Comics are antidotes to defeat terrorism
Islamabad: When Taliban militants stormed a school in Pakistan’s northwest last December, killing 150 people, mainly children, in the country’s deadliest terror attack, comic book creators Mustafa Hasnain and Gauhar Aftab decided it was time to act. The pair had already been working on a series to raise awareness about the corruption that plagues the economically-underperforming Muslim giant of 200 million people.
Hasnain, a British-educated computer graphics specialist, founded his own company Creative Frontiers in 2013, employing 20 people, including young male and female artists, programmers and writers, in a hip Silicon Valley-style office in the city of Lahore. He said: “It was a huge watershed moment for us. I got together with Gauhar,” adding: “We used to stand over there at vigils with a candle, but we wanted to do something more.”
The result was Paasban or Guardian a three-part series featuring a group of close friends at college who begin to worry when one of them drops out to join a religious student group that is ostensibly working for charitable causes.
Fifteen thousand of the books are set to be distributed for free from June 1 at schools in Lahore, Multan and Lodhran. The comic will also be distributed on a tailor-made app the group have developed for Apple and Android smartphones.