Published in DAWN Magazine on April 25, 1999
What follows didn't happen, but it may well become the norm in a couple of years.
Two weeks before Eid, a sweet voice on the phone tells you, "We have the best butchers in town. Register now, or your animals will have to wait another year before they go to their Maker."
You point out that the animals haven't yet arrived from the interior.
"Our men will help you select the best animals."
You tell her to call after ten days.
"Don't hang up, sir. Our butchers are all graduates. We even have a few MBAs on our payroll."
This was interesting. "What'll I have to pay an MBA to slaughter a goat or cow?" you ask.
"Much lass than what our chartered accountant will take."
You didn't know the situation was that bad, so you say, "All right, send one over on Eid day. What'll I have to pay him?"
"Just a second sir, let me calculate. It'll be ten thousand for a cow, five thousand for a goat, and fifteen for a camel."
You let out a yell that is heard in Quetta.
"Maybe you'd like an MBA to do the job? You'll save 50 per cent, and 60 per cent if one of our engineers does it."
"For God's sake, can't you get me a real, genuine, red-blooded butcher who does nothing but carve up goats and cows every day?"
"This Eid is the only time when the real ones do any butchering, that's why you see all these jobless graduates doing their work."
By Shakir Lakhani