
Last night, while Pakistani men were anxiously waiting for the premier’s speech, to be aired at 8pm, the women had a completely different, and might I add ‘dramatic’, agenda to grab hold of the TV remote. Coincidentally, the prime minister’s speech took place at the same time when the series finale of Pyare Afzal – which could safely be dubbed as one of the most widely watched television serials of all time – was to be aired. On one hand, this diffused the political tension for the fans; on the other, it became a reason for family discords over the TV remote and polarised interests. The air was rife with anticipation and the channel had started a stopwatch countdown for the finale as fans and followers were placing bets on how it would end. Amid all this frenzy, women were seen praying and intending sadqas for a possible happy ending. [embed width="620"]http://www.dailymotion.com/video/x21t1uj_jane-wo-kesay-log-thay-jin-k-pyar-ko-pyar-mila-pyaray-afzal-ost-video-dailymotion_music[/embed] Unfortunately for them, the writer, Khalilur Rehman Qamar, was clever enough to know that tragic heroes are always mythologised. Some cinemas even arranged special screening for the finale, which I remember happened only once before, for the Turkish drama serial Ishq-e-Mamnoo that had become exceptionally popular back in 2012. For the local drama industry, the screening of Pyare Afzal was a first. The final episode erupted unprecedented social media response. The emotional outpour was a mix; fans were mourning the death of their hero and venerating the love saga whereas sarcastic and humorous posts were finding comic relief in the tragic ending. Resilience is the best part of being Pakistani, as we always end up finding happiness in the most unlikely of places and that’s how we refuse to bow down before the shadows of fear and chaos. There ensued a frenzy of tweets, heartbroken Facebook statuses, sad Instagram posts and other updates on different media platforms. A Facebook friend in their status mourned,
“Afzal ko kyun mara?” (Why was Afzal killed?) “Afzal died!” lamented another.This was followed by a string of comments where some friends condoled and consoled while others remain bewildered as to who Afzal was. Many were seen naively asking if he belonged to any of the political parties or if he was from the Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf or Pakistan Awami Tehreek side. The most hilarious meme, for me, was a confused Nawaz Sharif, clad in his sherwani, asking,
“Imran Khan say baad may baat ho gi, pehlay batao ye Afzal kaun hai?” (I will talk to Imran later; first tell me, who is this Afzal?)[caption id="" align="alignnone" width="472"]

