
By Syeda Sonia Munawar
There is a quiet truth that prosperous societies understand and failing ones forget: that the worker who rises before dawn, who stitches the shirt on your back, who lays the brick beneath your feet, who harvests the wheat on your table, is not a servant of the economy but its very spine. Labor Day, observed each year on the first of May, is not merely a date on the calendar. It is a reminder written in the language of sacrifice. It is a promise renewed. And in a country like Pakistan, where the working class carries the nation on its shoulders while often standing in the shadows of neglect, that promise demands more than speeches. It demands action.
The origins of this day reach back to 1886 in Chicago, a city of stockyards and railroads, where workers dared to ask for something that should never have been a luxury: an eight-hour workday. They did not ask for mansions. They did not ask for holidays on every shore. They asked for time. Time to rest. Time to see their children. Time to simply live. The movement cost lives. Workers were shot, arrested, hanged. But from that blood rose a global consciousness that labor is not a commodity and that human beings are not machines. Today, from Havana to Hanoi, from Karachi to Kolkata, May Day is celebrated not as a victory won but as a struggle still unfolding.
In Pakistan, that struggle is both visible and invisible. Visible in the construction worker balanced on a steel beam under the April sun. Visible in the woman stitching footballs in a Sialkot shed for pennies a piece. Visible in the farmer in rural Punjab who still has no guaranteed price for his crop and no safety net if the rains fail. Invisible because too many of us look away. We drive on roads we did not build, live in homes we did not raise, wear clothes we did not sew, and yet we rarely pause to ask whether the hands behind these comforts are warm or cold, secure or desperate.
The numbers tell a sobering story. Pakistan has a labor force of nearly seventy million people, the majority of whom work in informal, unprotected conditions. Minimum wages, where they exist on paper, are routinely ignored. Workplace safety is a suggestion rather than a standard. Child labor persists in brick kilns and carpet looms. Domestic workers, most of them women and girls, have no legal recognition and therefore no legal recourse. Trade unions, once a vibrant force for collective bargaining, have been weakened by both policy and neglect. And the idea of social security for the working poor remains, for too many families, a distant fantasy.
This is not merely a matter of charity. It is a matter of economics as cold and hard as steel. A worker who is underpaid cannot educate his children. A worker who is exhausted from fourteen-hour shifts cannot learn a new skill. A worker who has no health insurance will not take a sick day, and will instead spread illness across the factory floor. A worker who has no pension will work until his knees give out, and then his family will beg. This is not dignity. This is waste. And no nation ever grew rich by wasting its people.
Skill development is another urgent frontier. The world of work is changing. Automation, artificial intelligence and global supply chains are rewriting the rules. Pakistani workers cannot be left behind with outdated tools and no training. The government and private sector together must build technical training centers, mobile education units for rural areas, and digital literacy programs for young workers entering the gig economy. A worker who knows how to operate a modern sewing machine or maintain a solar panel is not just an employee. She is an engine of growth.
But beyond policies and programs, there is something simpler and harder. Respect. The most radical demand of Labor Day is not for higher wages, though wages matter. It is for recognition. To look a sanitation worker in the eye and not turn away. To thank the man who delivers your parcel as if he is your equal, because he is. To teach our children that a plumber and a physician both deserve honor, because both serve. Development is not merely about buildings and roads, as grand as those may be. It is about whether the people who build them can sleep at night without fear of tomorrow.
Labor Day teaches us this lesson each year, and each year we risk forgetting it by the second of May. But the workers do not forget. They remember every morning when they leave for work before the mosque’s first prayer. They remember every evening when they count coins to see if there will be dinner. The question is whether the rest of us will remember as well. A prosperous worker is not a favor granted by the state. A prosperous worker is the foundation of a strong and prosperous nation. And that foundation, if we are wise, we will build not with slogans but with justice.
(The writer is an IT professional & Social media expert, also write opinions on various issues, can be reached at editorial@metro-morning.com)


