The rock helpfully marked with the demon Gokal’s name | Photo from the book
Panah Baloch’s Lahoot Lamakan could have been a great travel book. But it isn’t, because the writer has no standards to set his writing by. This is because the genre of travel-writing in Urdu has been completely demolished by the most celebrated Urdu travel writer. It has been turned into the bantering essay devoid of substance like that turned out by a grade-four schoolchild who describes his outing to Murree during the summer vacations.
Lahoot Lamakan was once a delightful, sylvan valley with towering tamarind, spreading mango and leafy jamun trees shading a green-domed mausoleum. During the annual death anniversary celebrations in the first trimester of the month of fasting, it was the venue of ecstasy for thousands of devotees who believe in the miracle of Shah Bilawal Noorani. These bhang-quaffing, hashish-smoking hosts turned the leafy dome grey with cigarette smoke and it was impossible even for non-smokers to remain free of the influence.
That was 30 years ago. In November 2015, this writer returned to Lahoot to find the old dome (which dated back to the 16th century) replaced by a new, larger mausoleum. Further, most of the trees were gone, destroyed to present a view of the shiny new edifice to visitors. In a word, the magic of Lahoot Lamakan stood greatly reduced.
A book that calls out for a greater exploration of a legend
However, the author of the book at hand speaks of none of that.
No blurb, either on the cover or inside the book, discloses the credentials of the author, but the writing style gives him away as a journalist of the Urdu press.
Over the course of a couple of years, Baloch bravely travels the paths that Lahootis — as the devotees of Shah Noorani style themselves — take from various towns to the valley in Balochistan’s Lasbela district.
He tells us how the devotees, done with the death anniversary at Sehwan, walk the mountain path from there to Lahoot in about two weeks’ time. Though the walk is only about 150 kilometres (three to four days’ journey for a good mountain walker), disciples devote most of their time en route to preparing and guzzling their bhang as they slowly progress westward from Sehwan. (It was just the tedium of this local version of the pub crawl that kept this writer from undertaking the Sehwan-Lahoot journey back in 1985.)
Baloch steadfastly keeps himself in devotee mode, just as he abstains from travel-writer or anthropologist mode: he does not break into any description of what would definitely — because of its comic value — have added immense colour to the narrative. Indeed, the only time he becomes a travel-writer is when he briefly describes a bus journey between Lahoot and Karachi. Mystified by the sacks left by the wayside that the bus pauses to collect, he engages the conductor: people living nearby give over the bags and money together with a list of provisions they need brought back from the metropolis. And since the entire country between Lahoot and Karachi is like his home, the conductor does the favour as if for his own family.
One would have wished the author to have done this more often. Instead, Baloch turns a perfect yarn into an insipid inventory of this tomb or that site — even the most insignificant ones — connected with some saint or the other.