Category Archives: Pakistan

Anarkali: the myth, legend and public history.

Located in the heart of the Punjab civil secretariat, Lahore, the octagonal shaped building is a legacy of Emperor Jehangir. The grandeur of the Mughal-era building and the tomb inside is a marvel. After numerous incarnations, the tomb today is home to the Punjab Archives and is more popularly known as simply Anarkali. Taking the name from the celebrated relationship between Prince Saleem (Jahangir) and Anarkali (Sharif un-Nissa aka Nadira Begum), a courtesan in the court of Emperor Akbar. There are many different accounts of this relationship and the death of Anarkali, with little history authenticity. Whether she died naturally or under more mysterious circumstances or whether Akbar ordered her to be buried alive in a wall. We may never know the truth, but the legend and the myth of the passionate affair between Saleem and Anarkali has inspired many.

Anarkali: myth, mystery and history

The Film: 60 years on, Mughal-E-Azam continues to make waves

The drama: Alain Desoulieres, Historical Fiction and Style: The Case of Anarkali, The Annual of Urdu Studies 

The many incarnations of the tomb:

‘The tomb of Anarkali is one of the most significant buildings of the Mughal period. It is an ingeniously planned octagonal building. Circular in shape and roofed by a lofty dome, the tomb once surrounded a garden, called Anarkali Garden, but during the last couple of hundred years it has been put to several uses. Under the Sikhs, the mausoleum was occupied by Kharak Singh. Later it served as the residence of General Ventura, the Italian General of Ranjit Singh’s army. Under the British, the tomb was converted into Church (a protestant Church) in 1851 right after 2 years of British Control on Lahore. Few years later, it was converted to St. James’ Church in 1857 till 1891. Since then, it has been used as Punjab Archives Museum with an amazing treasure for those interested in the history of British Punjab.’ Story of Anarkali and her Tomb at Lahore.

An extract on the Tomb Anarkali from R.E.M Wheeler, Five Thousand Years of Pakistan: An Archaeological outline. With a Preface by Fazlur Rahman. Royal Book Company, first published in 1950. Page 84.

Anarkali or “Pomegranate Blossom” was the nickname of an attractive girl who was brought up in Abkar’s harem and was suspected by the emperor of carrying on an intrigue with prince Salim, afterwards the emperor Jahangir. The story is variously told, but it would appear that the girl was barbarously executed in the year A.D. 1599. When Salim came to the throne, he strove to make some amends for the tragedy by building a large tomb over her grave. This tomb stands in the ground of the Punjab Secretariat to the south of the old city, and has passed through vicissitudes which have concealed all its original decoration. It is hexagonal on plan, with a domed octagonal tower at each corner, and is crowned by a central dome on a tall cylindrical drum. After 1851 it was used as a Christian church, and for this purpose the arched openings in the eight sides were wholly or partially walled in, a gallery (now removed) was constructed in the interior with an external staircase, and the whole structure was whitewashed internally and externally. The large monolithic marble gravestone had already been moved out of the building in the Sikh period, when the tomb was turned into a residence, amongst the occupants being General Ventura, the famous Italian officer of the Sikh Government. The stone was subsequently replaced by the British within the tomb, but in one of the side bays, not in its original central position. It has been stated that the actual grave was also moved to the present site of the gravestone, but digging in 1940 in the middle of the building revealed the former still intact five feet below the present floor, in its proper place. From accounts of the discovery, the grave would appear to be of plastered brickwork. The building is now used as the Punjab Record Office.

The gravestone bears well-cut inscriptions which include the date of the death of Anarkali with the words “In Lahore” and the date of the construction of the tomb (A.D. 1615). It also bears the ninety-nine attributes of God, and a poignant couplet,
obviously composed by Jahangir himself, which may be translated thus:

“Ah, could I behold the face of my beloved once more,
I would give thanks unto my God until the day of resurrection.”

Elsewhere on the marble are the words: ” The profoundly enamoured Salim, son of Akbar.”

It is for these inscriptions, and for the vast size of the building which reinforces their
sincerity, that the tomb is noteworthy, rather than for any special architectural quality.

Today the documents belong to the people of Punjab at the Punjab Archives are being digitised for posterity, and will hopefully allow historians to view untapped accounts and records. This is a mammoth task but at least the process itself has started. See the project website: http://dap.itu.edu.pk/

Impact Of Nationalization On BECO And Pakistan Economic Development

Little known history of CM Latif and Batala Engineering Company (BECO), Lahore.

Anika Khan's avatarRamblings of a Pakistani Woman.

There had been many times in Pakistan’s history when stupid decisions were taken by the government. Nationalization in Bhutto’s era was one of those decisions. 22 Families lost everything that they had worked  for all their lives. BECO (Batala Engineering Company) is one such example.

Late Chaudhry Mohammad Latif was the founder and chairman of the Batala Engineering Company (BECO). After attending a meeting of leading Muslims in Batala, who wanted to establish Muslim industries in the face of Hindu dominance of retail, that he struck upon the idea of forming BECO.The company was established in 1932. , He sold its first 10 shares to a lime merchant for Rs 10. In the early years, he worked almost single-handedly to build up the company from its first workshop in two rooms and a veranda. Over the course of the next forty years, and in spite of losing much of his business…

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“The slogan of every woman here must be Educate, Educate, Educate!”

PT, 14 August, 1950
The Pakistan Times, 14 August, 1950

This is a small section from a discussion on the problems and solution regarding women in Pakistan. It is a full page piece written in The Pakistan Times Supplement, there is no information on the writer, other than her name, Mrs M. Saied. It offers a detailed discussion/opinion on women in relation to education, purdah, tradition, customs, marriage, economic dependency and more.

THE PURDAH

One of the greatest enemies of womanhood in Pakistan is the rigid religious code that tradition seems to demand. There is no code or rule or law, ancient or modern which has been passed for the whim or amusement of those in authority. Necessity of some kind or the other has demanded the code and it has been given out as a law to be obeyed. The only trouble in Pakistan is that traditions which are not now necessary are still being followed. Take purdah the biggest bone of contention between the bearded maulvis and the “Europeanised” young men and women. Which Muslim country is observing purdah with the rigidity with which people in Pakistan do? Yet we acknowledge they are Muslim countries. When their men and women come here, we embrace them and hail them as our Islamic brothers. Yet if a Pakistani woman is without a burqa what pious hands of Ya Allah Tauba! are lifted to heaven and the women are told that they are not Muslims but Kaffirs. Why? Is the purdah a hukum for only Pakistani women? I would request all pro-Purdah people to remember that if a Turk, Irani, Iraqi, Arabian or Egyptian woman without a burqa is a Muslim, so is the Pakistani woman who goes with no veil. Whether to be in purdah or to be out of it, worries many women. For the future of womanhood in this country, the girls should be allowed to lead their lives unburdened by the burqa. This will teach them to face the world untrammelled by the handicaps that a woman brought up in burqa suffers from. The other solution is that those already out of burqa should behave in a modest manner. I do not mean that they should sit or walk with hesitant steps and downcast eyes. No, but rather a quiet gentle manner of speech and behaviour. During 1944 in Calcutta, a British Colonel, talking of the W.А.С.ls said to me, “The Indian (pre-partition days, remember) girls never seem to lose their dignity.

Even the eighteen-year old girls conduct themselves with a lady-like charm that I have not found in women of any other nation.” Our problem is the abolition of the burqa. The solution is that we show the world that we can be “gentle women” of modesty without enveloping ourselves in yards and yards of suffocating material. And if any young lad waxes too emphatic on the benefits of the burqa I would advise his mother to keep him in purdah for a week. It will cure him for ever of saying that women should go about covered in veils. For those girls who have to attend schools or colleges and who do not go in buses but have to walk there in groups of three or four; for those who might take an outing with other women neighbours and friends; for those who make up a picnic party or who decide to go to a cinema show there is the loathsome problem of goondaism. It fills me with horror, I feel as if I am touching something putrid when I have to talk of this. This is nevertheless a very present and definite problem for women in Pakistan.

Three girls of school age used to pass along a certain road every day. And every day a certain young man would call out to them, telling them. The girls would go along their way in silence. The third day of this occurrence, when the same young man began to pass remarks, the tallest of the girls turned round, snatched the cane which the young fellow was carrying and gave him the beating he was itching for! The passers-by collected; cries of “Shabash! Zindabad! Changa! Changa!” rang out on all sides. The boy was taken to the Police Station. The three girls still pass on that road on their way to school.

If the women have courage, they will in time get rid of these goonda elements. Let there be no secrecy, no false shame about these occurrences. They must all be brought to right. When public opinion condemns a thing or a person, it has to go. Pressure from all sides must be put on the Government that they should deal very harshly, mercilessly and with absolute justice when a goonda is caught in any act of molestation. Women here are just getting used to the outside world. They must be given adequate protection to step out and be as free to move as they require. Instead of this they are jeered at, their personal appearance and their garments are discussed, they are deliberately pushed and shoved.

Heads of male institutions should arrange for lectures on etiquette. By the help of posters and other publicity, every Pakistani should be taught how to behave in the presence of women. It is very sad that in Pakistan there are many so-called educated men who are ill-mannered. They must be punished if seen doing or saying anything unbecoming before a woman.

One problem which does not arise for every woman and is yet of vital importance to the womanhood of Pakistan is that of divorce. There are so many rights which belong to women and which are very clearly given to them by the Prophet himself. When a woman does not observe purdah there are so many who twist and misquote the Holy Quran to prove their point. But when it comes to anything favourable to women and the women themselves quote it, they are told, Oh No, that is not the meaning at all.”

I hold no brief for divorce. It should be the last resort for ending an unhappy married life; but under circumstances which must be judged by an unbiased tribunal, a woman must be given the right to ask for and to apply for a divorce. No stigma or stain should be attached to a woman who is granted a divorce after the case has been judged by Muslim judges. The only way by which women can get these rights is by becoming active in the political sphere. The slogan of every woman here must be Educate, Educate, Educate!”

Problems are solved by everyone concerned doing their bit. And certainly it will be only by raising the standard of the women that Pakistan will find her rightful place in the modern world.

‘Foreign marriages’

Model Town, Lahore
Model Town, Lahore. © 2017 Pippa Virdee

Going through some archival footage from The Pakistan Times I come across this gem from 28 April 1960 in Letters to the editor. Written in 1960 but some of the issues highlighted in the letter still exist even today, especially in the second paragraph. What is also fascinating is how many men were really marrying ‘foreign’ girls during this period? Was it really that prevalent, enough to prompt a letter to the editor? If anyone knows more or knows of such stories please do share these with me.

May I invite your attention to a grave social problem which is becoming more and more acute day by day.

It has been observed that large number of our young men who get an opportunity to go abroad for higher education, professional studies or training come back with foreign wives. This is very frustrating for our own eligible girls. It deprives them of intelligent marriage partners. On the other hand, those who marry these foreign ladies become status conscious and become eager to raise their standards of living. Their wives feel like fish out of water in our society. They cannot freely mix with us due to a great difference in cultural, social and religious background. Naturally, they try to divert their husbands from the country’s social stream. Thus these young men – our own kith and kin – virtually become foreigners in their own milieu. This is no fault of theirs. It is a natural process.

The question is why do these young men marry abroad? The answer is very simple, in our society they have no opportunity to come in contact with girls and hence no understanding can possibly develop between them. It does not need much imagination to foresee the serious consequences of this tendency, which is the product of our defective social pattern and of the ignorance of the parents. If they give their children even a limited opportunity to mix with one another and then chose their life companions our young men will not even dream of marrying aboard, this will make for social integration and give a chance to our girls to contract suitable marriages.

Abu Saeed Ahsan Islahi, Rawalpindi

Women and Sports (in Pakistan).

Screen Shot 2018-07-05 at 16.33.00
Women of Pakistan by Pakistan Publications. (Washington, D.C.: Printed by Gibson Bros., 1949).

Insert reads: Champion athletes of Pakistan photographed with Quaid-i-Azam Mohamed Ali Jinnah, founder and first Governor-General of Pakistan, and is Miss Fatima Jinnah, after the first All-Pakistan Olympic Games held in April, 1948.

 

Screen Shot 2018-07-05 at 17.36.27
‘A tennis player’ – Women of Pakistan by Pakistan Publications. (Washington, D.C.: Printed by Gibson Bros., 1949).

Trawling through some old archival material I came across Women of Pakistan, published in 1949, it offers a visual feast of material relating to women in early Pakistan. For an official publication, it is illuminating of the time when Pakistan had just been created. There is not much on the individual women themselves but certainly the pictures themselves are great importance. While I try to discover more about this early era of sports history, I would love to know more from those who might know of women who were involved in sports or have any stories to share themselves.

 

 

 

Women and Pakistan International Airlines in Ayub Khan’s Pakistan

pia-airhostesses

Abstract:

This article weaves together several unique circumstances that inadvertently created spaces for women to emerge away from the traditional roles of womanhood ascribed to them in Pakistan. It begins by tracing the emergence of the Pakistan International Airlines (PIA) as a national carrier that provided an essential glue to the two wings of Pakistan. Operating in the backdrop of nascent nationhood, the airline opens an opportunity for the new working women in Pakistan. Based on first-hand accounts provided by former female employees, and supplementing it with official documents, newspaper reports and the advertising used for marketing at the time, it seeks to provide an illuminating insight into the early history of women in Pakistan. While the use of women as markers of modernity and propaganda is not new, here within the context of Cold War and American cultural diplomacy, the ‘modernist’ vision of the Ayub-era in Pakistan (1958-69), and its accompanying jet-age provide a unique lens through which to explore the changing role of women. The article showcases a different approach to understanding the so-called ‘golden age’ of Pakistani history: a neglected area of the international history on Pakistan, which is far too often one-dimensional.

Link to the article: https://doi.org/10.1080/07075332.2018.1472622

The Final Resting Place: Gurdwara Kartarpur Sahib

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In March 2017, in an impromptu adventure, I had the opportunity to visit Kartarpur Sahib in Pakistan. It came amidst an amazing road trip, which took me from the Radcliffe line to the Durand Line (almost). The trip was full of surprises – monuments (old and new) in situ and people on the move – and their discussion, especially of religious spaces and their historical significance. During one of these conversation, Dr. Yaqoob Khan Bangash (ITU Lahore) asked why the Sikhs never demanded Kartarpur Sahib during the discussions of the 1947 Radcliffe Boundary Commission.

Kartarpur is located in Narowal District in Pakistani Punjab. It is about 120 kms/2 hours away from Lahore and is located only 3 kms from the Indo-Pakistan border by the river Ravi. Indeed, Dera Baba Nanak is located about 1 km from the border, on the other side, east of the river Ravi in Indian Punjab. Both are visible to each other on clear days. The Gurdwara is the historic location where Guru Nanak (1469-1539) settled and assembled the Sikh community after his spiritual travels around the world. It is on the banks of the River Ravi and even today there is a nomadic and unkempt, wilderness feel to the place. Guru Nanak spent eighteen years living in Kartarpur, during which he spent time preaching to a growing congregation; the appeal of Nanak spreading from nearby areas to beyond and drawing the first Sangat to the area. Many devotees remained and settled in Kartarpur, dedicating their lives to the mission of Nanak.

The informal led to the formal, with the establishment of the first Gurdwara (the house of the guru) being built circa 1521-2. Here, free communal dinning (langar) was started, feeding all those that came and the langar remains a defining feature of Sikhism – providing free food to everyone without any prejudice. The food is simple and usually vegetarian. It is not a feast, nor does it offend anyone due to their dietary preferences. Everyone, rich or poor, sits together; equal in the house of the guru.

However, for Sikhs, Kartarpur is an especially significant place, as it marks not only the beginnings of Sikhism but also the final resting place of the first guru. The original Gurdwara complex was washed away by floods of the river Ravi and the present-day building was built with donations from Bhupinder Singh (1891-1938), Maharaja of Patiala. More recently, the Government of Pakistan has been contributing to its maintenance. The most fascinating thing about Kartarpur is the appeal of the Gurdwara to all communities. Baba Nanak is revered as a Pir, Guru and Fakir alike.

My trip to Kartarpur was during the “off-season” period and so, mostly Muslims were visiting the shrine/Gurdwara to offer their duas/prayers. Legend has it that when Guru Nanak died, his Hindu and Muslim devotees disagreed about how his last rites should be performed: cremation or burial? During this ruckus, Nanak appeared as an old man before his devotees and, seemingly, suggested delaying the decision until the following day. The following morning, the shroud covering the body was found with flowers, in place of the body. These flowers were divided, with the Hindus cremating theirs, and the Muslims buried theirs. And so, in the courtyard of the Gurdwara is a shrine to symbolise this story. Outside the Sikh tourism that takes place, which is limited, this shrine is mostly frequented by Muslims.

In August 1947, Kartarpur was in Gurdaspur district, which had all (almost) been delineated to be in Pakistan, until the late, controversial changes to the boundary line, which meant that parts of Gurdaspur went to India. Thus, at the last minute, Kartarpur ended being in close proximity of the international border. After Partition, the Sikhs were negligible in their numbers in Pakistan and Kartarpur remained closed and abandoned for over fifty years. More recently, there have been attempts to get a connecting corridor between the communities in India and Pakistan today, but this has not materialised. Going back to the question of why Kartarpur never figured as a specific request before the Boundary Commission, perhaps part of the answer lies in the fact that Sikhs believe in reincarnation of the soul and, therefore, death of the body is not the end of life’s journey.

‘Corridor connecting India with Kartarpur Sahib Shrine in Pakistan ruled out’ by Ravi Dhaliwal:

http://www.tribuneindia.com/news/punjab/community/-corridor-connecting-india-with-kartarpur-sahib-shrine-in-pak-ruled-out/400962.html

‘Visit to Kartarpur Sahib (Pakistan)’ by Dalvinder Singh Grewal: https://www.sikhphilosophy.net/threads/visit-to-kartarpur-sahib-pakistan.49707/

‘How Nanak’s Muslim followers in Pakistan never abandoned Kartarpur Sahib, his final resting place’ by Haroon Khalid: https://scroll.in/article/857302/how-nanaks-muslim-followers-in-pakistan-never-abandoned-kartarpur-sahib-his-final-resting-place

Everyone’s Guru by Yaqoob Khan Bangash: http://tns.thenews.com.pk/everyones-guru/#.WxAxiakh3OQ

From Mano Majra to Faqiranwalla: Revisiting the Train to Pakistan

New Delhi train station. © Pippa Virdee 2016

By Pippa Virdee and Arafat Safdar in South Asian Chronicle.

Khushwant Singh’s novel Train to Pakistan was published in 1956, almost ten years after the partition of India/ creation of Pakistan in 1947. Its publication inaugurated what has been called ‘South Asian Partition Fiction in English’ (Roy 2010). It remains, to date, one of the most poignant and realistic fictional accounts depicting the welter of partition and saw a sensitive screen adaptation in 1998 by Pamela Rooks. It captures one of the most horrific symbols of partition—that of the burning, charred and lifeless trains that moved migrants and evacuated refugees from one side of the border to the other. The trains that previously served to bring people and goods from disparate worlds closer together were overnight turned into targets of mob attacks and transporters of mass corpses. They thus became an emblem, a much-photographed representation (Kapoor 2013) of the wider violence and ethnic cleansing that was taking place in Panjab (Ahmed 2002: 9-28); one of the two regions divided to make way for the two new nation-states.

Selecting some key individuals in the village, relevant to and representative of our efforts to excavate the myths and memories associated with partition, and situating their sensibilities vis-à-vis the sentiments exhibited in the novel, we conducted interviews to collect and compare experiential accounts. An attempt in the Wildean spirit to attest that ‘life imitates art far more than art imitates life’, the article, located in the Faqiranwalla of 2017, looks back to the Mano Majra of 1947. In doing so, not only does it reflect on this intervening time-span and what it has done to those remembrances, but, also brings to fore the well-remarked realisation that, in this case too, ‘the past is another country’ (Judt 1992). Like in the novel then and life today, the connecting link in this article too, between Faqiranwalla and Mano Majra, is the train, as both share the overweening presence of the railways in the village, through which its life is/was governed.

Read full article: https://edoc.hu-berlin.de/handle/18452/19508

Südasien-Chronik – South Asia Chronicle 7/2017, S. 21-44 © Südasien-Seminar der Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin