Shaista Khan was the master of the schoolhouse in the precinct of Orazha — a sprinkling of huts spread over a wide area — but a good way from the nearest houses, nestling in a valley between two ridges. It was a simple hut with its walls of juniper logs and juniper bark roof set in a small clearing. In front, a little to the side of the hut, the teacher sat on a chair with a desk and spread out in front on a blanket on the ground were a bunch of girls and boys poring over their books. To the left of the pupils, the national flag hanging limply on its pole in the absence of a breeze declared this a government school.
I went up and asked the master if I could have five minutes with him. Shaista Khan flashed an impish smile and said I could have ten. Indeed, as I left him about half an hour later, it was this waggish smile and the jaunty air he flaunted that I found very endearing. He seemed the kind of man you could entirely trust, someone you would like to be friends with.
Of the Sarangzai sub-clan of Kakars, 32 years old and a graduate, Shaista Khan had been a teacher for eight years in 2007 (when I met him). I imagined he would be a native of Orazha or some nearby village. But he was from Ziarat town. Six days a week he set off from home at 6.00 AM the same way we had come to ring the bell at eight. For the next four and a half hours he taught before returning. That particular morning he had walked through pouring rain.
I wheedled him about the difficulty of having to walk to work and back, hoping for him to whine. But Shaista Khan said something that brought tears to my eyes. ‘Someone has to do this work and fate has bestowed the responsibility upon me. I look upon my vocation as a responsibility to these young people.’
How many of us in Jinnah’s Pakistan would look upon our salaried work and that, too, in such adverse conditions, as a responsibility that we would not willingly shirk? Shaista Khan was a man truly remarkable. It surely is persons like him who keep this country going.
There was another school some ways away in the same valley, Shaista Khan said. But the master there, obviously not of the same mettle as our man, had not been attending his duties. My query regarding the other teacher’s absence was met with a smile and silence. I persisted and Shaista Khan parried the question with the information that an old student of his was looking after that school. His was only a primary school, that is, up to the fifth grade. After that the boys went off to the middle school at Ziarat, but in this strict Pashtun culture, the girls were then confined to the home.
This good man privately coached those of his girl students who wanted to carry on. Since Orazha was a village of poor people, Shaista Khan sometimes even had to purchase his students’ books for them. One such girl student, having finished grade nine, the highest for a girl in the area, was now the unpaid teacher in the school. The teacher, the government-appointed skiver, played truant.
I coaxed him to get him to bad-mouth his delinquent colleague. But not a word came from him. Just his jaunty smile. So here is a true hero of Pakistan that we do not even know of. Banish the notion that Shaista Khan will ever be acknowledged.
Published in The Express Tribune, April 7th, 2012.
COMMENTS (10)
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@Max: Not only was the article by Salman Rasheed regading Shaista Khan, a hope for many in this region, your comments were on par the same level of being extraordinary in this day and age. You bring hope to me and many like me who want to do the greater good for the community..I am lost for wards..truly..The name Shaista derived from the word Khaista in pashto means beautiful..Hence the whole article revolving around Shaists Khans selfless feats is Shaista in itself.. the work you and Shaista is undoubtly and fittingly beautiful..May Sahista, you and the rest of the unsung heroes out there be blessed and may there be many more of you to shine this land when all lights seem to fade.....
Teachers like him are an endangered speceis.Happy to read the appreciative comments.
I am a Manager at an NGO in Balochistan,. We are working with the Government and other Partners in the development of District Ziarat. If i find Shaista Khan, for which i will make an honest attempt, I will try to do everything i can to ease his access to local male and female students. I will also try to make sure that the school at which he teaches is well provided for. Would love to be of any use to such a guy!
excellant article.
@author - I like reading your articles. Waiting for more incredible real life stories. Amidst an army of cynical men and women and a society in turmoil, likes of Shaista Khan are real life heros - unsung but the kind who keep the flame of hope ever burning bright. I wish him all the best and success in his endeavor.
Sir, There are actually (or at least were) many who do or did it. I am a product of such schools and some of my worthy-teachers use to walk or bike from distant villages. The school use to close at 2:30 PM and they will stay and work with us to get ready for eighth grade exam that was conducted by the Punjab Dept. of Education. About two months before the exam we were required to stay school at night and work for our exams. Our teachers will also stay with us and work on our learning skills. There was no extra charge for all these services except a small "thank you" at the end of the school year and a garland of roses around the teachers' neck/s. They had their families and will leave them behind to visit only on weekends. I am a teacher at a university in a distant land and I am what I am because of my teachers. I learned so much from them and do a few of the things that they did. One of these is to be in my office at 6:00 AM (rain or shine), and in my thirty-eight years of teaching career: I never took a day off for no reason, took only nine sick leaves, was never late to my work except once (traffic jam on the intestate I take to get to work) but still made it by 7:20 AM. Had a police officer seen me zig-zaging on highway lanes and then driving on the shoulders, I am sure I would have been ticketed, but they were too busy in taking care of the major accident. I am getting close to retirement now and in the words of Kaasmiri, "we are the dwindling lights of the morning." But I can assure you that the next generation is neither sluggish nor hopeless. My younger colleagues are as hardworking, analytically as sophisticated, and intellectually as stimulating as anyone can think. I just returned from a major national conference and was quite impressed by the quality of their work: be it conceptual clarity, analytically sophistication, or quest for new methodology. Enjoyed reading your essay and am glad that Shiasta Khan is doing a great job. We need more Shaiasta Khans. Shaista Khan: proud of you for being a brother in the profession. Keep up the good work young man.
I am sure there many people like him in many societies around the world. These types are the ones who restore hope in humanity after you get your senses bombarded by inhumanity of humans on a daily basis. Great piece. Need more like this one.
Dear Salman sahib, It was really nice to read the piece. But in continuation of our last conversation, I do take exception to your statement "Banish the notion that Shaista Khan will ever be acknowledged."
To me, the fact that you wrote about him is "acknowledgement" and I trust many a reader would be moved by Shaista Khan's deeds and your description of them. If by any chance, even one single deed worthy of "Jinnah's Pakistan" is performed as a result of this, that sir would be more than any "acknowledgement" that the high and mighty of this land could ever bestow.
Thanks.
I believe that individuals such as Shaista Khan do these great works not because they want people to applaud them, but they them selves achieve great satisfaction in helping their country men succeed.
These are the people that will build our country, not politicians, lawyers, chief ministers.