Shahid Mahmood (artist) explained

Shahid Mahmood is a Canadian architect and cartoonist of Pakistani descent.

Early life

Shahid was born in Toronto, Canada and spent his childhood and teenage years in Pakistan, attending schools in Lahore and Karachi. Early in his career, he drew political cartoons for the Pakistani publications Star, Dawn and Newsline Magazine. After graduation he studied architecture in Canada,[1] attending both Carleton and McGill University (Master of Architecture, McGill University; Bachelor of Architecture, Carleton University). Shahid’s cartoons focus largely on religion and politics, with his critiques targeting both Islamic fundamentalism and the aggressiveness of US foreign policy.[2] Over the years, he has received threats to his well-being from groups ranging from the Taliban to various government officials.[3]

Career

His cartoons were a part of the exhibition showing at the 1997 APEC Conference. Following the 9/11 Attacks, Shahid exhibited work at the Paris exhibition The New World Order. In 2002 his exhibition Enduring Operation Freedom, criticizing the Bush policies in Afghanistan, resulted in the McMaster Museum of Art in Canada shutting down the event.[4] While working in Pakistan, Shahid faced repeated attempts at censorship by the government of Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto,[5] who was featured in several of Shahid’s works.[4] His cartoons have been preserved in various institutions including the Museum of Contemporary History in Paris.[6] He has published his work in publications including The Huffington Post, The Guardian, The Express Tribune, Courrier International, and The New York Times Press Syndicate. Shahid has commented on the Charlie Hebdo aftermath.[7] [8] [9] [2] [10]

Censorship

Shahid is mentioned as being one of the first Canadians to be flagged on the US No Fly List.[11] The Canadian Parliament debated his story,[12] and in an open letter released by Amnesty International in December 2007 Shahid’s case was cited as a prime reason to implement the recommendations[13] made by the Arar Commission that advocate for balanced and transparent security measures in Canada.[14] Shahid claims that his criticisms of US foreign policy and military interventionism resulted in him being denied boarding to a domestic Air Canada flight in 2004. Following this, he began to receive extra screening on a routine basis by airlines in many countries.[15] In 2009 a racial profiling complaint regarding the incident was argued in front of the Canadian Human Rights Tribunal.[16] In 2010 Shahid settled the case with Air Canada.[17] The short documentary, “Listed” narrates some of the details of this incident.[18] In 2012 Shahid was again detained in the Santiago International Airport and interviewed by Interpol for 90 minutes, indicating he was still on a US government security list.[19] He was later assigned a specialized PIN from US Homeland Security to help deal with the appearance of his name on security lists.[20] Shahid has also received threats from Islamic fundamentalists for his works criticizing fundamentalism, including an image of the Taliban depicted as an ape reading an upside-down Qur’an. He has written and spoken[21] over the years on issues related to satire and censorship in newsprint, radio, and television.[20] [22] [23] [24] [25]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Amplifying the Ludicrous - Sampsonia Way Magazine. www.sampsoniaway.org.
  2. Web site: Pakistani Cartoonist on Charlie Hebdo, Satire and Islam - NBC News. NBC News.
  3. Book: After the Paris Attacks: Responses in Canada, Europe, and Around the Globe. Edward M.. Iacobucci. Stephen J.. Toope. 7 April 2015. University of Toronto Press. 9781442630031. Google Books.
  4. Web site: The trouble with the Charlie Hebdo drawings.
  5. Web site: The Dream that was Benazir Bhutto.
  6. Web site: Harper and Malala.
  7. http://www.cbc.ca/player/play/2647945139; http://www.newstalk.com/The-trouble-with-the-Charlie-Hebdo-drawings
  8. Web site: Charlie Hebdo : What Offends Does Not Make It Factual. Shahid. Mahmood. HuffPost. 9 January 2015.
  9. Web site: Attack on Charlie Hebdo - Accuracy.Org. www.accuracy.org.
  10. Book: After the Paris Attacks: Responses in Canada, Europe, and Around the Globe. Edward M.. Iacobucci. Stephen J.. Toope. 7 April 2015. University of Toronto Press. 9781442630031. Google Books.
  11. Web site: ICLMG Watch Lists Report - February 10, 2010 - Surveillance - U.S. Customs And Border Protection. Scribd.
  12. Web site: Debates (Hansard) No. 78 - April 7, 2005 (38-1) - House of Commons of Canada. www.parl.gc.ca.
  13. Web site: CBC News In Depth: The Arar inquiry. www.cbc.ca.
  14. Web site: Open letter from Amnesty International Canada cites Benamar Benatta and Shahid Mahmood - Disability & Human Rights Law • BakerLaw. 13 December 2007.
  15. Web site: Canada refuses to give answers about getting off no-fly list - Toronto Star. thestar.com.
  16. Web site: Tribunal to probe Air Canada over boarding refusal.
  17. Web site: Cartoonist who couldn't board flight settles with Air Canada - Toronto Star. thestar.com.
  18. Web site: Listed. vision.rcinet.ca.
  19. Web site: Canadian editorial cartoonist just can't seem to get off no-fly list - Toronto Star. thestar.com.
  20. Web site: Getting off a no-fly list: the never-ending saga.
  21. Web site: Association Of Canadian Cartoonists/Association Des Caricaturistes Canadiens - Ryerson Journalism Research Centre. ryersonjournalism.ca.
  22. Web site: KMEC 105.1 FM - Audio - Political Cartoonist Shahid Mahmood. www.kmecradio.org.
  23. Web site: Feature Guest - Shahid Mahmood - Nine To Noon, 10:08 am on 13 May 2010 - RNZ. 11 October 2010.
  24. Web site: RCI // Masala Canada. www.rcinet.ca.
  25. Web site: BBC - World Service - World Have Your Say: What's wrong with immigration?. Leonardo. Rocha.