Benazir Bhutto, A legacy of lightness in times of darkness
Benazir Bhutto, A legacy of lightness in times of darkness
By: Aftab Ahmad Goraya
The bright morning of June 21 reminds us of a towering personality who carved a unique place not only in Pakistan’s history but on the global stage as well. This date marks the birthday of Shaheed Mohtarma Benazir Bhutto, a leader who wasn’t just a dream, but a living reality, a voice that didn’t just echo, but became an echo itself, a name not merely written but engraved on hearts. Benazir Bhutto was not just a political figure, she was an era. An era that lit the candle of democracy in the darkness of dictatorship, that never let principles bow before power, and that still beats in the hearts of millions as a symbol of hope.
Benazir Bhutto’s political training did not occur in the comfort of parliamentary halls, but rather in the narrow, dark cells of prison, in the desolate nights of exile, and through the trauma of her father’s martyrdom. Indeed, the path may not have been of her choosing, but she walked it wholeheartedly for the people, for the constitution, and for a brighter future for Pakistan. When despair prevailed during the bleakest days of military rule, it was a young woman who took up her father’s mission and vowed to carry it forward. She knew it would be a difficult path but she neither wavered nor retreated. Solitary confinement in Sukkur Jail, General Zia ul Haq’s brutal dictatorship, and every tool of state repression only strengthened her resolve.
Mohtarma Benazir Bhutto often said, “I did not choose politics, politics chose me.” The same can be said about Chairman Bilawal Bhutto Zardari. When a foreign journalist once asked him whether he feels unsafe given that both his mother and grandfather were assassinated, Bilawal Bhutto Zardari replied, “I had two options, either leave the country and live a life of luxury and safety, or stay in Pakistan and fight for the rights of the people. I chose the second path, my mother’s path.” This path is difficult and full of danger, but it is the right path. Those who label this “dynastic politics” must understand that leadership in the Pakistan People’s Party is not a bed of roses, it is a crown of thorns that both Shaheed Benazir Bhutto and Bilawal Bhutto Zardari were forced to wear at a very young age due to the tyranny of circumstances.
In a society where even today it is considered improper for women to work outside the home, and in a country dominated by patriarchal norms, she emerged as a living symbol of defiance. A woman who not only became the world’s youngest prime minister but also the first female prime minister of the Islamic world. This was not an ordinary achievement it was a smile of confidence on the scarred face of a wounded century.
Though her two terms as Prime Minister were brief, her commitment to democracy remained long and unshakable. She was dismissed under the infamous Eighth Amendment, elections were rigged, and new chapters of electoral manipulation were written yet she never responded by stepping outside the constitutional framework. She firmly believed, “Even the weakest democracy is better than dictatorship.” While doors were being shut on her, she always kept one door open, the door to the people. And the people never let her down. The historic welcomes on April 10, 1986, and October 18, 2007, remain unmatched to this day.
Shaheed Benazir Bhutto’s stance against terrorism was always clear and firm. In the post nine eleven global landscape, she identified religious extremism as Pakistan’s greatest threat and emphasized that Pakistan must adopt a consistent and clear position against militant groups. She repeatedly pointed out that the killing of innocent people in the name of jihad is not only against the teachings of Islam but is also leading to Pakistan’s global isolation. She believed that the war against terrorism must not be fought by military means alone, it must also be fought intellectually, socially, and economically, with the active involvement of the people.
Benazir Bhutto risked her life to raise her voice against extremism, returning to Pakistan despite clear threats to her life, determined to make the country peaceful, progressive, and democratic. She often said that extremism cannot be eliminated by bullets alone but through education, equality, and rule of law. Her brutal assassination on December 27, 2007, is evidence that terrorist elements saw her as an unbreakable wall. Her martyrdom was not only a great loss for Pakistan but for the entire world, yet her sacrifice breathed new life and ideological clarity into the fight against extremism.
Shaheed Mohtarma Benazir Bhutto is more than a memory, she is a message. A message to stand by one’s principles, to speak out against injustice, and to sacrifice one’s life for democracy. Today, as politics is once again consumed by self interest, conspiracies, and shortcuts, BB Shaheed’s vision and sacrifice remind us that leadership is not about power, it is about sacrifice, foresight, and the trust of the people.
Today, we must renew our commitment to carry forward the mission of Shaheed Mohtarma Benazir Bhutto. Her dream is yet to be fulfilled, and until every citizen in Pakistan has equal rights, security, education, healthcare, and employment, her struggle remains unfinished.
Dated: 21-06-2025