The night Abdul Sattar Edhi came over for dinner is etched in my mind, not in oil colours but as charcoal on canvas. Perhaps it was the grey of his kurta, cap and slippers as he sat on the pristine beige plumped-up sofa, and his down-to-earth manner.
As soon as I addressed him as “Maulana Edhi” he let me have it.
“Don’t you call me a maulana!”
“But everyone refers to you as one, Edhi sahib.”
"Just because I maintain a beard, they insist on calling me a maulvi. I’m not a maulana," he said, waving his finger at me.
Which brings to mind that when people asked Edhi why he allowed non-Muslims in his ambulances, he replied firmly:
"Because the ambulance is more Muslim than you."
Edhi had no qualms about speaking against anyone and anything he deemed wrong. When I praised the dynamic Mayor of Karachi who had improved the city's infrastructure, during a conversation with him, he told me fiercely:
“He’s not dynamic! Do you know that on Eid, we were the first ones to collect hides to sell for charity. But as soon as others realised there was money involved, they took it upon themselves to collect hides forcefully pretending it is for charity. Liars and thieves.”
And then he calmly went back to his dinner.
The humble legend
He single-handedly spearheaded the Edhi Foundation in 1957, and it continues to function as a non-profit social welfare organisation through the length and breadth of Pakistan, providing the needy with medical aid, family planning, emergency assistance and education. It also operates maternity homes, mental asylums, homes for the physically handicapped, blood banks and orphanages.
On November 16, 2009, the International Day for Tolerance, Edhi went to Paris to receive the Unesco Madanjit Singh Prize for the Promotion of Tolerance and Non Violence "in recognition of his life long efforts to ameliorate the condition of the most disadvantaged groups in Pakistan and for promoting the ideals of human dignity, human rights, mutual respect and tolerance".
The prize-giving ceremony was held at the sprawling United Nations edifice; I was present there too. Amidst all the designer suits, gleaming coats and fancy shoes, Edhi stood out in his grey shalwar kameez and worn out slippers.