People's Democracy(Weekly Organ of the Communist Party of India (Marxist) |
Vol.
XXVIII
No. 50 December 12, 2004 |
WORLD
PUNJABI CONFERENCE
THE first week of this month saw an event that was not only unique but has great potential insofar as a betterment of the Indo-Pak ties is concerned. On December 2, there began in Patiala the first World Punjabi Conference, with the participation of personalities from the Indian as well as Pakistani sides of Punjab. Moreover, the idea was that India and Pakistan would alternatively host such conferences every year and that the next year’s version of this conference would be held in the historic city of Lahore that, as we know, was the capital of united Punjab before the country’s partition.
Indian
HRD minister Arjun Singh, Indian Punjab’s chief minister Captain Amrinder
Singh and deputy chief minister Mrs Rajinder Kaur Bhattal were among the
prominent figures who attended this conference. Chaudhary Pervaiz Ilahi, chief
minister of the other side of Punjab, was the chief guest at the conference.
Some 120 persons from Pakistani Punjab also attended the event along with Mr
Ilahi.
I
was one among those who were especially invited to the conference.
EVENT OF GREAT SIGNIFICANCE
A
COUPLE of events marked this three-day conference, including the laying of the
foundation of a World Punjabi Centre at Punjabi University, Patiala. Then the
conference was immediately followed by the first Indo-Pak Punjab Games 2004,
which started on December 5 and were inaugurated by Chaudhary Pervaiz Ilahi. By
the time we go to press, these games, sponsored jointly by the Indian Olympic
Association and Punjab Olympic Association, were still continuing and were to
conclude on December 11.
Before
the conference process set into motion on December 2, Chaudhary Pervaiz Ilahi
and his delegation were accorded a warm reception at Raja Sansi airport in
Amritsar. From there, the delegation was taken to the Golden Temple complex at
Amritsar where the Shiromani Gurdwara Parbandhak Committee (SGPC) honoured Ilahi
with a siropa (robe of religious honour) and a model of the shrine. Later,
Guru Nanak Dev University of Amritsar presented both the chief ministers
honorary doctorate degrees for their role in strengthening the Indo-Pak
friendship. Punjab governor General S F Rodrigues (Retd), in his capacity as the
university’s chancellor, conferred these degrees on the two chief ministers.
The
Pakistani delegation and Indian delegates also paid tributes to the martyrs of
our freedom struggle at the historic Jallianwala Bagh where the British had
perpetrated a massacre on the Baisakhi day in April 1919. This had a great
symbolic value, as the Jallianwala Bagh is the place where the Hindus, Muslims
and Sikhs shed their blood together for the country’s liberation from the
foreign imperialist yoke.
ADDRESSING
an assemblage of people at the Information Office of the Golden Temple,
Chaudhary Pervaiz Ilahi said
the government of his country was prepared to start a special bus service
between Amritsar and Lahore that could be further extended to connect the Sikh
shrines at Nankana Sahib and Kartarpur. He also assured the Sikh community that
their shrines in Pakistan would not only be protected but also repaired to
restore their historic glory. He also expressed resolve to develop Nankana
Sahib, the birthplace of Guru Nanak Dev, into a model city. These came as
welcome announcements in the background of vandalism at the Nankana Sahib shrine
a few months ago.
A
further announcement was that Ilahi would try to get relaxed the visa
restrictions regarding the Sikh pilgrims’ travel to Pakistan. As a large
number of Sikh pilgrims were recently denied visas for Pakistan, the issue has
been agitating them no end and the announcement should come to them as a
soothing balm. Ilahi also promised to try for release of the Punjabi youth who
are languishing in Pakistani prisons.
Delivered
in chaste Punjabi at Patiala, Chaudhary Pervaiz Ilahi’s
valedictory address at the conference not only reiterated these points but also
stressed the importance of the event, and the need to hold similar conferences
in future, for the sake of progressive betterment in Indo-Pak relations.
IN
order to fully grasp the significance of this first World Punjabi Conference and
the Indo-Pak Punjab Games, one has to first situate them in context of the
travails which the Punjabi people underwent after independence.
As
we know, the partition of the country was accompanied by a ghastly holocaust
that directly and indirectly affected the entire North India. In the midst of
inhuman communal pogroms that preceded, accompanied and succeeded the
country’s independence, lakhs of people had had to leave their hearth and
home, and move from one side of the newly carved out border to another.
Innumerable people including the aged and children were brutally massacred by
communal goons on both sides of the border; their houses, shops and other
properties were arsoned, looted and forcibly occupied; and a large number of
women were molested and raped.
This
was thus one of the biggest and cruellest transfers of population in human
history, one whose wounds are still festering --- even after 57 years of the
partition. Each of the Punjabi nationality in the North West of India and
Bengali nationality in East India artificially got divided into two segments.
Moreover, there are instances in which even individual families were divided and
their members have been deprived of mutual contact for the most part of these 57
years. The partition thus led to a human tragedy of immense proportions.
But
the nationality that bore the brunt of this holocaust most was that of the
Punjabis. Not only did whole villages on both sides of the border wear a
deserted look in the immediate aftermath of the partition; the whole economy of
the region also suffered grievous dislocations and losses. The Punjab had been a
distinct province under the Mughals as well as under the British and therefore,
before the partition, the economy of the Punjab was so integrally structured
that both its eastern and western parts were crucially dependent upon one
another for goods and services. Also, lakhs of people used to daily commute from
one city to another (e g from Amritsar to Lahore) for jobs and study, for making
purchases, for marketing of their produce etc. In the first decade of the 20th
century, thousands of families had migrated from the eastern to the western
parts in order to inhabit and cultivate the lands that were barren till that
time but where irrigation facilities were newly developed. This was indeed the
background in which a powerful anti-British movement erupted in the same decade
under the leadership of Lala Lajpat Rai and Sardar Ajit Singh, martyr Bhagat
Singh’s uncle.
BUT
the partition snapped all these links and it was therefore no wonder that, in
the immediate aftermath of the partition, the large-scale dislocation of the
population also brought indescribable misery to the people of both parts of the
Punjab. This is true not only for the refugees but also for others who were not
uprooted and were not as hapless.
This
division of the Punjabi nationality appears all the more tragic in view of the
socio-cultural tradition of the Punjabi people. For, here was a nationality
whose members were well known not only for their liveliness but also for their
organic unity. Before the partition the Punjabis were living together in
peaceful coexistence without any distrust on the basis of religion and
ethnicity. This was the land where Sikhism, one of the living world religions,
was born and its founder, Guru Nanak’s teachings are still regarded by many as
a major attempt at synthesising the basic tenets of Hinduism and Islam. When
Guru Arjun Dev, the fifth guru, compiled the Granth Sahib, the holy text of the
Sikhs, those whose poetry found a place of veneration in it included Baba Farid,
a Sufi saint, besides Kabir and several others.
The
tradition continued still further and got a concrete shape in the form of
numerous folk songs and stories. The latter include the stories written by Sufi
poets --- like Heer by Waris Shah (besides the versions written by Damodar and
many others), Sohni-Mahiwal by Fazal Shah, Pooran Bhagat by Qadiryar, and the
stories of Sassi-Punnu, Mirza-Sahiban and others. And no less eminent were the
Sufi poets from Sultan Bahu to Bulle Shah who stand as symbols of what has often
been called the Punjabiyat.
But
it was precisely this lively and syncretic tradition that got a severe jolt
because of the country’s partition. We take here just one specific instance.
Since the days of Guru Nanak, ragis
used to sing gurubani and Sufi songs outside gurdwaras throughout Punjab, and
these ragis were Muslims who did not
think their singing was in any way an obstacle to the observance of their own
faith. But the climate of distrust which the communal forces, aided and abetted
by British imperialists, created in the 1940s, has done away with this precious
tradition forever.
IT
is thus clear that if the “spirit of Punjab, Punjabi and Punjabiyat” is to
be revived, for which the organisers of the first World Punjabi Conference said
they would strive, then the said glorious traditions of Punjab will have to be
preserved and further strengthened and developed. Preserving these traditions is
in itself not much of a problem, as the Punjabi people of both India and
Pakistan still cherish these traditions. And this can serve as the basis on
which the mutual bonds between the two segments of the nationality can be
further cemented.
There
is also the need to look at the recent World Punjabi Conference in the context
of the ongoing Indo-Pak dialogue. There is no denying that India and Pakistan
still have to cross many hurdles in order to improve their relations, but the
gratifying fact is that the process of dialogue is on and has also made some
headway. And, more important than that, the process is backed by a very big fund
of popular goodwill in both the countries. As the Punjabis, like the Bengalis
and Muhajirs, have much suffered the trauma of partition, anything that pushes
the process of their integration can’t but have a salutary effect on the
betterment of Indo-Pak ties.
But
this requires, above anything else, that the process of people to people
contacts must be made to move ahead as vigorously as possible. If the first
World Punjabi Conference was mainly an official affair, this was in a sense and
to an extent inevitable. But since the conference process has already begun, it
is not necessary that it should remain confined to the official level. Rather it
must be made broad-based and intellectuals, journalists, teachers and students,
youth, women and other segments of the population of the two countries have to
be involved in it. There will of course be irritants in the way, like Chaudhary
Pervaiz Ilahi’s remarks on the supposed centrality of the Kashmir issue in
forging the Indo-Pak ties. But there is no need to let these minor irritants
dominate the whole issue. Moreover, once the process of people to people
contacts moves ahead, it can well overcome such irritants in an unimaginably
short time. In sum, such contacts are a very real guarantee for the creation of
durable peace in South Asia and progressive betterment of Indo-Pak ties that
will be in the mutual interest of the two countries and the whole subcontinent.
The newly started process of World Punjabi Conference can thus be a valuable and integral part of the wider process of Indo-Pak dialogue, and it is in this light that it has to be seen and evaluated.