|
In
one square mile of space in the heart of greater Lahore nestles
a microcosm of history - and of the human condition. Here the past
is chronicled in endless labyrinthine lanes, lodged in each brick
of an awesome architectural heritage, and springs to life in the
daily son et lumiere that makes up existence within its confines.
Once a jewel in the crown of the Mughal kings, of the Sikhs
who wrested control of it, and subsequently of empire - the British
colonisers - Lahore's Walled City is a testament to intrigue, power,
pageantry, passion and pathos. Ultimately, it is a testament to
life itself.
Liberate the senses and partake of the
feast of sight, sound and sensation
As the first light of dawn filters down, it awakens, as if in slow
motion, a sleeping giant. One by one, the denizens of the city begin
their day: milkmen venture forth on their delivery route; tea shops
and nashtaghars announce with the clanging of shutters being pulled
up, the start of business; street cleaners launch another pitched
battle against mountains of refuse; urchins ready for a new day
on the streets. By noon, it is business in earnest.
As dusk gives way to night, a full moon creates a dance of light
and shadows on the decorative tasselation, arabesque traceries and
mosaic pattern-work that adorn a myriad structures of the old city.
Courtesans play hide and seek behind ornamental jharokas, and as
one set of traders turns in, another prepares for business as old
as time.
One can almost hear the clip clop of hooves as horses ridden by
courtiers negotiate their way through the narrow cobbled streets
- 'koocha chiri maran' (the sparrow killers lane), 'mohallah patrangan'
(the dyers square), or 'koocha chabuk sawaran' (the saddle-makers
street). The businesses are long gone, but the streets retain their
character, and the names remain.
So too, in large part, do the dynamics. Almost 400 years ago, visiting
Spanish monk Fra Sebastian Manrique wrote, "despite the large
gateways [moving in the city] is a very difficult undertaking on
account of the number of people who fill the streets." He noted
"There are a great many shops, or more properly speaking, kitchens
in which are sold meats of various kinds
"
The words have resonance four centuries later. Since 'the number
of people' inhabiting the Walled City has swelled from 20,000 in
Manrique's time to almost 300,000 today, movement within is proportionately
more arduous, and kitchens selling meat abound. Just ask anyone
who has sampled the famous carnivore delight, 'Phajja's siri paya.'
Or ventured down Lahore's 'food street' and been treated to some
fresh-water fish.
The aroma of roasted water chestnuts, fresh roses, and the smoke
from tandoors and chimneys on a cold winter night has wafted through
the centuries. And time has not dimmed the vibrant hues of patangs
being prepared for basant in shops that dot the city, or the green-blue
of the original tiles of Mughal buildings which have withstood the
ravages of time.
But some things have changed. As stately old buildings crumble,
they are replaced by nightmarish multi-storey structures in concrete
and steel. The plaintive voice of the muezzin giving the call for
prayer from the Badshahi Masjid or the Wazir Khan mosque is now
accompanied by a cacophony of azaans emanating from a hundred loudspeakers.
The voice of the people and the cries of vendors are drowned by
the sounds of modern industry. The air that was once fouled only
by the dung of horses and buffaloes, now reeks of acrid, toxic fumes
emitted by vehicles of all descriptions and waste everywhere. And
stymying the magnificent view from the rootops of havelis, is a
tangled web of electric wires and a plethora of satellite dishes.
Welcome to the 21st century.
Changed also, almost beyond recognition, is what was once the Walled
City's most captivating feature: its legendary flesh bazaar. Although
not a centre of tehzeeb and tameez like Lucknow and Murshidabad,
Lahore's 'diamond market' nevertheless had its own lustre. Fabled
for their beauty, the women from the bazaar not merely serviced
members of the royalty and gentry through the centuries, but also
imparted to their heir apparents an education in culture and graciousness.
Their wares were a package of performing arts and lessons in aesthetics
and social niceties. In the ranks of the kanjar khandaans - the
musicians - were scores of maestros, and many of the hereditary
gharanas spawned singers who went on to find nation-wide acclaim.
"No province of India out-vies [Lahore] for pleasure and trade"
wrote St. Thomas Herbert in 1595. Through the centuries, the city
and its legendary mart made good that promise, surviving wars (the
Sikh conquest and ransacking of Lahore), obscurantism (Emperor Aurangzeb
and Zia-ul-Haq), and, until recently, the corruption of the 'custodians
of law and order.' Finally, the price exacted by the latter to turn
a blind eye, became too heavy for most to pay.
The dwellings of the courtesans, once lavishly decorated suites
in the royal quarters, Shahi Mohallah, the Park Lane of Lahore,
have been subdivided and reduced to poky little rooms, where prostitutes
from across the country - many of them runaways or young girls sold
into the trade - conduct business.
The descendants of the original courtesans (this was a hereditary
profession) have long fled - scattered in different localities of
Lahore, Karachi, even the UAE. Like them the kanjars who proudly
wore their family trees on their sleeves, are all gone. The diaspora
is complete.
Perhaps no one quite captures the new face of the bazaar
better than one of its most passionate residents: artist Iqbal Hussain.
The son of a courtesan, Hussain gained an education in art, resolutely
refused to move out of the area, and has dedicated himself to chronicling
on canvas life in the bazaar today. The eyes of the women he paints
become mirrors of our time.
|