The parades were spectacular. No child ever wanted to miss them. There was martial music and torchlight tattoos and lots and lots of flags. And there was the quick measured tread of hard heels on pavements slaked with the corrugated rust of a nation preparing for war. On one occasion, we caught a glimpse of the Fuhrer in his Mercedes Benz convertible, and a phalanx of arms greeted him with the Nazi salute. We were mesmerised by the goose step and the marching columns manicured like hedges in an English squire’s garden. The hot summers were delightful. We would head for the lake moored in the slow tides of flat calm afternoons. Here bright pink anatomies roasted in the sun and grandmothers in feathered felt hats and ankle-length skirts bit into sausage and bread and splashed themselves with four seven eleven. Boys with toy Messerschmitts zoomed at their war games at the edge of the lake and licked ice sticks, while their sisters in bright swimsuits were constantly threatened with photography.
The second language I learned was Urdu. My father had graduated with a Licence in Dental Surgery from the Royal College of Surgeons (LDS.RCS) from London. But instead of staying on in the UK, he decided to move back to India and accepted an assignment in the Prince of Wales Hospital in Bhopal. Like Berlin, I can never forget Bhopal — with its jungles and lakes and poets and palace intrigues, its famous wrestlers and equally famous hockey players, its shikaris and farmers and the most beautiful girls in India, descended from the Tartars, who I was able to glimpse because of my youth. Our house was opposite the smaller of the two lakes, and I was always amused by the quarter guard who stiffened to attention whenever our Austin 10 passed. We had five servants, an Irish setter and a Pomeranian and an excellent Hindu gardener who cultivated the finest English roses, gardenias and hibiscus. The Hindus were in a huge majority and lived in peace and perfect harmony with the Muslim rulers and the Christians.
The sport of the ruler and the princes was hunting tigers in Chicklod. Sometimes the beasts prowled the town at night and one rather precocious female jumped over our garden wall and made off with a buffalo calf. In the monsoon, the place was infested with snakes — cobras, pythons and Russels Vipers. We celebrated Eid and Christmas and all the Hindu holidays and in the winter, the Nawab hosted a huge ball with the police band in attendance. My greatest treasure, however, was my father’s collection of gramophone records. There were the rumbas of the golden age of Cuban music played by the orchestras of Don Azpiazu, Xavier Cugat, the Lecuona Cuban Boys and Filiberto Rico; and there were the symphonies of Beethoven and Mahler. And then, at five and a half, I was packed off to boarding school.
Published in The Express Tribune, April 19th, 2012.
2012.
COMMENTS (20)
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@Jyoti Malhotra: Thank you for your very kind remarks When I went to boarding school I learned my third language - English. I was very happy in Panchgani, that hill station tucked away in the Western Ghats, and made a lot of friends whom I tried to track down without much success when I visited Mumbai in 2006. My father migrated to Pakistan in August 1947 and two years later I was once again packed off to England where I was introduced to the works of Joyce and Yeats. I live in Karachi and have written a novel where the action takes place in Bombay and Bhopal and am looking for a publisher. ,
@Santosh K.C, Yes i agreed santosh and i tell something about northren areas of pakistan where i am belong to in our area my dad told me no body did any good thing we had school twenty miles from our village and that also just primary school thanks to creation of pakistan we have all the luxeries.
Mr Mooraj, how beautifully you write??!! What a wonderful story this is...What happened when you went to boarding school? When did you move to Pakistan? Where do you live now? How about a book which slakes our collective appetite??
Reading this article, I feel lucky to live in an independent country that has abolished the princely states and the privy purses. Its unfortunate that Nawabs and their select inner cycle of privileged royal court and employees ruled for as long as they did, and didnt get the boot earlier - wish India had its French Revolution in 1789 too. The princely rulers and their royal court all viewed their own rule as "peace and perfect harmony", to use the author's words, while they were hunted tigers at leisure.
The truth is that the "5 servants", the "Hindu gardener" and the quarter guard lived lives of quiet desperation, and peasants were oppressed by the prohibitive taxes collected by the nawabs to fund their opulent lifestyles and to buy their lackey status from British masters. Good riddance to the nawabs and the times the author writes about!!
@Ali Tanoli: Not Quite .. The walls remind me of Pre-Apartheid South Africa or the Warsaw ghetto for that matter.
@Faraz: hewers of wood and drawers of... Inadvertent mess up :)
Walls around the palestine population is reminder of east and west Germany and north south korea what a shame world cant see them
@SharifL, Please visit the occupy area of palestine i been in Al quds then decide how happy they are? Wo shaheen jo palah ho kergasoh mei - kya janey rah rasme shabazi.
@sharifL: Having lived in Israel, I must disagree. The Israeli Arab community have rights but are not treated the same as Jewish or even gentile Israelis. An Israeli citizen (Christian) with a Jewish father has more rights than a native Arab. It is true that Israel did not commit a holocaust in the occupied territories and in Israel proper. But, their treatment of both their arab population and the Palestinians is despicable. The Israeli Arabs ( approx 20% of the total population and growing) have become the "growers of wood and the drawers of water" in the state. Their right to marry non Israeli Palestinians, their right to own land and have an education are severely impaired by the state.
@Ali Tanoli: I think you are confusing Israel with Jews who were massacred. I do not defend Israeli atrocities. Israel came into exist because after Nazis tried to eliminated the whole race and other European countries refused to accept German Jews in large numbers, Europeans, particularly British created Israel where Jews were a minority. It was wrong, but let us not confuse the atrocities of Nazis. Jews had no country of their own and they were persecuted for thousand yo years in Europe. It is a shame that those children of holocaust have forgotten what persecution is. But I disagree that Israel killed Palestinians in large numbers like the nazis. After all there are a few million Palestinian arabs still living in Israel and seem to be happy there. They are also represented in Israeli parliament.
@sherifl. What happening in palestine and specially what happend in sabra camp by the hand of ariel sharon jew of izrael it was a worst than hitler killing when women and children were in saudi embassy hiding to save there lives and these arial killed them i think they had nothing to do with germany. and also whole villages wiped out in former palestine by jews of europe.
@anwer mooraj: Thank you for your input. Perhaps I was too harsh on your article. I am sure you have had great experiences starting from pre war Germany, then pre partition India to 21st century Pakistan. Yes, after the Treaty of Versailles Germans felt humiliated and nationalism got to such levels that Hitler could mobilize the germans. It was foreseeable to all at the time. But I beg to differ with your comparison of Nazis to other ruthless dictators of yesteryears. Stalin and Co. killed unlimited number of people, true but their crime was to kill those opposing their regimes, whereas Hitler killed Jews, Gypsies and others for just being Jews and gypsies, regardless of their political views. Germans are known for doing a 'prefect' job of what they initiate and here they did not stop at the acceptable levels. The ruthless killing of Jews was unparallel in our recent history. Children, women and men were transported to gas chambers for their final destination. I have lived in Germany for over 40 years and have developed a strong association for the country; i have German friends and others. But nazis? It was a shameful period and we would all like that never to happen again here or anywhere else. Good luck and as they say in Germany Alles Gute weiterhin.
Looking down on someone because of their lack of command over english shows your mentality and complexes. He may not have had the privileged education that you probably did but his efforts to follow english newspapers and learn are commendable.
@sharifL: Thank you for your comments..A little criticism is healthy.Yes, Hitler was evil, though in the list of modern mass murderers he ranked third behind Mao-tse-Dong and Joseph Stalin and ahead of Pol Pot and George Bush..He was trying to avenge the humiliating terms that the Treaty of Versailles had inflicted on a defeated nation and ended up fighting the collective military might of 19 countries. .What he did to the Jews and the gypsies was truly reprehensible, though the holocaust figures have now been questioned by scholars (not in Germany) who have pointed out that there wasn't enough rolling stock to have transported six million unfortunate victims to the death camps.You asked what the point of the article was. It was simply to record the impressions of a child and to demonstrate the power of propaganda in one city and the charm of a laid back life in the other.However, if it wasn't for Hitler and the Japanese emperor India would probably have had to struggle for another ten years to gain independence, with people like Winston Churchill around.. Anwer Mooraj
@unbeliever @Ali Tanoli: you can my friend. you can.
Provided he can write the visa application more coherently than his comments here
All very well. But what is the point? I live in Germany and speak German, my grown up son speaks German as his first language. There is now millions of non German citizens who have become part of Germany. You saw hitler, that evil man who butchered millions and was a symbol of intolerance. As I say, good to read the authors personal life story. Should we be impressed? Can I also write about my life?
@Ali Tanoli:
you can my friend. you can.
You were a lucky little boy, weren't you? You could easily have been swept up and removed as an undesirable gypsy child. The third Reich wasn't very tolerant.
Interestingly, Bhopal was one of the last princely states to accede to India and was independent until 1949. India did not invade it and gave the ruler (who was a muslim) time to sign the instrument of accession despite increasing protests from satyagrahis. (Shahrayar Khan, erstwhile head of the PCB would have been Nawab of Bhopal if his mother had stayed on in India - instead the title passed on to her younger sister, who married Mansoor Ali Khan Pataudi's father). Kashmir would have followed a similar set of circumstances, and migh not have even joined India at all if Jinnah hadn't been in such a tearing hurry to see his empire completed before he died.
I wish i can visit Bhopal.