CHAKWAL: Devar, jeth, ghar wala/Laam gaye tino ghabru/Wekh patt barchaan day loosay/Soaan jang diyan
(My husband his two brothers have all gone to war/The leaves of trees also got scorched hearing news of war)
In a village 17km south of Chakwal there is a forgotten memorial. It stands at raised point at the very entrance to the village, covered almost entirely by shrubbery, the sole relic of Dhedwal’s role in World War I, the 126 men who left the village to fight and the eight who died on battlefields thousands of miles from home.
Dhedwal was funded around 500 years ago during the reign of the Mughal emperor Humayun. It saw some development under the Musharraf regime, when one of its natives, Mohammad Amir Butt — a close aide to then district nazim Sardar Ghulam Abbas — was elected chairman of his union council.
Mr Butt managed to get the boys middle school upgraded to a high school, and the girls primary school upgraded to a middle school.
Dhedwal still looks like a developed village, but both its dispensaries — one for people and one for livestock — are short on doctors. The office of the patwari appears deserted, as he prefers to sit in a rented office in Chakwal city than stay in the village.
Dhedwal is one of the many villages in the Potohar region whose contributions to WWI have been erased from the pages of history, and even the memories of its people.
When the world marked the centenary of the First World War in 2018, the Rawalpindi division — which sent 120,000 soldiers, the highest of any division — did not follow suit.
In The Punjab and the War, M.S. Leigh wrote that Punjab alone supplied half the Indian soldiers in the British Indian Army before WWI broke out; by the end of 1914, 100,000 Punjabis were serving in the army. The figure shot up suddenly when the war began — by the end India recruited more than 1.2 million soldiers and Punjab enlisted more than 360,000. Of these 360,000, 120,000 were from the Rawalpindi division.
Chakwal, Jhelum and Gujar Khan were central recruitment grounds for the army at that time. These areas were arid, agriculture was in poor condition and the region was far from seeing any industrial development.
The war was a blessing in disguise for village leaders, who became key figures in the recruitment process and received fertile agricultural land for their trouble — in addition to appreciatory certificates, titles and more.
Eight out of the nine Victoria Crosses awarded in the Indian Army went to Punjabi soldiers. Dulmial, which sent 460 of its men to war received a cannon which still stands on the banks of the village pond.