Khan Abdul Ghani Khan(eldest son of Khan
Abdul Ghuffar Khan, aka Bacha Khan) was one of
the finest Pushto poets of this century. He was born in 1915 and died in year of 1996. He led the Pathans in what is
today Pakistan's North West Frontier
Province (NWFP) in the struggle
against British colonialism from the
1920's until 1947.
The excerpts below are from a two hour interview of Ghani Khan at Lady Reading
Hospital in Peshawar, NWFP. Ghani Khan had recently been shown on Pakistani
television for the first time. He was about to be discharged after a minor ailment.
Question: Where did you grow up?
Answer (Ghani Khan): I was born 1913, 14 or 15. [I went to school] here in
Utmanzai, this little, wretched village.
Father had made a school here [around 1928]. A Khan [landlord] had given his house,
one that he had had for his own wives. Two rooms for one [wife], two rooms for
another. He gave that house for a high school to be established. And we were brought
into it from Peshawar, I and my younger brother [Wali Khan] and later the little one [Ali Khan]
too. Father said that people will say he built a wretched school if he puts his sons in a
good school. That is why we went to this rotten school. What a horrible little school.
Q: Tell me about it.
A: Well, we were boarders and the boarding house charges were 3 Rupees a month.
Now for 3 Rupees/month, what could they give us? What could they give us, even in
those cheap days? The boys used to steal, little pieces of left-over bread from their
dinner for their breakfast because we got only tea, 2 cups of tea. And they used to be
caned for it. We had a chaukidar [guard] and the woman who used to cook the bread.
They had nothing to eat. They used to eat the leftovers.
So these boys tried all sorts of tricks, they would have little strings around them with
fishhooks on them and they would hang bread under their shirts. It was altogether I
think very poor pay for most teachers. If they could not get a job as a munshi [in the
courts] they would come to school for 15 or 16 or 20 Rupees a month. The headmaster
was an idealist of course in the Khilafat Movement [1919-1920]. He had he left
Aligarh [Muslim University] and had an M.A. He was the son of a Khan of Bannu
[District in NWFP]. They were two brothers. They were alright, but the rest, we had
mullahs and this religious education. There was no science because they could not
afford it. And then there was my fathers usual economy. I mean, he used to sit on the
ground!
The other day my grandson took me to his school and asked me to look at their hostel.
They had a very beautiful bed and a cupboard. On top of the bed and at their feet they
had a desk where they studied. On top of the desk there was a little bookcase and a
couple of drawers and chairs.
I told him you know how we used to study at your age? We used to sit on a mat and
the mullahs used to sit on the ground on a dhurrie [woven carpet] with a danda [stick],
and that was all. So it was a wretched school. And our boarding house, we were
boarders. It used to be a classroom in the daytime, and in the evening we used to roll
up the mats. Found lots of scorpions under it. And then we used to put out beds like
this [charpais], and at night it would become a boarding house. There were no
bathrooms, at night we had to go outside. It was a wretched place.
Q: Was this the first school your father founded?
A: No. Before this they had founded about 30 or 40 schools with the Haji of Turangzai.
There was a crowd of them, and the Haji of Turangzai was one of them, my father was
one of them, they were mostly priests [mullahs]. And they said that we have to
educate the children to be anti-British from childhood. In school they used to make us
read ... Ye Badsha Hamara [this King of Ours, a pro-British chant], this sort of thing.
They said that from childhood they [the British] teach them loyalty and everything.
But we should make a school where we can produce revolutionaries and workers.
They made this one big school in our village and little schools here and there and
everywhere, usually in the mosques. And the British attacked them, so my father and
the Haji of Turangzai, everybody ran away [to the tribal areas of NWFP, outside
British jurisdiction].
The Haji of Turangzai was a very handsome man. There was a Pir [holy man] who
had died in the tribal territory, and as usual in his old age he had taken a beautiful
young girl, and he died, of it I suppose. So then he left this Sajjada [inherited landed
estates belonging to a holy man], his whole Pirhood and everything, to this beautiful
young widow. And there arrived the Haji of Turangzai. They were related to us. He
was a dacoit and that sort of thing in those days. Very violent as it was usual in those
days with Hashtnagar Khans at that age. These people had nowhere to stay, these
political refugees. So they told Haji Sahib to marry the girl.
She fell in love with him as soon as she saw him. They said become a Pir here and we
will have at least somewhere we can stay. So Haji Sahib married her. Then he really
gave up all the evil deeds when he saw all these people coming and kissing his hand
and feet and offering him gifts. He went to Mecca, and became a Haji, and became
famous as the Haji of Turangzai.
Everytime we started a civil disobedience or something here against the British, he
would tell the Mohmand tribesmen whose Pir he was, "Come on, the doors of heaven
are open!" And they would come and start shooting in all this area. And then the
Afridis [in Khyber District] might also get infected and they would start shooting,
popping here and there.
With him he [Father] made a school. Then the British told my grandfather [Behram
Khan] that we won't put your son in prison if you bring him back. Do not let him stay
with the Haji of Turangzai [they said] because it might lead to complications later on.
We were a big tribe, and we are quite an influential family. So my grandfather went
and brought my father back.
My grandfather was very fond of the English, he was great friends with them. He used
to forget their names you know, but never mind. It was a great joke in [British]
Government circles [in Peshawar] then to say Khan Kaka, what is my name? He
would say the name of some Englishman who had died 50 years ago!
Q: How did you get the name Red Shirts?
Red Shirts because in our village they had this big tanning industry. They tanned
leather for soles for these Pathan shoes which were exported to Afghanistan and
Kandahar. It was a huge industry. Now there are no tanneries.
The used the tannin water they poured [from working with skins]. The skins, they
used to sew them up and they used to hang them from these huge trees, which were
put there on the edge of this tank. These skins used to hang all year around, 6, 7, 8,
10, 12. The servants used to pour tannin water into them, outside and inside. The
tannin water was there all the time.
So these fellows were asked to dip their clothes into the tannin water tank and get free
color. They got a deep red sort of color. Brown red. This is how people began to call
them Red Shirts.
After that of course no one put theirs into the tannin tank. They used to get a little bit
of color from the bazaar, and color them red.
Q: Had your father met Gandhi and gotten into non-violence by this time, 1928 or
1929?
A: No, he did not meet him then. The first agitation they started was to have the right
to choose their members for the District Board [of Education]. They were also
nominated. They wanted they should be given the vote for the District Board. They
were arrested [in 1928].
Gandhijis story starts somewhere around 1929, 1930. Father was in jail and they began
to shoot these people, everywhere people began to agitate. Like the Kissa Khani
[Bazaar Massacre in Peshawar of April 23 1930]. Father was there. There were others
where he was not there, in Thucker and Utmanzai and in Waziristan [District] they
killed 60 or 70 people. A lot of operations.
[During these operations] our village was surrounded, for a month you could not get
out of it, you could not get into it. The animals were starving, because our fields were
out [of commission]. And raiding and attacking people, there were hellish experiences
and we had no law here. So two of my fathers [jailed] friends dressed themselves as
donkey drivers, because there was some repair work going on in the jail, they escaped
with these bricklayers donkeys and told father that these English are just finishing us
off, no news is coming. There is no one to help us, there is no news about it in the
Indian newspapers. God knows when they are going to stop. It does not look like they
are going to stop.
So, Father said go to all the big Muslims in India, there are so many of them. Go to
Bhopal and Rampur, they are Pathan rulers, and see all the big people among the
Muslims, and tell them what is happening. Even if for heavens sake if you cannot do
anything, at least shout about it. They went all over India and nobody agreed [to help
them].
The only person who said yes was Gandhiji. But he said you must become affiliated
with the Congress. I do not want you to become submerged in the Congress, but you
must become affiliated so I have an excuse [to support you]. Then I will send you an
Inquiry Committee, I will do propaganda for you all over the world. So they came and
told Father. He said Good Lord, we can join the devil provided this shooting stops. Tell
him we will join the Congress. So Gandhiji sent Patel over here, the big Patel
Committee Inquiry Report [was produced]. He [Sardar Patel] was not allowed into the
Frontier so he stayed on that side of the Indus [in Punjab].
But we used to send him people [who had been arrested by the colonial authorities],
actually people whom they had castrated. All sorts of things, people castrated, horrible,
you would not believe that a civilized nation could do things like that.
Q: What did they do?
A: Castrated people, with this castrating machine from the veterinary hospital. Eight
people have medical certificates from the civil surgeon here. That they were absolutely
castrated. Because the Pathans would not stop, even if they kept on beating them, kept
on shooting at them all over [the province].
What was it all over? We wanted to stop the wine shops. We said we do not want
whisky in our village. We do not like it. It is against our religion and our boys should
not get used to drinking it. Stop this shop. That was all.
So, thats how father joined Gandhi. As soon as he joined Gandhi the Government
released him and all of them [because of the propaganda and publicity they got].
Gandhiji was staying at Wardah at Birlas place. He [Birla] was a multi-millionaire, but
also a great idealist and a great patriot. He built a great house there for Gandhiji. I went
and stayed there for a couple of months too. Uncle [Dr. Khan Sahib, brother of Ghaffar
Khan, Chief Minister of NWFP in 1936] used to stay there. Father would stay with
Gandhiji in Sevagram, a couple of miles away.
There were no roads then, just a bullock track. He stayed with him and then they grew
to like one another. Gandhiji used to say his Prarthana [prayer] and father used to say
his prayers. Then in the prarthana sometimes they would have something from the
Veda or one of the Hindu holy books, and then something from the Quran, this sort of
thing used to go on. Thats how he got to know Gandhiji and they grew to like one
another. He was very fond of Baba [Father] and Baba was very fond of him.
Q: What did he like about Gandhi?
A: Because he said he is so brave. Gandhiji was absolutely a fearless person. And he
was so simple. He had nothing. He had no result, position or anything. If you gave
him a present, he would give it to somebody else. What did he leave behind? A pair of
slippers, a pair of glasses and a one dollar watch. And the dhotis that he had done
[washed] himself. And people used to give him lakhs, crores [hundreds of thousands
and tens of millions] of rupees .
Once we were sitting with him in Birla house, my brother Wali and I, we were small.
One of the Bombay people came out and he had two or three of these wretched fellows
with him, they came bending from the verandah. This fellow behind them was Patel -
not [Sardar] Patel of the Working Committee of the Congress - but the Chief
Congress leader of Bombay.
He was going like this [showing a five with his hands] to Gandhiji. So Gandhiji said
kya hai [how much] when they bowed and touched his feet and all that. They said:
Teen lakh rupiah Harijan Fund kay leay laiya hai. [We have brought 300,000 Rupees
for the Untouchable Fund]. They had heard that Gandhiji was collecting money for the
Harijan Fund.
He looked at them and he had seen Patel give him five, so he said bhai, ye tora, tora
hai, aur lao. [this is too little, bring more]. Kitna, kitna, [How much] they said? Panch
lakh lao. [Bring 500,000]. They said acha hazoor, kal, kal [fine Sir, tomorrow]. And
the next morning they came and gave two lakhs more.
Once I was in Wardah when they were deciding whether to take part in the elections
or not, and then they said yes. And they sent Sardar Patel to Bombay and said bring
some money for the election fund. And in two days he returned with 8 million. In
those days 8 million was 8 million. In two days!
The average member could get elected comfortably for 4 or 5 thousand rupees to the
Provincial Assembly. Everything was cheap, petrol was cheap, cars were cheap. All
you had to do was supply transport to some of your voters, and you may not have had
to do that either. So that is what he liked about Bapu [Gandhi]. Thats what we all
liked.
In those days I was [working] in the sugar mill, and I had one hobby. I was a big game
hunter in those days. All those animals, I feel so sorry now.
Q: You used to be a hunter?
A: Yes, a big game hunter, tiger, panthers, deer, crocodiles I have killed about 40 or 50
of them. Then I got married, and I brought deer home, and my wife looked at it, and
she was sick and sick, and she said, Ghani how could you, how could you?
She would not touch it, would not eat it, and I took my rifle and put it in a corner of the
room and I have never shot an animal after that. I realized what a beast I had been, but
there was nothing else to do. I would do my 8 hours in the mill and then get into the
jungle and shoot something.
So I used to tell him [Gandhi] all these stories. Once, I went towards Nepal and I shot
a huge spotted deer, a really huge one leading a group of 500 or 600 deer. Terrific. I
got him tanned in Madras, a at special place taxidermy place. It had a huge black band
on its back and white stomach.
I told Bapu - we used to call Gandhiji Bapu - look here, I want to give you something
but you are not going to give it away. If you give it away ,I am not going to give it to
you. So he said, lao [bring it]. I said you always give away everything, and I went to a
lot of trouble. Bapu, I said, I went to Nepal and there were tigers all around at night. I
was in a little bullock cart, and the tiger ran away, but I got the deer he was after. So I
have the skin. I had seen these Indian sadhus in paintings, sitting on tiger skins, deer
skins, so I thought Bapu would not mind.
It did not occur to me that he was non-violent and that skin was a terrible thing to
him. So he said, lao, so I brought it, and there was Miss Slade over there, Admiral
Slades daughter, she used to be called Mirabhai. And she said, oh, oh, oh [in disgust]
when it was about 50 yards away from the cottage. So I said my dear Miss Slade, even
a special dog could not smell it, it has been treated. So Gandhiji cackled - and she of
course, she did not like me a bit, I used to give her cheek all the time.
I gave him this skin. I put it in front of his mantle in Sevagram. And after about half an
hour these Birla brothers came, two or three brothers with some hangers on. And they
are all Jains, they will not kill a mosquito even. Gandhiji said ao, ao, bhaito, bhaito,
[come, sit down], Ghani is here. He even made them sit on the skin! Oh, he was a
delightful old chap.
The first day when I went to Gandhiji she [Mirabhai] took me to the lavatory and said
clean it up. So I said what the hell, I am not a sweeper, I beg you pardon Madam.
Besides, I have not been near this blasted place, I go to the fields. Whoever has been
there [to the latrines], get them to clean it up. Then she said you can not stay here,
you can not stay in Sevagram if you can not clean this up. You have to do it for a week.
I said, who in the devil told you I want to stay here. I do not want to stay here.
She said come on to Bapu. So I went to Bapu. I am boiling because she asked me to
clean the lavatory. She of course was very angry because I was not agreeing with her.
So she told Bapu the whole story, and I said what does she think I am, a bhangi [drug
addict, as in sweeper]? I said, Bapu, I go out there into the fields, why should I clean
other peoples dirt, they can clean it themselves. So he said alright, leave him to me,
leave it, go away.
Father and he went together into the hut and discussed the rebellion. Then Father
came and took me aside and told me you know, son, this is to bring humility into your
spirit and to take away all these human poisons of pride and vanity from you. All these
things.
I said no, I must stay with my pride and vanity, I am not, absolutely not [going to clean
the latrines]. Then Gandhiji said alright, but you can not spend the night over here.
But you must spend the whole day with me. For the night you can go to Wardah
because it is against the rules of this ashram. Unless you clean the bathrooms for a
week, you can not stay the night here.
That was very clever, the old boy was very clever. That was also a good way to get rid
of unnecessary visitors. Because they all wanted to come and stay over there and they
would not let him work. And Gandhiji used to clean once a week. One day I went and
saw him. He had this cloth around his nose and mouth, and a girl was throwing water
at the pot and he was cleaning it. It was nice, but I would not do it.
Once he was ill, so Jawaharlal [Nehrus] sister Nan, she had a daughter named Rita.
So Rita was leaving him with her mother, after having come to ask about his health.
She was a little child, about seven. Kiss Bapu, her mother told her. She said no, I am
not going to kiss this ugly old man. No! Gandhiji of course cackled, he did not get
angry with her. Her mother got angry at her, but he said no, no, no leave her alone.
Later she [Rita] used to sit by the bed and talked to him. It came to such a point that
she used to spend all her spare time with Bapu. And then once her mother wanted to
take her away, she would not go. She would want to stay with Bapu. And he said, see
Rita, I am not such an ugly old man after all!
I used to talk to him about my shikaar [hunting], about girls. Once he said to Father
Have you been bloodthirsty like him when you were young? Father said no no, he told
him a lie and said I have never shot a bird even. Because father used to go for shikaar.
Every winter we used to go for shikaar.
Khaddi [homespun cloth], we all used to wear grey khaddi, I mean for years I never
used to wear these sorts of things [machine spun cloth]. I mean all the whole family
did, and the rest of the family does even now. In winter it is alright, but in summer it is
a little too much. He [Father] made lots of other schools, and about 50 primary
schools to go with this high school [we went to]. Those were his chief activities. And
anti-British propaganda. For freedom.
We have got two feet and two eyes like you have, why should you come from 6,000
miles and rule over you? Simple things that a Pathan could understand. This is why
they went for him. In Persian they have this thing called the place that you aim at.
That was clear. This Englishman, we want him out of here. Because we are as good as
he is, why should he rule over us? It is very complicated today, and these leaders and
leaderettes, they can not cope with it. In Fathers time it was very simple.
We had one weekly newspaper [Pukhtoon]which was confiscated and that was the
end of the story. For which I used to write a column and another friend of mine used to
write another column [Gade Wade]. That was all. That humorous column that I used
to write has now become a masterpiece of prose! [laughing].
It is so amusing. I used to work 10 hours [to finish an article]. In the middle I used to
come out and there would be a letter from Father abusing me that I could not write ten
lines for my country, and that I was a disgrace to the nation and all this, and I would
sit down absolutely half asleep and I would write down one of these [columns], Gade
Wade, a mixture of prose and poetry , a lot of humor thrown in and sometimes serious
things. The name of the column was Nonsense. And I never wrote [signed] my name
on it. My pen name was The Mad Philosopher.
Q: What did you write about?
A: I wrote on everything. All sorts of things. I wrote an article against the national
poets, and I made fun of myself in that also to hide myself.
Once I was sitting with my father when a delegation of poets came to see my father
and said Sir, who is this person [The Mad Philosopher], he is our enemy. Sir, have you
seen the last publication? Here it is. Look how he has made fun of us.
I wrote all sorts of things. Like if you want to be a great national poet, then start
growing a little beard at the end of your chin. And then keep on writing about
Fakhr-e-Afghan, Fakhr-e-Afghan because it is very easy to rhyme. And I said then,
my son, go after the Bride of Freedom, chase her all over the place, uphill and
downhill, all over the place till you grab her. The Bride of Freedom, they were always
talking about the Bride of Freedom.
Then I made fun of myself, so I got away with that. Father said no he is not your
enemy, he is just trying to say that you should not write the same sort of stuff.
Then after a month or two my mothers brothers wrote my father a very rude letter and
cancelled their subscription and said do not send your damned newspaper to us. So I
went to my uncles house, and said uncle what has happened? The three brothers, they
all cancelled their subscriptions. They said we have got some sort of a bastard over
there. And he has abused everybody. He has written a horrible disgraceful article about
Khans [landlords like Ghani Khan's family].
I had written a little skittish poem, that
The great potmaker of fate was sitting in heaven.
This great potter of fate was making a donkey,
when the order came to make a Khan.
So the potter cut off its tail and sculpted its ears,
on its forehead he put a spot of temper
and in the donkeys brain he put the disease
of being ahead of everyone, being a leader, and
then he put a beautiful turban on his head and
shooed him towards the world.
So the Khans of course got very angry about it. And everyone used to laugh at it. I also
wrote some serious things.
Q: When did you start writing poetry?
A: When I was very young. I started rhyming and all this thing when I was about 15
[1929]. I went on a ship in Bombay, and as soon as I got on I began to write. In school
too I had written something, very childish. Then I did not want to get them published.
Q: How did your father survive all those years [40 out of 99] in prison?
A: He was very tough, he was a giant of a man. When they first took him in, they
could not find any irons to fit his feet. They used these fetters which used to eat into
him. He was a giant of a man, 6 foot 2 inches, and very strong. Even before he took to
political work, he used to farm with his own hands. He told grandfather, he told him
you give me a piece of land and I will plough it myself and I will plant it myself and I
will keep my family out of that. Do not give me any more.
He went to the field like an ordinary farmer in the last part of the night. Then tea and
breakfast used to follow him and he ploughed there and he kept his bullocks and he
kept his buffalo and in the evening he used to come home. He did that for many years.
He was a tough sort of fellow. Even in some prisons, jail people were sympathizing
with him in later years. Because he had to grind 30 seers [kilos] of corn a day, hard
labor. So they said we will bring you a bag full of atta [flour] and 5 or 6 seers of corn
which you can put on the wheel. So if any officer comes you can pretend to grind it.
My father said no, I will do whatever I am given. I will not cheat.
Because he said one day in prison somebody came with 4 pieces of gur [molasses],
and then the Superintendent came and you were not supposed to have that gur. He
said I did not know where to hide them and I got so frightened and I sweated and I put
it somewhere in the atta [flour]. But he said afterwards that after spending 15 minutes
with him I decided never to do anything sly like that again. Anything which makes a
coward out of me and makes me frightened. So he would do his 30 seers.
When we got into the government [1937] we abolished all those hard labors. They
used to make old people turn a mill which produced oil, khulu it used to be called, all
sorts of things. Persian wheels used to be pulled by old men instead of buffaloes. For
the young people there were all sorts of horrible labors. When we used to give them
hard labor, we taught them mechanics and pottery in jail. When I was in prison
[1948-54], I was the beekeeping teacher.
Q: How did your father survive mentally in jail?
A: It was sort of faith. The feeling that you are doing the right thing, that even by being
in jail you are serving your people, you are serving your country, you are giving an
example, you are being a hero. In those days you just had to apologize, say I will not
do it again, and out you go and the property was returned. But he would not say it. He
just would not say it. This was sort of a point of honor with us.
Q: How did Pathans adopt non-violence so sincerely?
A: Gandhiji used to say that only a brave nation can become truly non-violent. It takes
moral courage. And the Pathan was warrior enough to understand that in this war, you
cannot lose. With non-violence, the fellow who beats you gets a nasty feeling. With
non-violence several of them [British Indian police] even used not to shoot.
I would talk to several of the Magistrates, all Englishmen. One of them was Secretary
to the Governor, Bacon. In those days [1937-39] my uncle [Dr. Khan Sahib] was
Chief Minister, and I was member of the Central Assembly, and Bacon used to come
to the house. His wife was friendly with our ladies.
He told me, Ghani, I was the Assistant Commissioner in Charsadda [District which
includes Utmanzai and Mohammad Naray villages] in 1930. He said this Red Shirt
would be brought to me. I had orders to give them each two years rigorous
imprisonment. They would come to me and I would say, are you a Red Shirt? They
would say yes. Are you against the Government? He would say yes. Do you want
freedom? Yes, I want freedom. If I release you, will you do it again? Yes. He said I
would want to get up and hug him. But instead I used to write two years rigorous
imprisonment.
Boys of 14 and 15 coming up to me and saying, yes I will do it again, you have no right
to be here, go back to your country. He said I was absolutely going mad, I used to do
nothing but drink until my wife said to the Governor if you do not want Bacon to go
mad, transfer him from Charsadda. He just could not stand it.
We knew if you shoot one of them [the British], he will shoot fifty of us. With
non-violence, you can never lose. If they put you in prison, you get a light sentence,
and when you come out you do it again.
This non-cooperation, not buying British goods, was a terrible thing for the British.
The first year that we started Non-cooperation [1930], when we started burning
British cloth, in Birmingham [England] eighty mills stopped working. Imagine the
unemployment. Eighty! We understood that this was a winning game. Sometimes they
[Red Shirts] had arms with them, had a pistol hidden somewhere but they would not
use it.
Q: It must have taken incredible self-control.
A: Yes, some people lost it, and they were killed or hanged. I remember one friend of
my fathers. He came, and said damn you, damn your non-violence. His name was
Fazli Akram. He said damn your non-violence and he banged his pamphlets and
things and said I am going to do violence. And shoot all these bastards who are
crawling to the British, all these Khan Bahadurs [landlords decorated by the British],
all these magistrates, lathi-charge wallas [violent riot controllers].
Father said alright, go ahead, I will not do it. That was his stock reply about violence.
He said go ahead, but if you want me to do it, I will not. So he [Fazli Akram] shot one
man, and another, he killed 4 or 5 people, of course he was in no way related to them,
or even belonged to the same village, so other people got into trouble for it.
Once I remember these people unanimously suggested to Father that we have to break
bridges and things to make our movement more effective. Father said I agree. But if
you break a bridge you will go to the police station and say I have blown up that bridge.
So that innocent people will not be beaten up and tortured by the police. If you are
willing to do that, you can do anything you like. Blow up the railway line, blow up the
bridges, burn the Post Offices, but you must go and admit in the police station that I
have done it, only then. But nobody did. Nobody wanted to blow a bridge.
Some people did, one fellow, I remember, Habib Nur from Charsadda, he took an
application to this Englishmen and behind the application was a pistol and he went
cruck cruck cruck, and misfired, all blanks. They just grabbed him and hanged him
from a tree on the road. No trial, just a telephone to the governor, that he tried to kill
me and I have hanged him. Like that there were lots of people, they ran away to the
tribal areas, to the Haji Sahib [of Turangzai].
Father had a great admiration for the British but that did not mean that they should
rule over us. He had a great admiration for the English because he was brought up by
missionaries. They taught him this thing of service for the nation, for the people. Dr.
Morgan, he was a great missionary, and Father was always talking about him, that he
was the greatest man he had ever met. And that when he looked at them, that they had
come from thousands of miles and they were serving the poor people over here, and he
felt ashamed of himself. And he also was educated in the Mission School in Peshawar,
not by the mullahs.
Q:Who was this Dr. Morgan?
A: Morgan, he lived here all his life. I do not know, he died before my time. Anyway
Father liked missionaries. We used to go to the convent, my sister was in the convent,
my daughters were there [the Convent of Jesus & Mary in Murree]. Whenever Father
went to the convent to see them, he used to sit and talk to the Mother Superior and all
the sisters. He had great love and admiration for them. He used to say they are
wonderful people, they will not get married, they have no ambitions, they just want to
serve. He was very fond of missionaries.
When I returned from America [Ghani spent 1930-1932 in Louisiana to learn about
sugar mills], I could not get along with the people in my village. I never lived in the
village, I lived in this blasted boarding house [the Azad School]. My father had turned
our ladies house into a school. I did not know anymore that Pathan customs were
anything. When I was 14 or 15 they sent me to Jesus & Mary [Convent], and then to
England and from there I went to the U.S. So whatever I learned about social life and
manners I learned in America and England. I did not know anymore what the Pathan
way of doing things was.
When I came back I used to go about in suits, and I had on a hat or something.
Villagers and elders came and said why do you put on an English hat. I said it is my
own damn head and I will put anything on it that I like. I was very fond of horses, so I
had brought a very good thoroughbred horse from my uncle and I used to ride on it
and go to my grandfathers village. He had ten or twelve villages, and I would go there
and look at the fields and look at the tenants and everything. I did not have servants
following me, six or seven with rifles, so they thought it was very peculiar that I rode
on one side of the horse, why do not you sit like a Khan with 5 or 6 pillows next to you
and have all these village elders come to you. They wanted me to be a dignified Khan.
They wrote to my father and said your son has come over here and is irritating the
villagers. So he sent for me from Hazari Bagh jail [in Bihar, India], and he took my
return ticket and put it into his pocket and he said go to Jawaharlal [Nehru], and he
sent me to Jawaharlal. Jawaharlal had just come out of prison [ May 1941]. He told
him that I had become Americanized and please teach him the simple life and
everything. So Jawaharlal looked at me and said, you look simple enough, damn you. I
was about 22.
I went there and he had only Indira, who later became Prime Minister. She was about
14. So I lived with them. He did not have any sons. So I sort of became his son. I lived
there for nine months. Then he sent me and Indira to Tagores University,
Shantiniketan [in Bengal].
We had the same tutor, Nan Lal Bhose. She went to the girls hostel, the only pukka
[sturdy] building there, very nicely made. We went into the arts school, because our
tutor was Principal of the Arts School. Shantineketan has three colleges. One is
Calcutta University College, where you get a degree which is recognized by the
Calcutta University. Then there is a Vishwa Bharati, where they teach you what they
think a boy should learn that is not recognized by the government. And then they have
Kalaban, the home of art, music and dancing and painting and sculpture and all that.
Weaving, everything.
I joined this journalism class in the English Department. They used to give me a
subject and I used to write on it and then I had nothing to do. So I went to my tutor
and asked what should I do, sir. He said anything you like. So I went round for another
day, and asked him again. He said anything you like. He did not know a word of
English or Urdu, he was Bengali speaking.
So I got fed up, imagine being 22, strong and healthy and everything, you want to do
something. The third day I went to him I said what shall I do? He said anything you
like.
I said I like to get a horse. He said get a horse. I said what about a stable. He said there
is a plot next to the hostel, make a stable there. Anyhow I made the stable, I got my
friends to help. But I did not get the horse, for when the time came to get the horse I
had run out of money.
I made friends with a Professor of sculpture. I did not know he was Professor of
sculpture. He used to sing and dance about the hostel, a very jolly fellow. So I went
with him to this studio and I saw these boys working with mud. I also took a piece of
mud and I think I made a frog or a lizard or something.
So the next day I went again with him; when I finished my essay or whatever the
teacher had given me, I went again to him. I became more ambitious, I did a
self-portrait, then I did Adam and Eve. Then Nan Lal Bhose looked at it and said this
is very fine. Then I started sketching, so I went to the shop and bought some
cardboard for sketching and some pencils and they would not give me rubber [eraser],
no, no rubber, you just could not get it [because of World War II]. So I also started
sketching.
When we went on picnics, some of the teachers used to take along these crayon boxes
and worked in crayons and I found it very convenient. So I bought myself a box of
crayons too and began to work on sort of art things. And they used to say they are
good. I thought they were rubbish and that they are mad. I mean imagine getting
enthusiastic about this childish stuff. That is how I started.
Q: What did you draw to begin with?
A: I just made faces. From childhood, from the very beginning I have only drawn
faces. I do not draw anything else, I think it is all a waste of time. I mean, when I did
sculptures of grown up people, I did a big one of a Prophet, it is so big it is in the
Shantineketan museum. That one, of course, I did the whole body and everything. But
the other things I did were only faces.
Q: What fascinated you about faces?
A: You see I wanted to get the personality of the person into the paper. And that you
can show only through his eyes and his face. The big ones that I do, people say that
you cannot tell if it is a man or a woman.
Q: Talking to various Khudai Khitmatgars in the villages during the past few days, I
was surprised at how much you have suffered. Yet there is not a negative, bitter sense
towards the past.
A: Quite right. Quite right. They are sort of surprised, the old ones, that we have
worked all our life, we have suffered all our life. But then they say our chief aim was to
get rid of the British and we have. For the rest, they are so fond of Father they do not
say anything.
Now I am writing a book now, my memoirs, at the suggestion of some Punjabi friends
that I have because they say we do not know anything about what you Pathans have
done. Your grandchildren will not know it because there is no literature. I have begun
writing things I have told you, and now that I have come to Fathers part, I find it very
difficult to write.
Because I do not want to criticize him. And now especially that he is dead, if he
were alive then I would have. Because with some things I did not agree, that is why I
left his [Khudai Khitmatgar] Movement and came and sat at home. He wanted me to
become President of the Movement. I said no. He sent me all sorts of people but I said
I will not do it.
I had had a fight with him. I did not agree with his program. I am a bit of a socialist.
I begged him to make an economic program. I told him Sir, there are eighty steps
between communism and conservatism. Stand anywhere, choose any mixture, either
way, nearer communism nearer conservatism, wherever you like but stand somewhere
for heavens sake, and say this is my stand on economics. All these boys, I mean all the
fellows who went with him to jail, their grandsons have passed BA and MAs in
economics and political science. They keep on asking what is your economic
program? And he said nothing.
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