By
Ramachandra Guha
04.07.20
Military
historians know Balakot as the place where the armies of Maharaja Ranjit Singh
and Syed Ahmad Barelvi fought a major battle in May 1831. The aam aadmi knows
Balakot as the place where the Indian Air Force launched a raid on a
Jaish-e-Mohammad training camp in February 2019.
Mira
Behn.
Wikimedia
Commons
----
This column
is set in the same place, although it deals with neither of these major events,
but with a third, which happened in between. In May 1939, a great Indian
patriot visited Balakot and its surroundings, and left behind an account of the
landscape and the people who inhabited it. This is contained in her unpublished
diary, a copy of which I found in the archives.
This Indian
patriot was originally named Madeleine Slade. The daughter of a British
Admiral, she became a follower of Mahatma Gandhi, living with him in his
ashrams in Ahmedabad and Sevagram. She changed her name to Mira; and, as a
further mark of her identification with her adopted country, went to prison for
long stretches during the freedom struggle. As someone who crossed racial
boundaries to take the side of the oppressed, Mira Behn has been widely
commemorated in the literature on the nationalist movement.
I knew a
lot about Mira Behn, but discovered only recently that she had visited Balakot
in 1939. At that time, what are now the sovereign, separate, nations of India
and Pakistan did not exist. Balakot fell in the North West Frontier Province of
British India. The province was home to a group known as the Khudai
Khitmatgars, who were led by a follower of Gandhi even more remarkable than
Mira Behn. His name was Khan Abdul Ghaffar Khan, and he had, by the force of
character and example, persuaded the war-like Pathans to embrace the credo of
non-violence and inter-faith harmony.
In the
spring of 1939, Gandhi sent Mira to the Frontier Province to promote spinning
and weaving. It was on this trip that she visited Balakot, travelling there by
road from the town of Abbottabad (now famous/notorious as the place where Osama
bin Laden was hiding, before he was detected and killed by United States Navy
Seals). This is how Mira described the scenery en route in her diary: ‘Round
the villages and farms, and along the ravines there are green trees, while the
fields, all gently terraced, and forming slopes and curves like the sounds of
the sea show a delicate variety of browns and greens, picked out here and there
with an emerald rice field. And all this little world surrounded by blue hills
and the great snow mountains beyond.’
Halfway to
Balakot, Mira and her Khudai Khitmatgar companions stopped for the night. Early
the next morning she took a walk. She found that ‘work had already begun in the
fields. Treading out of corn, winnowing and ploughing are all in progress. As I
was returning home the sweet summer notes of the cuckoo fell on my ear’.
After
breakfast Mira and her companions set off for Balakot. On the way they passed a
forest bungalow which she thought ‘a possible place where Bapuji might have some
rest and quiet’. It was at a comfortable altitude of 3,900 feet: ‘all alone in
the fir woods, with peeps of the snows above and the mountain valleys below, it
is certainly a very attractive spot, but water is scarce’. (Gandhi had come to
the Frontier Province the previous year, and was contemplating another visit.
Although this never took place, it is strange to contemplate that the Mahatma
might have taken a health cure in a Forest Bungalow so close to Balakot).
The way to
the village of Balakot lay through the valley of the river Kumbar. The road was
‘narrow and rough’, as well as ‘steep and twisty’, and the car found it hard to
negotiate the bumps and bends. Mira found the scenery absorbing, though, for
the road ran ‘along near the right bank of the river, which is a big torrent,
racing and tumbling down from the snow mountains. In its haste, as it rushes
over its rocky bed, and dashes against the many twists and turns of its course,
it rises into waves as formidable as the Sabarmati in flood. Here and there
along its banks and shallows are great tree trunks that have got caught up on
their way to the Jhelum, while others more successful pass headlong on down the
centre of the stream’.
Having reached her destination, Mira provided
a characteristically vivid picture of the place. ‘Balakot is a large village
fitted closely around one side of a little hill like a bee-hive, situated
exactly at the entrance to the Kagan Valley. It has no road to it. Only stony
foot-paths which are, in parts, more like stairways, and very often have a
stream running down them. The bazaar is tightly packed, the roof of the house
below often making the terrace of the house above. Among the shop-keepers many
Hindus and Sikhs are to be seen’.
Mira had
been told that the Gujjar shepherds who lived in Balakot ‘spin and weave the
wool of their flocks into very good blankets’. But, to her disappointment, the
Gujjars were not in station, having gone on their annual summer migration into
the pastures in the higher mountains. However, seeing her crestfallen look, her
escort, a Khudai Khitmatgar leader named Abbas Khan, said he would send a
messenger to bring some Gujjars down to the village by the next day. They came,
whereupon Mira ‘asked them various questions about their woollen industry’.
From
Balakot, Mira and her escorts proceeded further into the mountains. They halted
at a village named Bhogarmang, which had terraced rice fields neatly laid out,
as well as weaving and bee-keeping. Mira was impressed by this, ‘but the thing
which rejoiced my heart more than anything else in this village’, she wrote,
‘was the living Hindu-Muslim Unity.’ She found that a ‘Hindu family, headed by
a dear little old white-haired man, was on the sweetest terms with the young
Khans who said that he had been the friend of their Father and Grandfather, and
that the two communities had always lived in an atmosphere of mutual aid and
consideration’. On hearing this, wrote Mira, ‘the prayer which instinctively
rose in my heart was “May no ‘Leaders’ ever reach this little village and spoil
its sweet and natural life!”’
This
village, a model of Hindu-Muslim harmony, was Mira’s last stop. The next
morning, she left for Abbottabad. A few weeks later she was back in Sevagram
with Gandhi. In September 1939 the Second World War broke out in Europe,
changing history forever. Among the consequences of the War for India (and
Indians) was a deepening divide between Hindus and Muslims. This was stoked and
provoked by the ‘Leaders’ Mira feared; who existed in large numbers in both
communities. Over the course of the War, the spirit of communal harmony that
had once existed in the Frontier Province broke down completely, with Ghaffar
Khan’s party rapidly ceding ground to the rival Muslim League. Although the
NWFP did not experience riots as bloody as in the Punjab, after August 1947 the
Hindus and Sikhs who lived there had to leave Pakistan and take refuge in
India.
The Balakot
that Mira visited in 1939 has changed beyond recognition. It no longer has a
multi-religious character; instead, it now has a camp to train fighters
promoting Islamic fundamentalism. The landscape must surely be very different
too; as in other mountain regions in South Asia, the forests would have thinned
out rapidly, the charming stone-and-wood houses replaced by ugly concrete
structures, and the once thriving traditional crafts on the verge of
extinction.
This column
presents a fragment of historical memory, but let me end with a reflection on
what the present can learn from the past. There are no more than a handful of
Hindus and Sikhs left in the province of Pakistan once known as NWFP, and now
called Khyber Pakhtunkhwa. On the other hand, there remains a large (and often
vulnerable) Muslim minority in most Indian states. Can one hope that the
‘mutual aid and consideration’ between Hindus and Muslims that Mira once saw
around Balakot will be securely established in villages across our country? Or
will our ‘Leaders’ prevent it?
Original
Headline: A road less travelled: Lessons from the history of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa
Source: The Telegraph India
URL: https://newageislam.com/islam-politics/lessons-history-khyber-pakhtunkhwa-madeleine/d/122282
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