How many of Pakistan's 15 million Facebook users will plant a tree?
When you are a young university student, every evening spent at the university has a charm, but my evenings at the University of Agriculture, Faisalabad, are unforgettable for a special reason.
I can never forget the way the flowers of Alstonia would fill the air with a magical fragrance. Just as Bano Qudsia’s “Raja Gidh” would go ecstatic on full moon nights, the fragrance of these flowers in the late summers would refresh us everyday.
The university is still there, and the Alstonia plants on its U-Road are there too. In just 2-3 months, the nights will once again be filled with fragrance. The only thing needed now to enjoy these nights is time.
As I read the news of the heat-induced deaths of at least 1000 people in Karachi, I recalled the University’s 'thandi sarrak', a street dubbed so for the cool breeze that was peculiar to it. The thandi sarrak was lined with trees on both sides, and countless bird nests embedded inside.
When, in the summers, our hostel rooms felt like ovens, we would find solace in the refreshing shade of the trees on this street. We’d recount stories from the day, all the while saving ourselves from bird droppings.
People residing near the university, too, would reach out to the gardens here. It was perceptible that the temperature within the university was usually a degree or two lesser than the rest of the city, thanks to the infinite number of trees and shrubs.
Also see: Deforestation a threat to agriculture
We have heard that folklore several times, in which a king asks an elderly man why he's planting trees, and the man responds saying the trees planted by his forefathers benefited him, and the trees planted by him would benefit his offspring.
It was in this same spirit, that two years ago, my friends and I launched a project, “Fruit for Life”, under which we are now planting fruit trees in Pakistan.
Our aim is to bring back these fruit-bearing trees back to their habitat, where they had lived since forever until recently. In Punjab, the fields and farms were lined with trees of mulberry, plum, guava, blackberries, pomegranates and oranges. All of the locals had rights over the fruit of these trees.