A beautiful sunset.—Photo by author
Deprived of freshwater springs, the villagers of Nagri Totial are today forced to drink polluted water, with the supply of potable water to the village heavily compromised.
Many years ago, Nagri Totial was provided one water supply line by the water supply committee headed by late Major Gul Rehman Khan.
But soon after his death, the pipeline plunged into mismanagement and began being hacked at various points by different people. As a result, rainwater began mixing with the natural spring water through the punctured water line, and contaminated the available potable water. As per a water testing report, shown to me by a Nagri Totial villager, the drinking water available now is injurious to the health of the villagers.
In case someone falls ill, there is an acute shortage of basic health facilities inside the village. The only basic health unit (BHU), located in the midst of a jungle, is quite far away from the village and is in deplorable condition.
“There is absolutely no use of this so-called BHU, and we have to go to Lora or Murree in emergency, which costs us a lot,” says Attiq ur Rehman, a resident of the valley.
“We need a proper hospital inside our valley, which is a hub for at least two dozen villages.”
Nagri Totial has a great historical background. Some British colonial rulers and administrators, posted in Peshawar or Hazara division, reportedly visited the valley to meet the five great socio-political figures of the area at the time (who also happened to be brothers).
The eldest tribal chieftain was Khan Bahadur Abdul Rehman Khan, who served as the former chief of NWFP’s central investigation department under the British. He was later elected as member of the legislative assembly (MLA) and also inducted as provincial minister. On the call of Quaid-i-Azam, he stopped using the Khan Bahadur title.
The other brothers were the late Sardar Khan MLA, late Raja Allah Dad Khan, late Raja Ajjab Khan, late Eng Raja Mohammad Nazar Khan (who was the engineer in-charge of building the famous Army Public School, Abbottabad).
Today, there are insufficient educational facilities in the valley. There is one high school and one middle school for boys, while only one middle school exists for girls. A primary school for girls has been under construction for the last seven years. Villagers claim that the contractor building the school building left the job, and sold all material to save himself from any financial loss. Girls now study in two rooms of a private house.
Despite various complaints and media reports about this sorry situation, the authorities remain mum. “Most teachers remain absent. They are paid for sitting at home,” says Javed Iqbal, a local.
Meanwhile, petty theft in the valley is increasing by the day. “There are many FIRs lodged against unknown persons, who have cut the costly telephone wires worth millions of rupees but till date no one has been arrested,” narrates another resident.
Nagri Totial, mera gaon, was once a place of stunning beauty. The problems and miseries faced by inhabitants were few. Many lived great lives and had few worries. But it isn’t the fabled village that would fascinate children; it is now a memory that is fast fading away.
Published in Dawn, Sunday Magazine, March 22nd , 2015
On a mobile phone? Get the Dawn Mobile App: Apple Store | Google Play