The Peshawar of Wilkinson’s visit smells of cordite with militant influence infecting its heart and blowing up its Sufi shrines. He reminds us that in the 1970s this was an altogether different country, where travel writer Paul Theroux wanted to settle down to “grow old watching sunsets in the Khyber Pass.” Now it is the country where replicas of nuclear missiles, the “rather absurd totem pole” named after a Turkish invader make “a monument to an identity crisis.”
Wilkinson has a special relationship with the subcontinent where his mother’s ancestors lived for more than a century and a half until Partition divided the land. From his grandmother he heard stories that conjured images of “a hot and turbaned land where carpet-flight and slippered sprites did not seem improbable.”
With a sympathy stemming from those tales, Wilkinson scrapes off the warty ugliness of Pakistan that is today seen by most outsiders. He shows that it is not even skin-deep; it is merely a thin veneer. Under it lies the deep soul of the real people: kind, generous, hospitable, bawdy, manufacturing S&M equipment, having fun and, above all, utterly devoid of xenophobia. People who throng its Sufi shrines from Karachi to Buner and where old shamanistic beliefs still persevere unmolested and people in its bazaars and villages are the real Pakistan. Again and again one sees through the writer’s eyes a society struggling to regain its “kindlier past.”
The prose is lively with similes: the dewlap of a bull becomes like a silk curtain spilling from a pelmet and the inward sloping domelets of a Multan mausoleum are as relatives gathered around a deathbed. From Wilkinson’s keyboard Pakistan unfolds at a fast clip. So fast, in fact, it seems almost surreal.
Travels in a Dervish Cloak is the book to read to regain faith in Pakistan. It rekindles hope.
The reviewer is a Fellow of the Royal Geographical Society and author of nine books on travel
Travels in a
Dervish Cloak
By Isambard Wilkinson
Eland, UK
ISBN: 978-
1780600789
240pp.
Published in Dawn, Books & Authors, April 1st, 2018