one speaks as a mother tongue, to the Arabization campaigns of the Zia era, to the current obsession with Turkish dramas, Pakistan has engaged in relentless "civilizational hopping." This article synthesizes discussions on the Qaumi Taranah's deliberate linguistic engineering, the genetic evidence showing Pakistanis are far closer to Indians than to Arabs, the cultural resilience of South Asian traditions through Bollywood and Coke Studio, and the structural tensions between state-imposed identity and organic continuity. The result is a nation caught between its ideological aspirations and its geographical reality. ...

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