
By Abdul Rehman Patel
“When the first window breaks and no one repairs it — the entire building eventually collapses.” Civilizations do not crumble overnight. They decay quietly, one ignored fracture at a time. The philosopher Michael Zapato once demonstrated this truth through an experiment that would become a metaphor for moral and political decline. He parked two identical old cars in two very different places: one in The Bronx — a rough, crime-prone district of New York — and the other in Palo Alto, an affluent, orderly city in California. Within a day, the car in The Bronx was stripped bare — the battery stolen, the windows smashed, the tyres gone. The Palo Alto car, however, remained untouched for an entire week.
Then Zapato did something simple but profound. He broke one of its windows with a hammer and walked away. Within days, the car too was gutted, piece by piece, until only its metal skeleton stood in the sunshine. That experiment birthed what came to be known as the Broken Window Theory — the idea that collapse never begins with catastrophe; it begins with neglect. Disorder is contagious. When a single act of wrong is left unrepaired, it sends a signal: chaos is permissible here. The first broken window is never just a pane of glass — it is the first crack in a civilization’s moral architecture. And in that reflection, Pakistan today finds itself staring into the mirror.
When we look at our constitutional order, it feels increasingly like that abandoned car — a structure once whole, now quietly dismantled by indifference. What began as a republic built on the rule of law and accountability is fast becoming a playground for power — where rules bend, justice hesitates, and privilege drives unchallenged through the wreckage. In its early years, the Islamic state was not just an experiment in governance but in moral discipline. The story of Caliph Umar ibn al-Khattab (RA) remains a timeless lesson. When he wore a robe that appeared longer than what one piece of cloth from the treasury could make, a companion stood and asked: “O leader of the believers, each man received one piece — how is yours complete?”
Umar did not rebuke him for insolence. He called for his son Abdullah, who explained that he had given his share to his father. In that simple exchange lay the essence of justice — that even the ruler must account for his robe. That was the foundation of Islamic governance: power was never sacred; accountability was. No one stood above the law. However, today, in Pakistan, that sacred window of accountability has been shattered — and no one seems willing to repair it. After the passage of the 18th Amendment, there was a sense, however fragile, that the balance of power had finally been restored between the federation and the provinces. It felt as though, after years of distortion, the constitutional house was being rebuilt.
Yet somewhere along the way, a small crack appeared. A minor violation here, a compromise there. No one fixed it. Now, under the shadow of the 27th Amendment, that crack has widened into a gaping wound. The new proposal, if enacted, risks institutionalizing immunity for a select few — creating a class of individuals who can neither be questioned nor tried, neither investigated nor arrested. Whether in office or out of it, they would stand above the law, untouchable. This is not reform. It is fortification. Not democracy, but the architecture of impunity. The constitution was meant to shield citizens from the excesses of power, not to shield power from the reach of justice.
History has written this lesson many times in many lands: the day a law is written to protect a ruler instead of a republic, that day marks the beginning of decline. Once, our political battles were between rival parties — fierce, partisan, sometimes vindictive, but still anchored in the belief that institutions, especially the courts, could mediate and restore order. That belief is fading. Now the struggle is not between parties, but between politicians and institutions themselves — between those who wield power and those meant to restrain it. And those battles never end in victory; they end in ruins. The first tremors will reach the economy. Investors retreat when justice is uncertain.
However, it demands courage — the courage to hold the powerful accountable, to put principle above personality, to revive the spirit of justice that once defined this republic. Repairing that window will not happen through speeches or ceremonies. It will happen through the small, stubborn acts of those who still believe in the rule of law — judges who resist pressure, journalists who refuse silence, citizens who question what they are told not to question. Every act of accountability, however small, is a patch of glass fitted back into the frame. If we fail, then one day we will stand before the ruins of our own making and whisper the oldest lament of fallen nations: no enemy did this to us — we did it to ourselves, through silence.
The poet Faiz Ahmed Faiz once warned against such a dawn — one where light burns only in palaces, where the joys of a few eclipse the hopes of the many. His words echo now like prophecy:
“The lamps that burn only in palaces,
That carry the joys of a chosen few,
That hide in the shade of compromise —
Such a constitution, such a sunless dawn,
I refuse.”
If we are to honor that refusal, then let us begin not with grand reforms or loud promises, but with a single, simple act — repair the first broken window. Because once we do, perhaps the house can still stand.
(The Pakistani-origin American writer and columnist, sheds light on various social and political issues, can be reached at news@metro-morning.com)
