IN MEMORIAM: MY BEST FRIEND, JAMSHEED
One by one, my friends are falling away like autumn leaves. I have just heard the grievous news of the death of Jamsheed Marker, my best friend. In his death Pakistan has lost a noble soul, a man of many roles, a distinguished diplomat who alone understood the psyche, the mind and the soul of the West. And I have lost a good friend.
When I last met Jamsheed, a week before he passed away, death stood at his elbow — a bright mind was trapped in a body that would no longer do his bidding. Suddenly, without warning, he was gone. He awaited death patiently. He was not afraid of death.
A montage of memories flooded my mind. There are so many indelible memories he has left behind. He was one of the most extraordinary, most impartial men I have ever known.
Recalling the sterling qualities of Ambassador Marker who passed away on June 21
By an amazing turn in my life story, he became my friend. My father pulled me out of Islamia College, Peshawar, and sent me to F.C. College, Lahore. Jamsheed and I first met in the 1940s on the balustrade of Ewing Hall, waiting to be interviewed for the allotment of rooms. At that moment began a friendship between us which sailed serenely over all earthquakes and fluctuations of fortune. Despite diverse backgrounds, we immediately took to each other. Over the years, our friendship was cemented which no convulsion could undermine. He and I were like splinters off the same tree. We were soulmates, ideally suited to each other. We shared the same brainwaves. Jamsheed was the key to the most important transformation of my life.
We drifted apart after graduation. We were not good about staying in touch. A common friend, I met by chance in 1949 after a late night show in Karachi, told me Jamsheed was in Karachi and how he could be contacted. If we re-connected, I wondered, could we still be friends? Does the raw material of friendship remain intact despite years of separation? On return to my hotel even though it was past midnight, I woke up all the Dinshaws in my excitement. (Jamsheed was married to Diana, a Dinshaw girl. There was no one more gracious than Diana.)
The friendship of a good man is a gift from heaven. He had been for me the nearest thing, I suppose, to a brother. Jamsheed’s greatest talent was friendship. He showered affection on his friends, and has left behind an endless stream of them. He banked his treasure in the hearts of his friends.
I don’t know how to communicate the nobility of his life and how overwhelming it was to be admitted into it. To enter Jamsheed’s life was to enter the world of music, books and scintillating conversation.
Close, intimate, indestructible and perpetual friendship was the guiding principle of his life.
We came to know each other’s strengths, weaknesses, hopes and dreams. In time, I was able to read his face, his thoughts and his words. I came to know his questions before he asked them. I could finish his sentences. Our friendship was my greatest standby in times of trouble.
Jamsheed and I chatted on phone daily when he was in Karachi and once a week from the US. We talked national and international events, gossip and family problems. We talked politics and history, the caprice of fortune, and the follies of men, until the stars came out in the sky. Now the phone is dead.
A man of tremendous modesty, dignity, integrity and humility, is what Jamsheed was. He was immensely sophisticated, at home, in any kind of company. Rancour and bitterness were not in Jamsheed’s lexicon.
Subtle, sophisticated and obsessively discrete, Jamsheed was in a class of his own.