What's common between India & Pakistan: Argument
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Rajbir Deswal , ANTA: May 17 2008
Made Popular May 17 2008

Argument on Wagah

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While driving past Amritsar upto Wagah, we had thought we would experience all that should be different. People, soil, food, dwellings, crops, language, etc. Also, we’d thought everything should look, as between worst enemies, torn and divided: Culture, Community, Ancestry, History and Religion. But that was not to be. It was as if it were an extension of India into Pakistan, with nothing noticeable that tells one from the other.

We had heard about the Drill at Wagah and the sentiments attached to the event. A colleague in my office had once told me, “One is very enthused and enough prepared to die for the country at that moment, Sir”. The Indian side shouts “Vande-Matram, Bharat Mata ki Jai and Hindustan Zindabad”. The other side says, “Pakistan Zindabad, Paaindabad.” Lowering of the flags on both sides is followed by a common drill in which the Border Security Force Men and Pakistani Rangers ‘out step’ each other with overt and aggressive, macho display of strength.

Well we reached the Wagah Border with barbed fencing leading from both sides. The strong iron-gates were painted in tricolor scheme on ‘our’ side and green & white on ‘theirs’. Crowds of people having patriotic blood flowing through their veins had gathered on both sides. Each half was charitable but only to itself in shouting slogans. It was here that I felt there existed two countries, two people, two communities, two entities.

But still carried away by my fondness and respect for our mutual bonhomie with Pakistan, the tales of which I had heard from my father and grandfather, I began cheering even the ‘other side’ when they sought response to their sloganory exhortations. Suddenly then, I felt a tapping on my shoulder by ‘someone’. I turned back and looked someone with whom an argument ensued reflexively.

“Why are you cheering them?”
“There is nothing wrong in that”
“Are you one of those?”
“And are you someone different?”
“Don’t know they’re separate now?”
“Do Rivers stop entering this side?”
“Political rhetoric is long dead”
“So will be peace-willing generations!”
“Khushwants, Nayyars, Asma Jahangirs?”
“Yes. Precisely. So let’s cheer each other.”
“Don’t hear they swear by Allah?”
“Large number among us also does that.”
“They’re under seize and are tensed.”
“That’s why they deserve our cheers!”
“Emotional fool! Go your way”

Having been thus ticked off, I realized that ‘Someone’ was none else than my own flawed self. But what I had been looking in that crowd, even after the event of retreat drill, was the face of a child called Noor. Remember she had a successful heart surgery in Hindustan some years back. I am sure the likes of her would be the new generation of peace-willers in Pakistan. The retreat left me more hopeful. Emotional fool. Did you say that? No. Now it is ‘someone’ again at it. Damn him and hail peace!

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2 Stars
Siblings can be good friend but also bitter enemy. Pakistan and India falls in the later category. But the issue is not the Indo Pak amity. It is of regional ties. A Punjabi Muslim in Punjab (Pakistan) is close to a Punjabi Hindu in Punjab (India) but is bitter to a Muslim Mahajir (migrant from U.P. and Bihar after the partition of the country). Ibne Insha has beautifully summed up this paradox in his book ”Urdu ki Akhri kitab”.
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Sanwali
Shimla, India
Its a wonderful article, Rajbir. We all know that there is a lot of similarities in India and Pakistan. Once we were one, Afterall.
Everybody knows that a common man never demands a war because he is the one who suffers the most in such situations.

Its very sad that due to few selfish elements, the two nations are not able to unite.
2 Stars
Leena Komarraju
Kolkata, India
Yes Sanwali the common man does not want war. India and Pakistan were one before. We do not realise that it was just a clever move by the people who wanted to devide and rule that has developed this hostility between us.now they are just sitting back and watching the fun.

Its high time we and our neighbour realise this and start a new chapter of mutual respect, peace and harmony.
2 Stars
All the more, our generation is probabaly the last one,in as much as feeling oneness with pakistan is concerned. And it is so because we heard stories of Lahore, Multan, Layalpur,Jhang etc from our parents and grand parents.Similarly the other side also might have talked about things in Delhi, Lucknow, Meerut,Saharanpur and Panipat. The GenX on both sides is not blessed with this unique feature which could throw its weight behind all reconciliatory moves.
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Michael Kerjman
The Earth, Australia
What is common?

Genotype surely is, diversified on inter-faiths grounds, and following it, politics, of which family issues are a very part.
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