It was August 12, 1947, three days before India became free. My father, a practising doctor, summoned us three brothers and asked what we intended to do? I told him that I wanted to stay in Pakistan, just as the Muslims would in India. My elder brother, who was studying medicine at Amritsar, intervened to say that Muslims would ask the Hindus to vacate the house in West Punjab just as the Muslims living in East Punjab would be asked to leave. I asked how that could be possible if the Hindus did not agree to quit. He replied that we would be forcibly ousted.
This was precisely what happened. On August 17, two days after Independence, some Muslim gentlemen came to us and requested that we leave the house. I asked one of them, where do we go? He gave the keys of his house in Jalandhar and said that we would not have to do anything because his house was well furnished and ready for occupation. We declined the offer.
But after they left, all of us sat around the dining table to decide on the future. I told them that I was staying back in Pakistan and the rest said they would be going to Amritsar and would come back once the disturbances were over.
We agreed that however dismal the scenario, we could be back, at the most, in a month’s time. My mother remarked when she was locking the house that she had a strange feeling that we were not coming back. My elder brother agreed with her.
I packed one trouser and a shirt in a blue canvas bag and parted saying that we would meet at our maternal uncle’s place at Darya Ganj in Delhi. My mother gave me Rs 120 to sustain myself until we met in Delhi. My father had made my journey easier. He told a Brigadier, who was his patient, to take his three sons across the border. He said he had no space in his Jonga and could accommodate only one of us. The next morning, I was pushed into his vehicle. I could not conceal my tears and wondered whether we would all meet again.
The journey from Sialkot to Sambrial was uneventful. But from there, the caravans of people from either side, the Hindus moving to the Indian side and the Muslims to the Pakistani part, were on the move. Suddenly, our Jonga was stopped. An old Sikh stood on the way and begged us to take his grandchild to India. I told him politely that I was still studying and would not be able to take care of his grandson, however fair his request was.
The old man said he had lost all his family members and the only survivor was his grandson. And he wanted him to live. I still recall his tearful face, but I had told him the facts. How would I bring up the child when I myself was not sure about my future? We moved on. And, as we travelled, we could see the scattered luggage all over, but the bodies had been removed by that time. The stench, however, was very much in the air.
At that time, I promised myself that I would try to foster good relations between the two countries. That was the reason why I started lighting candles on the Wagah border, a process that began some 20 years ago.
It was a small movement with just 15-20 people to begin with. Now, roughly one lakh people on this side and the people of Pakistan, though in limited numbers, have also joined the cause.
Peoples’ enthusiasm knows no bounds. But the governments are in the way. There is curfew in the entire area and one has to take permit to reach the border. I have written to Home Minister Rajnath Singh to instruct the authorities, both Border Security Force and Central Reserve Police Force, to allow us to reach the zero point, where the steel gates check the movement into either side, for lighting candles.
This exercise is confined to few Individuals. I wish that the border could be made soft and the situation became calm so that the enmity between the two countries is banished. I was on the bus that Prime Minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee rode to Lahore. There was bonhomie on both sides and I thought that the trip would resume a regular exchange of trade, joint ventures and people-to-people contact between the two nations.
But I feel disappointed when the barbed wires on either side of the border prevent people’s passage into each other’s country. In the past, intellectuals, musicians and artists could meet and hold joint programmes. But today, even that has stopped, with the governments showing rigidity in issuing visas. There is practically no contact on official and even non-official levels.
Pakistan’s new prime minister-designate Imran Khan has said in an interview that he would ensure trade and business. My only worry is that his proximity to the army may not allow him to carry out his promises. But, maybe, the army angle is being exaggerated. It also wants peace because it’s its men who have to fight the war and bear all that it entails.
The sticking point is that the decision in India is taken by the elected members of parliament, unlike in Pakistan, where the army has the last word. That’s where the problem arises. Whether or not Imran Khan will be able to convince the army top brass is difficult to say.
New Delhi should make an effort. But it has adopted a stand not to negotiate with Islamabad until Pakistan stops providing shelter to terrorists and punishes those responsible for the 2008 Mumbai attack. Imran Khan should take the initiative, keeping in view India’s demands for any cordial relations between the two countries.
(Kuldip Nayar had a long-running column in DH, going back decades. He penned this article, one of the last pieces of his writing, just before Independence Day)