N ature , langurs &
farmers!
Humra Quraishi
This 'gas chamber' capital city can get on your
nerves. What with the pollution, the pace,
the murky politics around. And last
fortnight, I decided to get going …towards
Satoli, not too far from Mukteshar and
Almora in the Nainital district . That much
needed get –away!
In fact, a couple of friends had anyway planned to go
on that trip and I decided to go along. Good that I did ,
for within a couple of hours after reaching Satoli and
settling down in a lovely cottage - One Partridge Hill
Satoli
–one felt the change in the very atmosphere. Not just
an abundance of clean fresh air but absolute tranquility.
Solitude!
Few locals could be spotted on the roads and that's
about it. In fact, as luck would have it , the home next
one to Partridge Hill was Geeta and Colonel Dr. Skehkar
Pant's .Yes, they are the well - known couple who have
been reaching to the Kumaoni population of Satoli with
an array of facilities through the NGO Aarohi which
Dr Pant heads … he travels to Satoli every month to
oversee the running of a school , medical and health
facilities, mobile vans, outreach programs that his team
runs in this Kumaon belt . In fact, I am yet to meet a
Kumaoni who is so very proud his place of roots.
There is something wonderfully serene about this
belt; drawing several who's who of the capital city towards it …to this serenity .Our hosts, couldn't last
minute make it but gave adequate instructions to the
staff to provide us elaborate veggie meals and take us
around …we traveled towards Mukteshwar, Kwarab and
the connecting locales .
For me the only jarring note in this otherwise great
trip was monkeys and langurs all along - that is , all
over the Kumaon region .They seemed to be not just
along the roads and highways but also on agricultural
stretches. In fact, an agricultural expert told me that
farmers and cultivators of this belt are finding the going tough as monkeys have been let loose , "in the
last few months the monkey population in the entire
belt has tripled because truckloads of monkeys were
transported and dumped here …brought here in a
caged condition from Agra and Western Uttar Pradesh
and un –caged here on our land! Wrecking havoc for
the cultivators."
Actor's lament !
Saira Bano and Dilip Kumar
In 1999, I knew Saira Bano and Dilip Kumar were in
New Delhi. I was keen to interview them, so I tried all the
possible sources that could connect me with them. But
the closest I could get by way of a source was a
homoeopath who was treating the couple. And the
closest he could get by way of helping me get an
appointment with them was to tell me that they were staying at the Le Meridien Hotel.
I landed at the hotel lobby, but before I could move
towards the reception, I could see Saira Bano and Dilip
Kumar in the glass lift descending to the lobby.
I rushed towards them, but before I could begin with my well-rehearsed lines, introducing the homeopath
connection by way of introduction, I could see a frown
spread across Dilip Kumar's face. It was obvious that he
hated this intrusion, and in chaste Urdu – well, Urdu so
chaste that it seemed out of place and filmi – he said that
I should have come only and only with a prior
appointment, and they being so very busy here in New
Delhi, did not have the time to say even a word.
He walked out of the lobby, along with his wife and
several others who had gathered around to hear him.
It was the summer of 1999. It was a crucial and tense
phase for the couple – that was the year of the big
political controversy surrounding Dilip Kumar and the
Nishaan-e-Imtiaz, which the Pakistani Government had
bestowed on him, and which he refused to return…. I
was told that the two were meeting several important
political people in Delhi at the time and were keeping
miles away from journos.
Not one to give up, I waited .Well long enough till I
could manage to interview Saira Bano…When I got a
chance to speak to her this was my first question to her.
"Why doesn't your husband return this award? Why keep
it when it is causing so much tension?"
She'd replied, "Return it? Are we living in a democracy
or is it some sort of dictatorship? How much we are
being bullied! Tell me how much of a mess can you take
in your life? After all, this award was not given to him
now, but it was given last year, in March 1998. Even then,
Dilipsaab was so cautious, that he first took permission
from our Government and from the Prime Minister."
LK Advani
"But your critics are crying themselves hoarse, saying
that this is 1999, there's a war with Pakistan so the
scenario has
changed…"
To that, Saira Bano
said, "Tell me, do we
now go looking for all
those trophies,
awards and citations
that our cricketers
and sportspersons
received when they
had played in
Pakistan? Should we
ask them to give back all those awards they'd received
earlier? I'm told that even LK Advani sahib had got some
citation from Pakistan…all this talk of returning awards
seems petty."
"Your husband's critics point out that Rabindranath
Tagore had returned the title that the British had
bestowed on him, and in keeping with that action, Dilip
Kumar should return
this Award. What are
your comments ?"
Rabindranath Tagore
" R a b i n d r a n a t h
Tagore returned it on
his way on a certain
occasion. He wasn't
labelled anti-national,
nor was he bullied and
threatened, like we are
being bullied and
threatened," was her
terse reply.
"It is said that
certain Right-wing
political parties in
Mumbai are not happy
with the social service work you undertook after the
Bombay riots of 1992-1993. Is this why you are facing
this backlash?" I queried.
She said, "There is a communal trace to the whole
issue, but let me add that I do social service for all
people, people from different communities. I try to
reach out to whoever is in need…And I do so with a
group of close friends who belong to different
communities; in fact, most of my friends are Hindus. We
are not high profile at all, but try to serve in a quiet
way…I feel very upset by what's been happening.
Witnessing those riots was a nightmare, and the growing
fascism and communalism has hurt me, shattered me. I
feel grieved, as though my dream has been broken, my
glass been shattered. One hopes that common sense
prevails and this growing communalism gets controlled,
so that we can all coexist in peace."
"Usually film stars stand united in times of crisis, but
in this present crisis that you and your husband are
facing, film stars are maintaining a studied silence. What
do you think of this?"
"Have they stood by anyone? Nobody takes a stand
these days! Even when Sanju (Sanjay Dutt) was being
harassed, the only two people who spoke for him were
Shatrughan Sinha and my husband. Even when the film
Fire was in trouble, only my husband spoke out on the
matter."
Nostalgia overpowers
Ustad Sayeeduddin Dagar
The very first time I had attended a Dhrupad
concert was in the mid - 80s ,at the residence of the
then envoy of Qatar to India, Dr . Hassan Al Nimah
…The setting was
absolutely perfect -
under white shaminas
erected on the sprawling
lawns of the
ambassador's residence,
the two Dagar brothers
- Ustad N. Zahiruddin
Dagar and Ustad
N.Faiyazuddin rendered
Dhrupad .
And the very first time
I had met Ustad
Sayeeduddin Dagar was
around the same time -
that is , mid -80s . In fact,
several days after that
concert I wanted to interview the Dagar brothers and
set out looking for their home .
I was directed to a first
floor flat in New Delhi's East Nizamuddin locality . The
stairs led to a study which had a chandni ( white sheet
) spread out on the floor .Ustad Zahiruddin was sitting
on it doing riyaz …I was ushered inwards by Ustad
Faiyazudin sahib's wife Mehmooda Begum . She had
introduced me to her brothers –in - law- Ustad
Sayeeduddin , Nasir Aminuddin , Fahimuddin, Zia
Mohiuddin and Zia Fariduddin.
And now when news comes in of the passing away
of Sayeeduddin Dagar nostalgia overpowers . One
doesn't want to sound clichéd but then, how else to
describe the scenario - passage of time taking its toll...
Yes, till about a couple of decades back , it was a full
household when the seven Dagar brothers were alive.
One would see them all at their small home Though
three of them - Zahiruddin, Sayeeduddin and
Faiyazuddin - lived in that home together with their
families (Faiyazuddin and Sayeeduddin were married
with children but Zahiruddin remained a bachelor ), the
other four brothers - Aminuddin, Fahimuddin, Zia
Fariduddin and Mohiuddin - would visit from the cities
they were based. And yes, it was a treat to watch them
for there seemed much togetherness and that feel of a
clan. Clan of great music givers, for not to be overlooked
is the fact that Dhrupad started in the 15th Century
when a Dagar was a court musician for Emperor Akbar
and till date, this tradition has been going on, unbroken
so far.
And I had last met Sayeeduddin Dagar around
the start of 2014 , during the two day long concerts
by the Dagars at the Indira National Centre for Arts.
S a y e e d u d d i n
Dagar was
performing with
his sons ,
Aneesuddin and
Nafeesuddin. That
evening amongst
the audience
were a large
number of his
French students -
several had
travelled from
France to India to
be able to do riyaz
with him and were
putting up at the
various guest houses in this capital city .
After the concert we all drove to Wasifuddin
Dagar's Asiad Village home for dinner and an informal
get -together… There was tremendous warmth and I
got to meet his French disciples – prominent was the
67 year old Mitchelle Dehoky , Jerome Cormier ,
Brigitte Peterfalvi …and several other Indian disciples
too . I recall meeting one of their Jaipur based senior
disciples, Iqbal Khan,who is closely associated
with the Dagar family for years and makes it a point
to be there for each and every occasion associated
with this family.