NON-FICTION: RELIVING MADNESS
Salman Rashid, one of our most prolific and erudite travel writers who has traversed some difficult terrains — both at home and in foreign lands — has been recording his visits in engrossing writings for three and a half decades. This time he recalls his ‘pilgrimage’ to his ancestral town of Jalandhar in India, as well as to the village of Ughi where the roots of his family are entrenched in the soil. His narration of this visit appears in a slim volume titled A Time of Madness: A Memoir of Partition.
Rashid was 56 years old when he undertook the journey. He wanted to do so earlier, but was denied a visa because of his seven-year stint with the Pakistan Army — his first job from which he had resigned in disgust because the country had been taken over by “the deceitful dictator” (you know who). However, the visa section of the Indian High Commission in Islamabad was considerate enough not to stamp ‘visa denied’ on his passport since that would have meant disqualification for good.
At a dinner held by the Indian High Commissioner Satyabrata Pal and his wife, sometime in February 2008, Rashid told his host that his was the only country to have denied him a visit visa. Rashid was not entirely unknown to Pal, who had read his columns on history in the Daily Times and his travel pieces that appeared in leading papers from time to time. The High Commissioner asked him to send a fresh application, which Rashid did on reaching his home town of Lahore.
Sixty-one years after Partition, a Pakistani travels to India with a desire to meet the man who killed his grandfather
The following month — 61 years after Partition — Rashid was able to cross the Wagah Border on foot. He was armed with a visa for Amritsar, Jalandhar, Ughi, Delhi and Solan and was spared the ordeal of reporting his arrival and departure at the police stations of these places — something that Pakistanis and Indians have to do while visiting each other’s countries.
Like most Pakistanis stepping on Indian soil for the first time, Rashid was struck by the fact that females, young and not-so-young, drove two-wheelers and was most pleasantly surprised that men did not ogle at women in Amritsar (and elsewhere).