I have always been drawn to the mysteries of roots. Like icebergs, most of their being exists below the visible surface. Knitting the ground beneath our feet. The ficus is a case in point.
Occupying the entire western half of our garden it is an ecosystem in its own right. The weather changes when you enter its dense cool shade, a canopy that shelters koels, mynahs, squirrels, bats and lime-green geckos.
I remember when my father planted the ficus, or more accurately, casually stuck the six-inch-long stem he had found in a pile of cuttings outside a posh Defence bungalow into the sandy soil near the slow leak of the water pipe running down the side of our building.
(Yes, this was so far back that there was actually a pipe with water running in it instead of barren air.)
Our family was the first to move into the newly built Seaview Apartments. It was 1981 or 82. Where the apartments ended the shoreline dissolved into sand dunes.
Sand and desert scrub colonised all the spaces between the empty buildings. There were no gardens, not even a blade of grass.
A young couple moved in next door to us on the ground floor but everything they planted wilted in the salt breeze and hostile earth.
Before moving into Seaview we ourselves had been rootless for a while, the last several years had been spent in a succession of cities since my father had been pushed out of his job as Health Secretary for the Northern Areas, forced to retire from the army after Zia’s coup.
There was no room for the secular and incorruptible values he stood for in the general’s worldview. So abba found himself looking for work at the age of 60.
Who wants to hire a 60-year-old? After a stint of unsuccessful job-hunting, he finally found employment in Europe, running St Luke’s Hospital in Malta.
We rented a beautiful apartment with a stunning view of the turquoise blue Mediterranean but no garden.
Still, our little balcony groaned under the weight of dwarf avocado trees, Meyer lemon bushes and gardenias.
Politics reared its ugly head again with a newly-elected Maltese government refusing to renew contracts of foreigners. It was a precursor of the xenophobia sweeping Europe today.
So it was that returning home to Karachi that made my father eager to plant a garden. We were still struggling financially, so he would ask his friends for cuttings.