Bureaucrats and their inferiority complex

i able to get to see few pictures of Fashion show at the Embassy of Pakistan in Washington DC, 2007, and i was ashamed to see all that.

and now i strongly believe that our so called bureaucrats, landlords, politicians try to act westerner, and try to adopt western morals but they forget that their brown skin will always remain brown.

but do these western bureaucrats-politicians like such so-called pakistanis representatives (with no or very low moral values)?

Re: Bureaucrats and their inferiority complex

I think a pakistani girl with a dupata and basic shalwar kameez is sexier then these girls you're talking about. So full of it it's unbelievable.

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they had arab belle dancers at 60th PAkistan Independence day party. :bummer:
honestly WTH!

so sick n tired to see these Bureaucrats setting wrong image of Pakistanis :aj:

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Aap ki kiya tajweez hai ky kiya hona chahiey tha?Yani daboiya on ko hony ny na hota gar ju howa tu kiya hota:D

Shame shame.

Re: Bureaucrats and their inferiority complex

I remeber the Dancing Girls of APPNA Chapter of Houston on 14th August 2007 celebrating Independece Day on indain punjabi songs shown live by ARY One .It was more a mujra than dance.

If you have issues with them wearing revealing clothes then that's understandable but if you're bashing them for wearing clothes you deem "western" then that's as retarted as an Englishman insisting on only wearing cravats and two-tail-coats in the name of tradition.

Inferiority complex is wrong but the other extreme of superiority complex is also wrong (pant shirt pehni to ghair-mulki ya ghair-muslim ho jaaen ge).

Culture and traditions change with time, no one culture has monopoly over any sort of clothing, we live in a global village everything is universal.

I hate wearing Salwar Kamiz, I don't have an inferiority complex, I always wore Pakistan cricket shirts in Britain, I had a Pakistan flag hung outside my bedroom window.

I'm proud of my roots but I feel uncomfortable in a sherwani or turban 'n' shawl and I hate the way it looks, culture is not static, just because some dude 60-70 yrs ago decided it was my "national dress" doesn't make it any more Pakistani, Indians and all sorts also wear it.

People who are against "western" dress should stop wearing sneakers/trainers/shoes, jackets, caps, watches, glasses and other so called western items.

Just because somebody doesn't like to wear balloon salwars and dhotis doesn't mean they are ashamed.

Salwar Kamiz just doesn't look good on men, women look nice in the modern pant type Salwar Kamiz's though.

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I went to an Italian built colony in Pashtunkhwa (NWFP) yesterday and I loved the lifestyle, it might aswell have been Europe except everyone spoke Pashto.

These people keep inline with Islamic rules/regulations and they still speak Pashto so they're as Muslim and Pashtun as someone who dresses as a sheperd but they're soo refined, all the guys wear jeans n stuff, n they're so in tune with the rest of the world, it's a refreshing change from Pakis who want to be idolated from the rest of the world.

Re: Bureaucrats and their inferiority complex

^lolz...talk about inferioruty complex.

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I hope you’re joking.

I’m not saying wear nangi pungi kachi chaddiyaan.

Keep your dress inline with Islamic rules but other than that wear whatever you think feels comfortable and looks nice.

Our Holy Prophet (S) didn’t just wear Meccan or Arab clothes, he was a traveller because he was a bussinessman and he picked up fashions from different places, he didn’t just wear Arab thobes.

I feel uncomfy in Salwar Kameez, my Salwar gets all tangled up and I hate the flaps on a Kamiz. I also hate the way it looks, men shouldn’t wear dressees in this day and age, nobody has the guts to tell me how I look so I don’t care what others think but I personally hate it of my own accord.

Salwar Kamiz looks pretty on girls (both Paki and White) if it’s those modern pant-cut Salwar-Kamiz.

I also hate Saaris ( :yuck: ) and Arab thobes.

My people also wear shawls, I can’t keep them in place, they hang off me and get tangled so I just wear a jacket, it’s hassle-free and I don’t look like a tramp in it.

I also like rice better than roti. Does it make me Bengali or ashamed? No!

Eat whatever you think is tasty, wear whatever you think is comfy and looks nice.

Don’t invent limitations and rules for yourself.

People shouldn’t be classed as this and that based on what they wear or eat. Eating noodles and black bean beef and wearing jeans doesn’t make me any less Pakistani, I probably have more Jazba and patriotism than the shalwar kamiz clad FOB who’s dieing to go to Britain, I was born and grew up in Britain and don’t mind spending the rest of my life in Pak, I’ve been here for over a year.

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^I think people have lost there fashion sense these days, there's a place and time for every type of clothing, people wearing jeans and t shirts in an evening function or on juma' in the mosque just don't look right.

I don't really like people always acting casual, I like snobs.

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^
LOL

Snobbiness is not allowed in Islam.

I like to look smart for Jummah Service, in England I had a special pair of trousers, shirt and dressing coat for Friday Service but I wouldn't say it's a requirement, if some kid comes to Prayer in jeans and t-shirt because he wants to go bowling with his friends afterwards then it's fine, why make religion harder than it is?

Insisting on wearing a tuxedo or sherwani to Mosque is soooo Christianlike (they have to dress smart for mass).

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^We should wear our best clothes for Juma' and this is in Scriptures.

I didn't mean snobs as in people with attitude but people with manners and etiquettes.

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PS: it's not shalwar kameez's fault if you don't know how to wear it.