January 4 marks 15 years since my father, Salmaan Taseer, was taken from us — not only from his family, but from a nation still grappling with the questions he dared to ask and the values he refused to abandon.
Time has a way of softening grief, but it does not dilute memory. For those of us who loved him, his absence is permanent. For Pakistan, his legacy remains unfinished — alive in debate, resistance, courage, and the pursuit of a more tolerant, pluralistic society.
Salmaan Taseer was many things: a businessman, a politician, a governor, a public intellectual. But above all, he was a man of conviction. He spoke when it was dangerous to speak. He stood firm when retreat would have been easier — and safer. His stance on human rights, minority protection, and the misuse of religion in politics was not performative; it was principled, even when it isolated him.
Fifteen years on, the questions he raised remain unresolved. The space for dissent remains fragile. The cost of speaking freely is still high. Yet, I believe his courage planted seeds — seeds that continue to grow quietly in classrooms, courtrooms, newsrooms, and living rooms across Pakistan.
As his son, I saw the private man behind the public figure. I saw a father who believed in debate at the dinner table, who encouraged disagreement, who taught us that loving one’s country means holding it to higher standards, not shielding it from criticism. He believed Pakistan deserved honesty, not fear-driven conformity.
Remembering Salmaan Taseer is not about revisiting tragedy alone. It is about reaffirming values — freedom of expression, rule of law, respect for human dignity, and the courage to stand against extremism in all its forms. These are not Western ideals or imported concepts; they are universal principles rooted in justice and humanity.
On this fifteenth anniversary, I do not ask for agreement with everything my father said or did. He himself welcomed disagreement. What I ask instead is reflection: on what kind of society silences its thinkers, and what kind of future awaits a nation that fears its own voices.
History often redeems those it once condemned. But redemption should not come decades too late, after the cost has already been paid in blood. The real tribute to Salmaan Taseer lies not in words alone, but in the courage to keep conversations alive — especially the difficult ones.
For me, he will always be my father. For Pakistan, he remains a reminder that progress demands bravery — and that some battles, though costly, are worth fighting.
Fifteen years on, his voice still echoes. It is up to us whether we choose to listen.
Shehryar Taseer is the Publisher of Daily Times Newspaper and Managing Director of First Capital Group, overseeing strategy, development, and expansion across media & diversified business ventures.
