Amidst all the talk about visa on arrival to Pakistan, a new book suggests the government should allow all those aged sixty five and above to travel across the border without visas.
For many Indian Punjabis, the city of Lahore continues to exert its charm more than any other metropolis of the world... there is a burning desire among the ageing generations of Hindus, Sikhs and Muslims to visit the land of their birth across the border," says Pran Nevile, a former IFS officer, in the revised edition of his book "Lahore: A Sentimental Journey".
"For decades, the post-partition generations have been fed tales and anecdotes by their elders about the towns and villages from where they were forced to flee. So, even the young Punjabis are keen to visit these places, not only to satisfy their curosity but also to ineract with their ethnic counterparts on the other sides, says Nevile, who has also worked with the United Nations.
He hopes the governments of India and Pakistan would give due consideration to this issue, especially from a humanitarian angle and initiate suitable steps to facilitate such visits on either side.
On Wagah border, Lahorite Nevile says in the epilogue of the third edition "there is a talk of converting it into a tourist spot, but one of the most laudable suggestions has been put forward by Prof Ishtiaq Ahmed of Stockholm University. He has proposed the building of a memorial in the no-man's land as a permanent symbol of the common suffering of the victims of partition."
The resumption of the Delhi-Lahore bus service in 2003 and recent developments directed towards establishing stronger ties of friendship, harmony and peace between the two countries augur well for the Wagah border, he says. The politics of the two countries has practically nothing to do with the people who would love to meet those across the border, bound together as they are by a common language, culture and history, says the book.
Nevile, whose family lived in Lahore before partition, says Germany and France are the two countries, which caused major destruction through wars in Europe. And yet today they are part of the European Union with free movement of people and no customs barries. Here, the Punjabis on both sides of the border can play a very significant role.
"Within the framework of the Indo-Pakistan cultural exchanges, let us encourage and sponsor the visits of Punjabi artists, writers and theatre groups from both side as the first step towards bridging this enforced divide," he says.
Focusing on Lahore, the book tries to explain what is it about the city, feted as the "Paris of the East" - that sets it apart from other pre-Partition bustling centres on both sides of the border.
"Even after fifty years and numerous social adjustments, the love that we have acquired for our new places of abode cannot quell the acute sense of loss and longing that accompanies thoughts of our native land. Most of us grapple daily with feelings of rootlessness and are constantly seeking our identity," he says. Nevile's emotional attachment to Lahore found expression in this book, first published along with a Pakistani edition in 1993.
Returning to the city of his moorings in 1997, Nevile brings to this edition the contrast in the Lahore of his memory and the city as it is today.
The pain of Partition is very much visible in the epilogue penned after his visit. Only upon his visit does Nevile realise that a friend - to whose memory he had dedicated the first edition of the book - was very much alive. (About the book: Lahore: A Sentimental Journey By Pran Nevile; Published by Penguin Books; Price Rs 250; PP 207).
782 govt accommodations under unauthorised occupation
Publish Date : 3/3/2007 7:26:00 AM
As many as 782 government accommodations are under unauthorised occupation, Minister of State for Urban Development Ajay Maken told Lok Sabha today.
Drive against illegal hoardings from mar 5
Publish Date : 3/3/2007 7:24:00 AM
The district administration would start removing from March 5, illegal hoardings, installed without proper permission and which distract public attention and obstruct traffic, district collector Dr Neeraj Mittal said today.
75,000 houses need to be developed in Delhi every year
Publish Date : 3/3/2007 7:17:00 AM
At least 75,000 houses will have to be built in the capital every year in addition to redevelopment of existing areas to meet the growing housing needs, according to the new Master Plan for Delhi (MPD).
No plans to trim retail fuel prices: Deora
Publish Date : 3/3/2007 7:08:00 AM
Petroleum and Natural Gas Minister, Murli Deora said on Friday there were no plans to cut prices of petrol and diesel after a cut in duty on fuels announced in this week's annual budget.
FM asks India Inc to hold price line
Publish Date : 3/2/2007 7:13:00 AM
Finance Minister P Chidambaram today asked the industry to hold the price line to help in curbing rising inflation and cooperate with the government in putting agriculture and rural India on high growth path....
Cabinet okays Bill to amend Motor Vehicles Act 1988
Publish Date : 3/2/2007 7:10:00 AM
The government today approved introduction of a Bill in the Parliament to amend the Motor Vehicles Act 1988 to enhance safety in public transport and strengthen the enforcement of safety related provisions.
Heavy rainfall likely to hit potato crop: futures price rises
Publish Date : 3/2/2007 7:10:00 AM
Rainfall in major potato production state Uttar Pradesh and some parts of northern India may hit the crop's production ahead of harvesting season even as it led to an upward rally in futures prices at both the NCDEX and MCX.
18 dead in Sri Lankan aerial raids
Publish Date : 3/2/2007 7:08:00 AM
Continuing its offensive against Tamil rebels, Sri Lankan jets today bombed suspected LTTE positions in the island's northeast, killing 18 people.
Production warrant issued for Delhi ACP in Shramjeevi case
Publish Date : 3/1/2007 8:40:00 AM
A local court today issued a warrant for a Delhi Police ACP to appear before it on March 8 in connection with the Shramjeevi Express blasts case in which 17 people were and over 50 injured in 2005.
Demolition in busy INA market
Publish Date : 3/1/2007 8:38:00 AM
Amid heavy security, bulldozers rolled out in south Delhi's busy INA market today demolishing 47 shops built on public land.
Total Results : 188 More News (Opens in New Window) : [1] 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 Next Page
|