NOSTALGIA: NO MORE HOLIDAYS IN THE US
Lately my elder daughter, who lives in Chicago, has been pestering me to take a holiday once again and visit her. But I am double-minded and it is not because of old age. Mr Donald Trump has put me off. His tweets and views about my country, and other countries that he doesn’t like, are simply outrageous. Who, in their right mind, would wish to take a holiday in Trump’s United States? It is no longer the same place.
I have twice visited the US in the past, first in 1997 and then in 2004 — and what an interesting time I had in that great country, touring no less than nine states: Illinois, Michigan, Indiana, Wisconsin, Kentucky, Tennessee, North Carolina, New York and California.
One of my visits started off by attending a mushaira at Devon, a neighbourhood in Chicago where the streets are named after Jinnah, Gandhi, Golda Meir, etc. Those who recited their kalaam (poetry) in the well-attended mushaira were Pakistani immigrant poets — Dr Abdul Wahid Fakhri, Dr Abidullah Ghazi, Reazuddin Atash, Ghousia Sultana and Zamir Jafri.
The joy of visiting America has been tempered by Trump’s vitriol
The next day, I met the renowned Indian sarangi player Ustad Sultan Khan at the residence of one Mr Sukhan Bose and we immediately became friends. I had lunch with him and he very sportingly played the sarangi in accompaniment with the few bandishes (verses) I sang of my ustad. The tabla player accompanying Sultan Khan on his yearly pilgrimage to the US was the younger brother of Ustad Zakir Husain. Sultan Khan informed me that he had composed music for the Ismail Merchant’s 1993 film In Custody (whose cast comprised Shashi Kapoor, Shabana Azmi and Om Puri).
Two days later, I was invited to another music programme at the residence of one Dr Mehdi Nawab. A well-known surgeon, he lived in a 600,000-dollar Victorian mansion in Hunting Creek in the township of Prospect, Kentucky. In the same area, another Pakistani doctor, Zaka-ur-Rahman, lived in a nine-bedroom mansion.