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This
very personal piece on Alys Faiz must begin with an apology to all
those who are used to writing and reading rather impersonal obituaries.
Much has been written about the public figure that Alys Faiz was,
what she did and what she stood for. It may be time now, to recall
the remarkable person she was, to the extent that we knew her, for
even close friends of many years often do not fully know one another.
Alys to her close friends, Mama to her children, Auntie Alys
to a large brigade of younger people, and Mrs Faiz to everyone beyond
the fringe of immediate intimacy, she was the perfect example of
a saying Mumtaz Daultana was fond of quoting, but in reference to
Alys' husband, Faiz Ahmed Faiz: "He bred friendship without
encouraging familiarity." This evaluation conformed just as
much to Alys, for two reasons. One , she had a commanding presence,
and two, because most people knew her only as the woman by Faiz's
side.
I was one of the few people who had met Alys before meeting Faiz,
and it was through her that I sometimes understood him. But that
was more than 50 years ago, when as an inexperienced and hesitant
apprentice to journalism, I was ushered into a small compartment
that had been crafted out of what had been a much larger room at
The Pakistan Times. The partial wooden partition separating my cubicle
from those occupied by others, did not touch the roof, and as the
voices of various staff members filtered through, I was always well
aware of the activities of each one of them. The wife of the newspaper's
incarcerated editor was in charge of producing the children's page
as well as the more tedious task of measuring contributors' input
in inches and typing out their fees in triplicate. The very first
impression she made on me was a motherly one - I felt protected
and encouraged by her interest in my professional advancement, although
she never minced words about the competition in the field.
Those were exceptionally difficult days for Alys. Her husband was
facing charges that carried a high penalty. She had to bring up
and educate her two young daughters on a meagre income and was thus
obliged to don herself in uncalendered long cloth. She sizzled with
anger at all those tormenting Faiz but kept her personal anguish
to herself. Her biggest complaint was against Lahore's heat, as
she bicycled to the office under the scorching summer sun. "I
don't think I will survive this summer," she would often remark.
Her zest for life proved her wrong. Those were the days of struggle
- learning about one's capacity to resist, battling against the
odds, denying one's self for one's convictions, and learning about
the satisfaction inherent in standing up for the oppressed.
Alys also had to fight her way through a male-dominated office environment.
Even a small task like getting permission to build a women's washroom
required a struggle. A young reporter sought her company by claiming
that Faiz Sahib treated him like his son. He did get his cup of
coffee but also the repartee - "I am not responsible for Faiz's
wild oats." Normally, however, politeness and a penchant for
the under-statement were her trademarks. But she could always be
counted on to be honest. When a guest once asked for a 'small' amount
of milk in her tea, Alys corrected her immediately. "You mean
a little," she said. She once persuaded me to review my articles
as a film critic with a hard-hitting single sentence: "It seems
you can no longer enjoy a film," she said. And she was first
and foremost, a member of the team she worked with. She may have
argued with Mazhar Ali Khan at times, but there could be no question
about her loyalty to the captain.
Alys loved books and could often be spotted in public libraries.
For her it was essential, especially in times of adversity, to derive
sustenance from cultural pursuits - music, theatre, cinema, even
from TV documentaries. She was always careful about living within
her means and although this led some people to believe that she
was parsimonious, this was not entirely correct. She helped along
Faiz's sense of financial propriety, and if she insisted on Faiz
being compensated for the use of his name in commercial ventures,
she was only acting as his authorised agent.
She was a meticulous housekeeper, capable of running a decent establishment
without riches. She insistedthat her husband always leave his bedroom
properly dressed, and she refined his sense of punctuality. She
considered it her duty to protect Faiz against people who wished
to exploit him and also against friends who sought his company for
pleasurable pursuits that lay beyond the limits set by her. When
she said it was time to leave, it was time, whether the place was
a friend's house or the BBC club in London. But she also knew the
limits of her capacity to regulate Faiz's free spirit. She suffered
quietly and chose not to see what could not be endured.
It was not easy to befriend her because she insisted on only associating
with intellectuals and those who loved their fellow human beings.
She did not like people who, in her words, "spoke at length
and said little," and also those who left their sentences unfinished
- 'Like Faiz, you too,' she would protest. She, however, could communicate
in silence with Aziz Siddiqui, who like Faiz, was a man of few words.
Yet Alys was always a caring spirit. She was always concerned about
her associates' problems. Once, on holiday in a foreign capital,
a local friend, while recounting the attractions of his city and
desirous of my visiting him again, mentioned without reason that
I should return to have my heart examined. She overheard this remark,
and without my knowing, set about impressing uponAsma Jahangir the
urgency of saving me from climbing the stairs to my fourth floor
office.
What poor workers did by way of their commitment was more welcome
to her than noisy affairs staged by rich hypocrites. A function
in the village Kala Qadir was as enjoyable to her as a grand carnival
in Lahore, and she never declined a single offer to join factory
workers protesting for change.
Although Alys was devoted to her siblings and yearned for reunions,
she loved many Pakistani people much better than her own countrymen.
She did not like her life in exile and did not take kindly to those
who she thought was a party to Faiz's retreating to Beirut. Her
greatest trial was Faiz's death. But the only words that hinted
at her pain were these: "Five years without him," she
would say, and later, "Fourteen years without him." But
they were enough to communicate her agony. As a 'gritty Brit,' which
is how she often described herself, it served no purpose to complain
and instead she would observe - "I have seen only a few faces
today, you know I cannot go out."
Many people labour hard to leave indelible footprints on the sands
of time, but only a few make their mark by simply being who they
are. Alys Faiz was one of those people.
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