Updated November 09, 2009
Pakistan Designers, Models Defy Taliban With First Fashion Week
AP
KARACHI, Pakistan
Amid headlines about violence and militants, Pakistan style circuit seeks to push new image with fashion week.
AP
Nov. 7: A model displays a creation by Pakistani designer Faiza Samee during the Pakistan Fashion Week in Karachi, Pakistan.
Some women strode the catwalk in vicious spiked bracelets and body armor. Others had their heads covered, burqa-style, but with shoulders — and tattoos — exposed. Male models wore long, Islamic robes as well as shorts and sequined T-shirts.
As surging militant violence grabs headlines around the world, Pakistan's top designers and models are taking part in the country's first-ever fashion week. While the mix of couture and ready-to-wear fashions would not have been out of place in Milan or New York, many designers made reference to the turmoil, reflecting the contradictions and tensions coursing through this society.
The four-day event, which was postponed twice due to security fears and amid unease at hosting such a gathering during an army offensive in the northwest, is aimed at showing the world there is more to Pakistan than violence and at helping boost an industry that employs hundreds of thousands of people, organizers said.
Many of the models, designers and well-heeled fashionistas packing out each night said the gathering was a symbolic blow to the Taliban and their vision of society, where women are largely confined to the house and must wear a sack-like covering known as a burqa.
"This is our gesture of defiance to the Taliban," said Ayesha Tammy Haq, the CEO of Fashion Pakistan Week. "There is a terrible problem of militancy and political upheaval ... but that doesn't mean that the country shuts down. That doesn't mean that business comes to a halt."
The shows are taking place in Karachi, the country's largest and most cosmopolitan city, in a five-star hotel just next door to the American consulate, which was bombed by Islamist militants in 2002. It's two hours by plane from the northwest, the heartland of Al Qaeda and the Taliban, and has largely been spared the violence sweeping the country over the last month.
"Unfortunately, it is the bad side of Pakistan that gets everybody's attention," said top Pakistani model Nadia Hussain as hairdressers and makeup artists fussed over her backstage. "It has never been this bad, I don't know what will happen," she said, as fellow models chain-smoked cigarettes.
While many of the city's 12 million people live in slums, hip cafes and restaurants in wealthy neighborhoods draw sophisticated crowds of young men and women into the early hours, more often than not speaking English with each other and wearing Western dress.
While the shows in Karachi resembled fashion weeks in other parts of the world, there were no foreign designers or buyers. The organizers decided not to invite them given the precarious security situation.
"Who is going to come here with such negative stuff going on?" said Tabassum Mughal, a young designer who employs about 30 people. "Those who are here already are leaving."
Textiles make up some 60 percent of Pakistan exports and are worth around $12 billion dollars a year. The country's cotton and silks are among the finest in the world. But the industry has failed to grow in recent years amid political unrest, violence and chronic power shortages.
As if on cue, a power cut during the fashion week's opening evening left the hall in darkness for several minutes.
The fashion industry represents a tiny fraction of the country's textile exports.
"We are still doing the 30 dollar a dozen T-shirt business. There is no value added," said Haq. "We should be employing millions of people, not hundreds of thousands of them."
Designers presented a mix of clothes, some drawing on traditional Pakistani outfits and tribal motifs, others that had little or no sign of traditional aesthetics. In a culture where nearly all women dress modestly, many outfits were too racy for local tastes.
"This does not represent what we are as a people," designer Ayesha Tahir Masood said. "Only 0.001 percent of Pakistani women would wear these clothes, and then only in a controlled environment when drunk out of their minds."
Fox Nation
-
First Lady Responds to Palin Pokes
February 09, 2010 2 comments
-
How the Chicago Team Is Sinking the Obama Presidency
February 09, 2010 2 comments
-
Captain America: Tea Parties Dangerous, Racist
February 08, 2010 92 comments
-
Ayatollah: Iran Anniversary 'Punch' Will Stun West
February 08, 2010 58 comments
-
After Buying Spree, China Owns Stakes In Top U.S. Firms
February 08, 2010 29 comments
-
Meghan McCain Rails Against Tea Parties
February 08, 2010 164 comments
-
'Red Eye' Ratings Top CNN Prime Time
February 08, 2010 11 comments
-
Officers to Retrieve Edwards Sex Tape
February 08, 2010 11 comments
-
Obama Wants Ban on School Snack Vending Machines
February 08, 2010 75 comments
-
Al Gore Snowman Contest
February 08, 2010 12 comments
Most Commented
-
Why is the White House Still Attacking Fox News?
October 19, 2009 2,512 comments
-
Should Justice Investigate ACORN?
September 10, 2009 1,523 comments
-
Did 'Curb' and HBO Cross the Line?
October 28, 2009 1,490 comments
-
Navy SEALs Charged -- What Effect Does It Have on the Troops?
November 25, 2009 1,381 comments
-
Do You Agree With Decision to Release Lockerbie Bomber?
August 20, 2009 1,296 comments
-
Donald Luskin: Republicans and the Populist Temptation
February 08, 2010
-
McGurn: Bush Was Right, Says Obama
February 08, 2010
-
Cheney's Revenge
February 08, 2010
-
The Summit Gambit
February 08, 2010
-
James Copland: How the Plaintiffs Bar Bought the Senate
February 08, 2010
-
Peter Calvocoressi: writer, publisher and lawyer
February 09, 2010
-
Getting into university is not The X Factor . . .
February 08, 2010
-
A bully and liar who played the system
February 08, 2010
-
This beard thing is growing from the roots up
February 08, 2010
-
They’re all ignoring political climate change
February 08, 2010
-
The "Con" of American Hospitals
February 09, 2010
-
The Road to Serfdom: Public Servants Our Masters?
February 09, 2010
-
Imprisoning Kids
February 08, 2010 61 comments
-
You Fund BS Artist
February 08, 2010 7 comments
-
Media Ignore Health Gains
February 07, 2010 11 comments



recommend

Subscribe to Comments
