An India-Pakistan wartime friendship in Prague
The year was 1966. On a cold, gloomy and wet December afternoon, I landed at the Prague airport, capital of the erstwhile Czechoslovakia, now broken into the countries of Czech Republic and Slovakia.
I was just out of Punjab University, Chandigarh and not only was it my first trip abroad, I had also never been on an aircraft before.
So (very) cold and (extremely) apprehensive, I warily made my way across a completely broken down airport, the communist regime had plans to build a shiny new one elsewhere instead to impress the world.
I was in Prague on a 5-month scholarship for training with CETEKA, their news agency. Our institute was in a villa which is called Zameck in their native language, in a small town named Roztez (these details I hope will matter) which was some miles outside Prague.
It was a cold double-storeyed structure and the nearest railway station was two miles away. Reaching the station wasn’t easy especially since we had to cross a village with a very hostile gaggle of geese!
We were literally cut off from the world; I guess that is what the comrades there wanted. A visa problem had delayed my arrival by 15 days but on reaching Roztez, I was in for a pleasant surprise.
Our Doris Day lookalike Director Mrs Tshtolsova told me, 'your friend is waiting for you'.
A friend in Czechoslovakia?
There, in the Directors room, waiting for me was a lean and bespectacled Abdul Subhan in a black sherwani, from Karachi, Pakistan. I think he said he was from the Pakistan News Agency, although I am not certain if that organisation even exists now.