Gateway to justice.

In the parable, Before the Law, Franz Kafka represents the law as a physical space. The entire story is about a man who is trying to get through a gateway that will let him enter into the law. As this man approaches, he seems that though the gate is open, there is a gatekeeper in front of it. The gatekeeper tells the man that he cannot let him through. The man asks if he will be allowed in later. The gatekeeper says it's possible, but it remains unclear as to why the man isn't allowed, or if he will be allowed in the future. The gatekeeper warns that there are more gatekeepers ahead. The man did not expect such difficulties.

The law should always be accessible to everyone, he thinks, but as he looks more closely at the gatekeeper, he decides that it would be better to wait till he gets permission to go inside. It is because the gatekeeper seems to have a sense of authority that the man decides not to barge through. The man even offers his belongings to the gatekeepers who takes everything but does not allow him to pass. The man believes that in order to convince the gatekeeper, he just needs to ask the right question or do the right thing to be allowed in. But nothing the man does seems to matter. The gatekeeper asks the man some questions, but he doesn't seem interested in the response. Years and years have passed, but the man continues to wait by the gate until he is old and frail. He is still entirely fixated on it. He finally sees light coming out of the gateway and realises that he has one question left: everyone strives after the law, so how is that in these many years no one except him has requested entry, he asks. The gatekeeper replies, no one else can gain entry since this entrance was assigned only to you. The man dies and the gatekeeper closes the gates.

The plight of the man is synonymous with the citizens of Pakistan. It is not the story of any individual Pakistani, but rather of the collective masses of Pakistan who are awaiting justice while waiting outside courtrooms doors and behind bars. They are...

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