Church leaders and others in Pakistan lauded the producers and cast of a TV drama for risking their lives to broadcast an unprecedented, national media portrayal of the violent injustice resulting from blasphemy laws.
In the final episode of Hum TV’s drama series, “Tan Man Neel o Neel” [loosely translated as “Body and Soul Badly Bruised”], a professional dance team is performing at a wedding when an unexpected video on a large screen shows one of them, Sonu (played by Shuja Asad) dancing at a venerable Sikh mansion. Soon a Muslim, Kami (played by Muhammad Usman Javed), who sneaked the video into view rises up and falsely accuses Sonu of dancing in a mosque in the video.
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A flashback shows Kami — who has designs on Sonu’s dance partner and love interest, the lovely Raabi (played by Sehar Khan) — plotting the premeditated attack with his cohorts. Asked how they could assert that the Sikh house is a “holy site,” Kami tells them, “By the time they figure out if it’s a religious location, the mob will have done their work.”
The ensuing attack is something that has become commonplace for Pakistanis but not something they are used to seeing broadcast nationally, much less with high-level production values. In slow-motion scenes set to doleful music, a frenzied mob takes justice into their own hands and, without a trial or due diligence, kills the falsely accused “blasphemers.”
Sudden turn of narrative
The sequence occurs in the last 10 minutes of the final, Feb. 15 episode of the otherwise more light-hearted drama, leaving audiences shocked at the sudden turn of narrative and the portrayal of a sensitive issue that is usually taboo. Many lauded the tragic ending for its powerful message and relevance in the current digital age, especially considering how often such matters are misconstrued on social media.
“In a country where mob lynching seems to have become a norm, ‘Tan Man Neel o Neel’ is an alarming reminder of the dangers of religious extremism and false information,” said Christian rights advocate Lazar Allah Rakha. “In bringing these painful realities to light, Hum TV hasn’t just delivered a work of art but also initiated an essential conversation that we as a nation can no longer afford to ignore.”
Pakistan has witnessed a sharp increase in the prosecution of “online blasphemy” cases in the last two years, with private vigilante groups bringing charges against hundreds of young individuals, including Christians for allegedly committing blasphemy.
Pakistan ranked eighth on Open Doors’ 2025 World Watch List of the most difficult places to be a Christian, as it was the previous year.
EDITOR’S NOTE — This story was written and originally published by Morning Star News.