TRIBUTE: JOAN OF LAHORE
In a column in the 1990s, the late progressive writer and journalist Hamid Akhtar had written about a visitor who had come to Lahore after an absence of many years. He wrote about how the visiting English lady was meeting with old friends and reminiscing about the time she had spent in Lahore, mostly by herself — as her husband was in jail — during the early 1950s. Her name was Joan Afzal.
While Hamid Sahib was alive, I had interviewed him in 2007 for a book project. A couple of years later, as I was planning to visit Britain during the winter break of 2010, I gave him a call from Austin, Texas, where I live and teach, asking about Joan. I half feared that, as with many who were of her age, we may have lost Joan. Akhtar fondly remembered our earlier conversation and encouraged me to meet with Joan since she was still very much alive and in London. He asked me to get in touch with Faiz Ahmed Faiz’s daughter, Salima Hashmi, to get her whereabouts, as she was in regular contact with Joan.
I knew Salima Hashmi and sent her an email. She responded immediately and gave me Joan’s email address. I emailed and, very soon, received a reply with a phone number. I called on the designated day and was greeted by a gracious voice at the other end — a bit hard of hearing, but very polite and welcoming. I noted the address and made my plans.
The Englishwoman who became an inalienable part of Pakistan’s leftist gatherings and, indeed, of the country’s history, passed away on July 16
On a grey January morning, I travelled to a simple house near the Wembley Park tube station in London to meet with Joan Afzal. Joan, by then in her 80s, was the widow of Chowdhary Mohammad Afzal, one-time general secretary of the Pakistan Trade Union Federation (PTUF) and member of the regional committee of the Communist Party of Pakistan (CPP).
That afternoon at the house, a few minutes’ walk from the tube station, an elegant woman welcomed me at the doorstep with a big smile. Perhaps I reminded her of someone she knew during her Lahore days. After pleasantries she asked me if I would like something, but the sentence was left unfinished. I was not sure whether it was an invitation for lunch or tea. It was one in the afternoon and I imagined that she was offering me a cup of soup. “What do you have,” I asked. “Well, I can offer you scotch or gin,” she replied. I was a bit taken aback. I had come prepared for an interview and a drink on the rocks was not my idea of focusing on the topic. I declined, she smiled again and said, “All Pakistani communists started drinking before noon and they loved scotch, neat.” It was a delightful comment, welcoming and perhaps true. After all, she had known them all!
Joan Githero was a young woman, not even 20, when she met Mohammad Afzal through a mutual friend who worked for the BBC in London. This must have been the immediate post-war years. Afzal had been working for the BBC since the early 1940s. He had completed his MA in English Literature from Government College, Lahore, and was a student of Professor Ahmad Shah Bukhari (the great satirist Patras Bukhari). Bukhari had been closely linked with All-India Radio (AIR) and his brother, Z A Bukhari, was one of its senior managers in Delhi. In 1940, Lionel Fielden, the director of AIR, took Z A Bukhari with him to London to help start the new Hindustani service for the BBC. This service would help explain the ongoing war to an Indian public. Afzal was recruited to work in London for this BBC service by Patras Bukhari. Afzal may have been radicalised while in London; at the least he was one of the young anti-colonial workers in the Hindustani service.
A few months after Independence, Afzal wrote a memo to his superiors about the future policy of the BBC in which he criticised his role — and those like him at the BBC — as a mere translating machine that relays the British vision for India’s future to Indians. In this memo, Afzal argued for a more democratic relationship built on the recognition of the common humanity that the British and the Indians shared and also the problems that were common between them. This universalistic and humanitarian perspective was asking for a change of relationship between the former colonial masters and the newly independent states of India and Pakistan.
Perhaps his evolving thoughts on the matter made Afzal leave for Pakistan. He arrived in Lahore in 1948, and joined the then legal CPP. Soon, he became an active member in the CPP-supported PTUF, eventually becoming its general secretary.
Joan had not heard from Afzal much since he had left for Pakistan. She had saved some money working for a South African newspaper and by placing advertisements for rare books in newspapers. She wrote to Afzal telling him that she was arriving. She booked a ticket on an ocean-liner, reaching Karachi via Bombay. Afzal was there to meet her. This was October 1950, and they had not seen each other in almost three years. They got married in Karachi and proceeded to Lahore, where they set up house in Afzal’s Model Town bungalow. His brother, Dr Akram, had a clinic downstairs and Joan and Afzal lived on the second floor.