My latest memory of Kohlu is now
about 16 years old. When I close
my eyes and try to picture what
now lays in bits and patches in
my mind, I miss that odd place.
I really do. I think hard of
what good that place has brought to
my life and I can think of
nothing. But I know I am wrong;
for nostalgia is driving me to write
about it.
Story
of my stay with my family, in
Kohlu, finds its beginning that dates
back to the summers of the year
2000. For an army officer (serving in
infantry)’s eight-year-old kid, father’s posting
to a far off place is not
something out of the ordinary. Considering
the fact that I had travelled by
a C-130 military aircraft to Gilgit
within a year of my birth, shifting
to place that no one couldn’t even
find on the map back then, could not be
categorized as extraordinary (although the
stay did prove to be truly extraordinary).
Kohlu,
situated in Balochistan, has a history
that dates back to the 16th
century. Pertaining to tribal disputes, the
history of Kohlu is blood-stained with
regional wars over land and resources.
Marri and Zarkhoon are the two tribes
living in and near Kohlu district
since before the British rule over
the subcontinent. Since the partition,
owing to the unsettling situation in
the area, two military operations have
been conducted in the region. The latter
of two resulted in a permanent
military control over the land by
Frontier Corps (FC).
In
2000, as part of my father’s hard
area tenure, he was posted to Kohlu
as the Company Commander in Maiwind
Rifles (FC).
Setting
off and travelling to Kohlu was in
itself a dangerous mission. The first
phase of the thirteen-hour journey was
a five-hour long travelling from Lahore
to Dera Ghazi Khan (where we crossed
the Punjab-Baluchistan border) by bus. Then
After a night stay in DG Khan,
we set off for Kohlu on a
Toyota single-cabin. I can see three
distant memories in my mind. A long,
seemingly never-ending, straight, deserted road
that apparently led to the mountains
visible in distance, with empty plains
on both sides. Narrow, twisting roads on
the most rocky mountains I had ever
seen, with an enormous wall of rock
on one side and a frighteningly deep
pit on the other. A distant sight
of a few lights visible from
the mountain at night, as we
descended into the Kohlu Valley.
The
night we reached Kohlu after the
thirteen hour long journey from Lahore,
not a thing could be seen in or
near the house that was allotted to
us, for electricity was out and the
generators were out of order. The
night was spent in total darkness,
thinking about the time in Kohlu that
lay ahead.
Next
day, when the sun came out, I
decided to take a look around the
place. Our house was a typical army
house. Painted in maroon and white;
chipped, grey floor; old looking,
white-washed rooms; huge lawn with patches
of green; big metallic gate that gave
a view of an entrance to a jail
(literally); high boundary walls. At the
front covered area of the house,
there was a small room with a
large steel netted window that replaced
the whole front wall. We called it
the ‘sun-room’ for it was filled with
gleaming sunlight the whole day. Later we
kept fowls there and used to sit
there during winter afternoons. The
remaining part of the house, within
the boundary was a grassy lawn.
Generally, Kohlu’s soil was barren and
dry. We tried to grow some vegetables
on the rear part of the house
but all efforts went in vain.
Water
in Kohlu was scarce. The little water
that was present had no connection
whatsoever with the houses and once
or twice a week, water filled tanker
filled our home water tanks that was
used for cleaning purposes. What that
water was like is a completely
different story. Let’s just limit
yourselves to the knowledge that when
filled in a tub, small white and
red worms could be seen swimming in
the water.
Tribal
disputes and their clashes with military
forces could never be settled. I can
relate to two such instances, however,
the one which I have quite a
vivid memory of, is a post 9/11
clash between the two tribes in
Kohlu. My father had to leave Kohlu
as he was deputed to Chaman on
Pakistan-Afghanistan border, right after the
American air-strike on Afghanistan, to keep
an eye on trans-border smuggling of
goods and afghan people. It was a
Saturday night. I and my mother were
watching a PTV short film while my
sister was asleep. We heard a muffled
sound, as if somebody had closed the
metal gate of our house. Frightened
of a possible burglary, we tip toed
to the door and peeped out. What
we saw was something that we never
expected. It was pitch dark outside
and all we could see was a fire
ball (a bazooka launched rocket), right
above our heads, up in the sky.
Realizing what it really was, we
panicked. Soon after this sight it
started firing that continued for about
half an hour. We woke my sister
up, went out in the lawns and
climbed the wall to move to our
neighbours’ house. As long as the
firing continued, all the kids including
our weeping mothers kept praying. I
don’t know how much time we spent
there but when I woke up the
next morning, I was in my own bed.
As
a kid that situation excited me more
than it frightened me. Leaving home
during a cross fire and climbing a
wall to take refuge was like living
a real movie scenario. But when I
recall it and picture it in my
mind now, I realize how dangerous
that situation was. The rocket could
have hit somewhere near our house or
the cross fire could have killed us.
As a kid we never thought of
anything like that. Either we were
way too young to think about
something like being killed or we
simply ignored the fact. The same
reason can explain why our mothers
were crying and we weren’t. Another
thing that I learned from that experience
was how we, expecting the worst, took
refuge at a place that was as
exposed as our own place was. We
found ourselves completely helpless and
wanted to be with people we knew
and who shared our fear. It did
no good to the tribal clash situation
nor did it stop any bullet from
leaving the barrel of the rifle, but
it did give us a sense of
virtual protection. I think that made
all the difference. Hope, it is said,
is a good thing.
Snakes,
scorpions… name any horrifying creature and
you could find it in Kohlu. One
in particular was a very mysterious
one. Its bite could make you lose
that whole part of your body. The
trait that made it mysterious was
that no one could see it. Sand
fly, as it is called, is an
insect so small that it can’t be
seen with a naked eye. Unlike its
name, this particular ‘fly’ cannot fly
but it jumps and hops its way.
Once bitten by this, it was said
that the patient was to be injected
a number of times at the point
of infection. When my sister showed
symptoms of Sand Fly’s bite, it was
decided by Major Dr Anwaar, the only
doctor in Kohlu cantonment and our
neighbour that her case was a
different one and only bandaging could
suffice the treatment. It worked and
her hand was soon back to normal.
It
was in Kohlu that I was first
introduced to dogs with rabies or
more commonly called Mad Dogs. When I
found that one of the soldiers was
bitten by a Mad Dog and was
reluctant to even see water,
the image that was created in my
mind was a hilarious one. I visualized
the ‘mad’ dog as one behaving more
or less like a mad person commonly
shown on TV. I imagined it walking
in an awkward way, making funny
noises and with a messed up face.
The person being bitten was assumed
to have acquired the madness through
the bite such that he started
behaving just like the dog. But one
thing that didn’t make sense was how
could someone be afraid of water?
Meanwhile, observing the situation, soldiers were
ordered to shoot any dog in the
premises of the cantonment. It was
only after many years that I finally
found about hydrophobia and symptoms of
rabies from nothing else but a course
book.
As
astonishing as it may sound, my
realization of the beauty of Allah’s
most magnificent creation ‘stars’, also
finds its origin in this forsaken
place. It was a normal night, which
means that electricity was out and
generators were not working either. So
in order to pass some time, I
went out in the lawns and sat
down on a chair. The moment I
looked up in the sky I couldn’t
move my eyes off that black canvas
full of uncountable, shimmering lights. I
savoured the scene for as long as
my neck could afford to. I had
never witnessed anything more bravura than
those stars that covered the whole
sky, and not a single starless patch
could be seen on the entire heavens.
Never again in my life had I
ever witnessed so many stars as I
did that day. My love for this
sight made me think about becoming an
astronaut one day and reaching for
these stars but the idea was
immediately suppressed as soon as I
learned in my science class that
stars were not to be touched and
that their beauty remains only if you
are distant from them. Alone, a star
is just a blazing hot ball of
fire. I never liked the idea.
Not
far away from where our house was
situated was a range of huge, rocky
mountains. I really admired those enormous
creations that covered a large part
of land in Kohlu. With not a
single patch of greenery on the entire
range, the mountains were dry, rocky
and unclimbable. The beauty of these
humungous creations was magnified during
rain. As it rained, water found its
way through the cracks created by
erosion and formed an awfully beautiful
waterfall. I loved the sight.
My
first and only supernatural experience is
also directly linked with this city I
miss. We had just came back to
Kohlu after our yearly one-month vacations
in Lahore. On entering our room we
found the TV missing. Presumably, it
was stolen. Enquiries were made but
nothing could be concluded. One day after
school, my father took me with him
at some place in the city area.
In a small, narrow street, there was
a house with a green wooden door.
My father knocked and a bearded man
opened the door, greeted us and
offered us to get in the house.
Immediately after the entrance, there was
a hall where at one side some
children were reciting Quran. On
the other side there was a mat.
The bearded man asked me to sit
on the mat while my father sat
beside me. After resting his own self
on the mat, in front of me, he
started reciting something to himself and
once in a while blew on me.
After some time he took my hand,
dipped his index finger in a black
ink pot and spread the ink on
my thumb such that my whole nail
was wet with black ink. He then
asked me to look into the inked
thumb nail and tell him what I
saw. As I looked into the ink, what
I saw was so unexpected and
impossible that I simply refused to
accept that I even saw something. The
reflection on my thumb nail had an
image of my own room where we
had the TV. Then I saw a man
sitting right in front of the TV
set, undoing the wires. I raised my
head and looked around my shoulder to
see what was making the reflection. I
couldn't comprehend anything, so when he
asked, I simply said that I didn’t
see anything at all. He smiled and
said “Nothing?” I repeated my last
reply and after that we left that
place. To be honest, at that time
I was sure of the fact that I
was hallucinating, for logic couldn’t
explain it. Real or unreal, magic or
trick, it did happen, but the fact
is: Apart from being an incident I
can relate to, it didn’t affect me
in any manner, and I thank Allah
for that.
I
have quite a few regrets in my
life. Making no good, lasting friends
in Kohlu being one of them, at
one end makes me feel sad and
at the other helps me make new
friends. For an indefinitely long period
of time, lack of education in the
citizens of Kohlu resulted in disputes
over petty issues that cost lives and
property. As part of the rehabilitation
of the locals suffering from the
aftereffects of tribal disputes, Frontiers
Corps decided to build a new school
in the city area in order to
eradicate the problem of illiteracy in
the masses. The school that was built
to provide primary education to the
local children was named FC Public
School. To serve its purpose rightly,
locals were encouraged to send their
children to this school. Officers and
educated personnel from Army Education
Corps, educated wives of Army officers
and educated locals were hired as
teachers. When I joined the school, I
was in grade three and there were
four students in my class. The
strength of the class later raised up
to six. The school initially had four
classrooms, one for each of the four
grades, up to which, at that time,
the school offered education. For as
long as two years after that, one
classroom was constructed to accommodate
the promoted students and make room
for the new admissions each successive year.
Out
of the five class fellows I had,
the two I now remember and so
desperately wanted to befriend were the
brothers Asad Ullah and Ubaid Ullah.
Asad was elder than Ubaid but Ubaid
was the taller of the two. Both
of the brothers were gifted with
highly intelligent minds. As long as
I studied with them I could never
beat them. Why they disliked me, at
that time I could never comprehend.
All my efforts to offer them a
hand of friendship went in vain. Once
on my birthday party I invited them
to come to my house which they
refused. On the day of the function
I waited for them but they never
came so I asked my mother to
take me to their home. Their mud
house comprised of, if I am not
mistaken, two rooms. When I entered
their house they offered me to sit
in one of the two. I was served
with cold Badam ka sharbat in
a steel glass. When I told them
that I had come to take them
with me, they were reluctant. I
insisted, to which their parents finally
gave their assent. These are all the
memories I have of them.
When
I think about them now, I feel
that what lacked between our friendships
was my inability to grasp the unsaid.
Whether it was the huge difference in
the statuses of our families, their
sense of deprivation, my failure to
make them feel comfortable with me or
none of what I think they thought,
I guess I can never find out.
What good I found from these
experiences was my ability to make
new friends. Making people feel comfortable
and important, and never trying to
make them feel small by compromising
is I think what Asad and Ubaid
taught me.
Hardships
pass but their affects last, cities
are lost but their legacies are eternal.
Situation today in Kohlu is far worse
than it ever was. I have good
memories associated with Kohlu and I
have bad ones, but I have always
chosen the good ones over the bad
ones and have learned from them all.
Today when I speak my heart out
and wish to visit that place once
more, I am called insane. But if
being nostalgic is being insane then
let it be. I can’t remember the
day we left Kohlu. It must have
been a day we anticipated going back
to the ‘world’ again. If,
instead of being a place, Kohlu were
a living being then I know how
it must have felt when I left.
It must have felt the same way
Pi felt when Richard Parker left him
so unceremoniously after such a long
journey of survival. Pi saved Richard
Parker’s life, Kohlu saved mine.


Wow nice i almost feel i have been there!
ReplyDeleteThat's a huge compliment Fouzan ! Thanks! :D
DeleteHmmmm great 1 bro..... awsome...
ReplyDeleteThank you! It is pleasantly surprising to receive a comment from someone from the Marri tribe! :) Thank you again!
Deleteoh my my! you've reminded me of my year long stay in Kashmore depot! I can so relate to everything you've written here (except that I had no school to go to:-() so I didn't make much friends either. great piece masha ALLAH :-)
ReplyDeleteThank you very much Mariah for taking out time to read my piece and comment too! :)
DeleteIts feels great to find people who can relate to stuff you have been through but in case you too are an army brat then its not much of a surprise I guess :D
By the way, 'No school' sounds cool! :D
:-D
Delete