2. Difference between urban and rural culture of Pakistan
Q. Describe the differences between the rural and urban
societies in Pakistan.
Rural Societies
Pakistan is an agriculture country and 80% of its people
form the rural population of the country. The villages, towns and small cities
form the rural areas of Pakistan. Their main profession is cultivation and
ploughing. The entire population of Pakistan is scattered and resides in
villages, towns and big cities. They pursue different professions to earn their
livelihood. Village is the most important and pivotal centre of rural life of
Pakistan. Our villages badly lack in civic amenities. There is no proper system
of drainage. The drinking water and electricity are not available in a large
number of our villages. There are no hospitals, schools, post offices and
markets in most of the villages making the life difficult and unhygienic. The
village population, due to the difficult living environs in the villages, keeps
on migrating to urban areas where better facilities of social life and brighter
chances of earning sustenance are available.
However, the Government is very much alive to the problems
of rural areas. The Government is making sincere endeavours to improve the
conditions of rural areas. Modern facilities of health and communication are
being provided in the rural areas. Roads, dispensaries, schools, post offices
and shopping centres have been provided at Government level. The facility of
drinking water and electricity has been made available to a number of villages.
Urban Societies
Urban areas in Pakistan completely differ from rural areas
in the life pattern. The urban areas are the centre of social life with greater
facilities and amenities of life.
The urban population of Pakistan represents about a third of
the total. Two cities have a dominating position - Karachi and Lahore. Since
the 1960s, government policy has been directed towards the dispersal of
industry, which had become heavily concentrated in Karachi. As a consequence,
urban growth has been more evenly distributed among several cities. Rapid and
unplanned urban expansion has been parallel by deterioration in living
conditions, particularly in the housing conditions of lower income groups. Many
urban households are unable to pay rent for the cheapest form of available
housing and live in makeshift shacks. Water supply and sewerage system are
inadequate, and in many areas residents have to share communal water taps.
Inadequate urban transport is also a major problem.
The urban areas, unlike rural areas, are well-planned and
well-built with modern residential colonies. The big cities, which form the
portion of our urban areas, are the centres of high modern education. A large
number of prestigious educational institutions are situated in the big cities
which attract the students from all parts of the country. The urban areas have
become the centre of social activity because of their multifarious aspects of
social life. The industrial progress and the location of Government and other
departments in the urban areas have made these areas prosperous and
progressing.
Differences between Rural and Urban Way of Life
The rural and urban life differs in a number of ways. For an
agricultural country like Pakistan, it is essential to understand how and why
life in rural and urban areas differs.
1. Function
Villages and towns differ in function. Villages are usually
engaged in primary activities, including farming, animal keeping, lumbering,
fishing etc. Towns are engaged in secondary and tertiary activities, like
manufacturing, trade, transport, telecommunications, education, medical
treatment and other activities. However, these two sets of activities are not
exclusively confined to rural and urban areas. Shops, transportation services,
educational and medical facilities are found in rural areas, too.
Similarly, there are vegetable fields within Karachi, Lahore
and other major cities. It is more a question of the predominance of one set of
activities over the other. As a consequence, the line of distinction between a
small town and a large village is difficult to determine.
2. Lifestyle
Some specialists believe that lifestyle is a distinguishing
feature of villages and towns. According to them, close contact with other
members of the community is a distinctive feature of rural life. The
inhabitants of a village, for example, usually know each other personally. In
urban areas, on the other hand, relationships tend to be impersonal; urban
areas are so highly populated that most people do not even know who their
neighbours are. This is case in large urban centres like Karachi. However, even
in places like Karachi, there are pockets in the city where people who belong
to the same community or village live. In such areas people know each other and
have closer contact with their neighbours. In small towns, which are in reality
overgrown villages, most people known one another as well.
It is also argued that while village life is traditional,
urban life is rational. This is not entirely the case in Pakistan. Most of the
urban population in Pakistan has a strong rural background. Although the use of
urban facilities changes their way of living, it does not change their way of
thinking much. In Pakistan, the lifestyles of the rich and poor differ far more
than the lifestyles of city and village dwellers. The objective application of
lifestyle as a factor for distinguishing between villages and towns is
therefore difficult.
3. Population
Another factor used to distinguish between villages and
towns is population. Although this criterion is applied in many countries,
there is no agreement on size. In Canada, for example, a settlement with a
population of more than 1,000 is considered urban, in Japan more than 30,000
and in Pakistan, 5,000. In Pakistan, a settlement can also call itself a town
if it has a two committee or cantonment that controls electricity, the water
supply and drainage. For example, Ziarat in Balochistan had a population of 619
in 1998, but it was still classified as a town because it had these amenities.
However, there are only ten towns with populations of less than 5,000 out of a
total 478 urban centres in Pakistan.
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