Going Home to Lahore, and a World Left Behind

May 8, 2005

Before I die, I want to see where I was born," my father announced last fall at home in Katonah, N.Y., as our was celebrating , the Hindu New Year. With that, my parents and I began making plans to to . My father and his entire extended fled from there in , when gained independence and was partitioned into Muslim and mostly Hindu .

It was not a trip we had been expecting to take. My father’s left , where they had thought they would live their whole lives, after what the departing British had envisioned as an orderly exchange of minority populations exploded into a cycle of brutality and retaliation engulfing both new countries. They went first to , arriving with only what they could carry. My father, who was then 5 years old, remembers the tense train journey and the ’s difficulties afterward as dispossessed refugees. As adults, my parents joined the Indian diaspora, raising me and my older brother in Sudan, then Abu Dhabi and finally New York. For more than a decade, we have all been Americans.

Until that day last November, I had rarely heard Dad speak about the partition. It was a subject I knew I should not bring up. But now, almost 60 years afterward, he had been captured by the zeitgeist of a generation: all over and , the partition survivors are seizing a last chance to reconcile their contradictory memories - of terrorized displacement, but also of a rich shared culture that had to be left behind.

Peacemaking between and has become trendy. Chanting symbolic statements, movie stars and members of parliament are stepping across the border at the dusty guard-post village of Wagah. Since last month, ’s national team has been on tour across , bringing along thousands of -loving fans and being greeted by warm hospitality - reciprocating Pakistani hospitality when ’s team broke the ice by touring in last year.

But can people taught for decades to regard one another as enemies really come together? We wondered, in this age of a on terror, if it was worse to to as Indians or as Americans.

Flying from to after a first stop in , I was surprised to see the plane full of mostly older people, both Indian and Pakistani. They were speaking excitedly in Urdu and Hindi, and in their unifying , English, about plans to visit long-lost relatives, attend weddings and do business. "Tourism brings emotional issues to a practical level," said Rakesh Mathur, the passenger seated next to me. I soon learned he was in a position to know. An Indian, he has flown in and out of for a decade as South Asian manager for a Western hotel chain, harmoniously supervising Pakistani employees.

On our first morning in , my parents and I, with our local driver, Latif, wandered through the sprawling market district of Anarkali, following a crude map drawn from dim memories by my great uncle in New : past the bamboo market, a left before the King Edward Medical College, adjacent to a narrow staircase leading to a white masjid (mosque). Sensing that we were lost, people stopped to help. Dad communicated in Punjabi. Passers-by, shopkeepers and bicyclists tried to help us correct our multiple wrong turns and sent us to an octogenarian tailor who stood hunched over his wooden cart of fabric and needles. Hearing that we were Indian, he asked our name, hoping to cross-reference with memories too strong to fade. Our apprehensions dissolved.

Eventually, an old tree gave it away. "That is the house," Dad said. It was hardly as he remembered it. His ’s comfortable three-story home was now a shirt factory, the inside structure completely rebuilt. The only familiar feature was a four-foot-high wall on the roof, separating the house from the mosque, where he remembered a white cat used to sit and stare at him.

It didn’t matter. My father beamed. And seeing the sign outside, touting "Classy wear from New Yarke," we joked that we might as well buy some shirts while we were there.

Perhaps we were not the first Indian travelers that the people of Anarkali had directed around their streets. The international border that in was crossed in both directions by trains full of corpses is now crossed increasingly by tourists. Though both countries still insist on issuing special stamps for each city to be visited, Pakistanis are going in droves to visit the Mughal monuments of and Agra and to historically Muslim cities like Lucknow and hot spots like Mumbai and Kerala. In return, Indians are becoming a tourist asset for , with Punjabis flocking to and Sindhis to . Tour operators from both sides have even gotten together in an initiative aimed partly at diaspora tourists: a " revival link" connecting the cultural sites of Taxila and in with and Amritsar in , offering two countries for one package price.

When a taxi driver asked if it was our first time in , my dad replied half-jokingly: "Not exactly. The first time they kicked us out." Actually he had been in 25 years earlier, when he was living in Abu Dhabi and traveled to for a wedding. "All the men got drunk and spoke the truth," he told me now. They threw their arms around him and proclaimed, "Partition shouldn’t have happened; we’re all brothers."

Before this visit, some of my parents’ friends in New York had wondered why they would take a trip to . But every third uncle pleaded with them to take photos of places remembered from prepartition . In the Anarkali bazaar, high on their list, the baubles were the same as in any Indian market - pashmina shawls, bats, miniature marble Taj Mahals, leather slippers - but with one addition, savory pomegranate juice, best enjoyed with a dash of salt.

Reconciliation seemed farther away at Wagah, barely half an hour away. My parents and I went there to watch the daily high-decibel, goose-stepping border-closure ceremony that casual travelers see as a spectacle of old colonial tradition, and political diehards view as a platform for protest.

Though Indians and Pakistanis are indistinguishable, as far as we knew we were the only Hindus on the Pakistani side, and we stood quietly as an old man wrapped in the green Pakistani flag taunted the Indians watching, to the accompaniment of bhangra , from their own side of the border. Then a man began to lead the Pakistani crowd in feverish chants of "Allah Akhbar! Zindabad!" and, most unexpectedly, "Superpower Allah!" My father, in the middle of the gyrating mob, silently sobbed, then laughed.

My mother, picking up on his sense of the absurd predicament all of us were
in, chimed in, "Shoot the British." Our driver wholeheartedly agreed.
Dad’s grandfather, a merchant banker named Bishen Narain, was the last to leave , having sent the rest of the ahead to safety in . As Hindu homes burned in Anarkali, a Muslim neighbor braved the wrath of the mob to escort him to the train station. When Bishen handed him the keys to the house, the neighbor said: "Let this madness pass. You will be back soon to retrieve these keys from me." Of course, my great-grandfather never returned.

One day in , we visited the Badshahi Masjid, which holds 100,000 worshipers and was built in 1674, in an era of tolerance: it shares a wall with a Sikh temple. When we told the caretaker what had brought us to the city, he gave us a special tour, presented my father with a saffron scarf and refused to accept any token of appreciation. We recalled an old Punjabi saying: "If you have not seen , you have not been born."
The night before my parents left, we drove through the elegant Shadman district and saw a large stone mansion under construction. "I they’re building it for us," my father said with a laugh.

In my , laughter always wins over .

Published in New York Times April 3, 2005