Undeterred by disability, Niaz Bahadar stays brave as his name
PESHAWAR: Niaz Bahadar recalls the heartbreaking moment when his four-year-old daughter ─ his only child ─ discovered he was blind.
It was just a few days after the horrific explosion that had ripped off his limbs and permanently deprived him of vision.
"Baba, look at my bangles!" she had exclaimed, with the characteristic excitement of a young child who has returned from the village market bearing gifts.
"Please, tell me how they look? Do they look beautiful?"
Memories from that day overwhelm the 35-year-old, a former member of the Balochistan Frontier Corps, who lost both his eyes and legs 15 years ago when he stepped on a landmine during a routine patrol.
"I didn’t judge the area properly," he recalls, a tear trickling down his face. He had stepped on a mine that had been planted under the topsoil.
As we speak, Bahadar attaches an artificial leg to his knee, recalling the incident that changed his life.
Bahadar, who hails from Khyber Agency, is now a permanent resident of Peshawar where he lives in a rented three-room house near Karkhanu bazaar. He wears a blindfold to ward off the pity and sympathy that gushes from strangers when they look at his stressing wound.
"I don’t want others to feel sad by seeing my eye sockets without eyeballs," he says.