by Irshad Ahmad Mughal & Dr. Qurat Ul Ain Rana
The ancient fable of owls and crows offers profound insights into contemporary geopolitical conflicts. These natural adversaries—owls blind by day and crows sightless at night—initially mocked each other’s limitations, with owls boasting of their night vision while crows dismissed their daylight blindness. Their eventual reconciliation through mutual teasing (“You’re part of the night!” “Your eyes stole from the sun!”) reveals a fundamental truth: perception shapes reality, and humor can bridge seemingly irreconcilable differences. This allegory mirrors the destructive cycles between India-Pakistan and Israel-Iran, where competing religious-nationalist narratives have created parallel realities as incompatible as day and night.
Beneath surface-level conflicts over territory or power lies a deeper crisis of perception. In India, Hindutva ideology constructs a solar mythology of Hindu revival that deliberately obscures its Muslim population; in Pakistan, Islamic identity politics similarly filters reality through sectarian lenses. Israel’s security paradigm and Iran’s revolutionary Shi’ism function as inverted mirror images—each needing the other’s enmity to sustain its own mythos. This dynamic echoes the owls and crows’ initial hostility, where both sides became prisoners of their sensory limitations, unable to conceive that their truths might be partial rather than absolute.
The transformation from enemies to allies in the fable occurred through shared laughter at their mutual absurdity—a psychological mechanism largely absent in modern conflicts. Field research with religious extremists in Pakistan reveals how leaders systematically eliminate this capacity for self-reflection, replacing it with apocalyptic seriousness. When Narendra Modi frames elections as civilizational battles or Benjamin Netanyahu invokes ancient prophecies to justify strikes on Iran, they mirror the crows and owls’ early phase of mutual incomprehension, but without the fable’s redemptive progression. Digital platforms have exacerbated this by creating algorithmically-enforced echo chambers where, unlike the birds’ face-to-face interactions, conflicting perspectives never genuinely meet.
Three pathological patterns emerge from this analysis. First, the sacralization of politics transforms governance into theological performance, as seen in Modi’s temple inaugurations or Iran’s martyrdom rhetoric. Second, the politicization of religion turns spiritual traditions into territorial markers, evident in Pakistan’s blasphemy laws serving as de facto border defenses. Third, social media’s engagement economies reward outrage over nuance, with data showing a 73% increase in interfaith hate speech across South Asian platforms since 2020. These forces combine to create what might be termed perceptual incarceration—a state where, like the pre-reconciliation birds, groups literally cannot see beyond their ideological blinders.
Yet the fable suggests emancipation remains possible through three channels. Cognitive disarmament—teaching religious literacy as spectrum perception rather than binary opposition—could replicate the birds’ visual reconciliation. Indonesia’s pesantren schools demonstrate how theological education can foster pluralistic vision when it emphasizes shared hermeneutic traditions. Institutional innovation must replace obsolete frameworks like the UN Security Council veto system with decentralized, blockchain-based mediation platforms that incentivize cooperation. Ultimately, an existential imperative emerges: to adopt what might be called the Avian Ethical Maxim—that any doctrine causing permanent perceptual blindness (whether literal or metaphorical) must be reformed or rejected.
The owls and crows achieved peace not through negotiated compromise but by recognizing their mutual absurdity—a lesson geopolitics has yet to learn. When Netanyahu calls Iran “the new Amalek” or Pakistani textbooks depict Hindus as inherently treacherous, they perpetuate what the birds transcended: the confusion of perceptual limitations with cosmic truths. Climate change may force the issue, creating an ecological equivalent to the fable’s existential threat that finally compels cooperation. Until then, the parable stands as both warning and possibility: our conflicts reflect not clashing truths, but complementary blind spots that humor and humility alone can heal.
About the authors:
Irshad Ahmad Mughal
Dr. Qurat-Ul-Ain Rana
Irshad Ahmad Mughal and Dr. Qurat-ul-Ain Rana form a formidable intellectual partnership in contemporary Pakistani scholarship. Prof. Mughal, renowned for his Urdu translations of Paulo Freire’s revolutionary works and decades of teaching political philosophy at Punjab University, joins forces with Dr. Rana, an accomplished sociologist and social commentator whose razor-sharp analyses regularly grace Pakistan’s premier journals. Together, their collaborative writings for Pressenza weave rigorous academic insight with urgent social critique—bridging Western critical theory with South Asian realities to illuminate pathways for transformative change.”