In a career spanning over
six decades, India’s veteran journalist has covered a host of events; he has met,
interviewed and written about major figures in India’s political life as well
as also those from the world arena: Indira Gandhi, Lal Bahadur Shastri, Jai
Prakash Narayan, Mujibur Rahman, Ziaul Haq, Z. A. Bhutto, A. Q. Khan. The list
is endless. His first major assignment as a cub reporter working for the Urdu
newspaper Anjaam (The Conclusion)
from Delhi was to write on Gandhi’s assassination. The poignancy of that moment
left a deep impact on his psyche. Only three months old in the field of
journalism, he could ‘see’ history explode before his eyes; he admits he wept
unashamedly. He is still haunted by Gandhi’s words, delivered at a public
prayer service a few days before his death where Nayar was present: Hindus and
Muslims are like my two eyes, the Mahatma had said.
(This interview first appeared in The Herald, Karachi, August 2012)
In a previous book, Tales of Two Cities (co-authored with
senior Pakistani journalist Asif Noorani), Nayar has written with empathy and clarity
about the momentous event that changed countless lives, including his own,
forever. Was partition inevitable, I ask? Could its thirst for blood been
slaked by some means other than the division of the country? Holding Jinnah and
Nehru equally ‘responsible’, he says, to begin with, Partition was not
inevitable. The Cabinet Mission Plan held out promise of resolution but as
events panned out and Nehru and Jinnah remained implacable, it became inevitable.
Having witnessed at
first hand the blood and gore, the massacres and the communal carnage, how,
then, did he not go the ‘other’ way? After all many did. In fact, right-wing
organisations on both sides of the border – the RSS and its affiliated wings in
India just as the Jamaat or the MQM and the pro-Muhajir parties in Pakistan –
fed on precisely the trauma that the first-generation of migrants had
experienced to swell their ranks and obtain sympathisers if not members? Nayar
tells me that it is precisely because he saw the trauma and the madness that
his belief in pluralism was strengthened. He learnt to judge a person by his
beliefs and commitments, not his religion.
Nayar’s great love for
the Urdu language is well known. In fact, in his youth, he even wrote poetry
till the maverick but hugely talented poet-politician, Hasrat Mohani told him
he was wasting his time ‘writing verses that made no sense’! Yet Urdu has
remained his ‘first love’ and he is one of its most vocal champions. But what
of the neglect of Urdu? Why is it that any Urdu-related soiree sees only a grey
audience? What does he make of the Indian Muslim’s oft-repeated lament that
Urdu has languished due to official apathy? Holding Urdu to be the worst
casualty of the migration, Nayar blames political parties, including the
Congress that held sway in post-partition India, to be responsible. In his
characteristically blunt manner he asks, ‘(Such deliberate neglect) is
understandable on the part of the BJP, but why the Congress?’
In 1992, Nayar started
the practice of a candle-light vigil at the Indo-Pak border on the night of
14-15 August. Scores of peaceniks join him as he marches up to the crossing at
Attari, candle in hand; an equal number of activists, writers, poets,
performers, surges from the other side. This annual event is viewed with some
bemusement by hard-nosed political commentators and dismissed as dewy-eyed
idealism or jingoism of the worst sort by hawks on both sides, especially in
times when bilateral relations suffer from frost bite. But what compels a man
of 88 years to undertake this long journey – by rail from Delhi, by car from Amritsar
and eventually on foot, that too at the perilous hour of midnight – year after year to raise the cry of
‘Hindustan-Pakistan Dosti Zindabad’ in the face of continuing cynicism? ‘I am
an optimist,’ he tells me. ‘One day, all of South Asia will be a Union – one
visa, one currency… everyone will be free to work, travel, think.’ As we wind
up our conversation, he recites this sher by Faiz Ahmad Faiz:
Jis dhaj se koi maqtal mei gaya,
woh shan salamat rahti hai
Yeh jaan to aani jaani hai, iss
jaan ki koi baat nahi
And this unshakeable
belief, gentle readers, is the heart of the matter. Herein lies Kuldip Nayar’s
real eminence.
Either NATO must intervene to stop Milosevic's blood thirsty mission. ... With the passage of time in this post 9/11 period when media hype against Muslims is too .
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