Ghani Khan
-------The Renaissance Man
Dr. Fazal-ur-Rahim Marwat
In his famous book, A brief History of Time,
Dr. Stephen Hawking examines the nature of the universe, and
explains that modern laws of time and space no longer distinguish
between the past and the future. He goes on to discuss "the
psychological arrow of time" which enables us to see the
past, but not the future and rejects the possibility of memory
being reversed if the universe started to shrink instead of
expanding as it is now.
But in the aura of space and time, and cycle of
change only few people would survive- those who are close to
nature and beauty. The reflection of nature in their works in
whatever form it may be would give them an unending life and
immortality.
Ghani Khan, a son of the legendary prophet of
peace and non-violence, Khan Abdul Ghaffar Khan holds a high
place in pashtu literature because of his humorous and satirical
verses. His first poem appeared in December, 1928 issue of the
Pukhtoon, the first Pashtu journal and mouthpiece of the
Anjuman-Islahul-Afghana. Ghani's poetry includes love songs,
epics, anthems, elegies, epigrams, verse, litters and satires
etc.. According to Dr. Sher Zaman Taizai "affection and
contempt, love and hatred, idealism and realism and epic, sarcasm
and satire and above all frankness, fluency and spontaneity are
the main characteristics of the poetry of Ghani". His poetry
is about the mysteries of life, death, God, love, nature and
religious beliefs and concepts of his people in his won distinct
way. Very little os known to many about Ghani's other facets:
music, art, painting and sculpture.
If his father chose the path of devotion to
Almighty Allah to serve his nation by launching a reformative
movement, his son Ghani Khan chose the way by presenting various
Sifats or attributes of Almighty Allah by presenting his poor
people in poetry, prose, paintings and sculptures.
Ghani Khan was bold and beautiful when he was
young and perhaps continued to be so and criticize openly
avaricious Mullahs. He walked with nature and embraced it. He
visualized an ideal state a state for the Pukhtoons, of the
Pukhtoons and by the Pukhtoons. But nature was against him, and
rulers too. he saw several times his father behind the bars and
himself spent six years in jail and detention without trial or an
FIR and his land and property were confiscated. His first
anthology of poems Da-Panjery-Chighar (songs in a Cage) was
written in Haripur Jail. He sketched a lot, did a number of self
portraits. They portray the horror and agony that he went
through.
Ghani Khan was neither an iconoclast nor
iconolater and "he sees himself neither as a painter, a
sculptor, nor as a poet but perhaps only as a plagiarist who very
humbly glorifies", in his words, the work of another artist,
the real creator, who he calls Al-Jameel (The beautiful) and
Al-Musavvir (The Artist).
Leon Battista Alberti (1904-72) also known as
the man of Renaissance in the west says: "A man can do all
things if he wills". It was Ghani Khan who proved it with
his deeds and his works in all fields poetry, prose, politics,
philosophy, paintings, sculpture and music. Art includes all
human creative activities like literature, painting, sculptures,
music, calligraphy and architecture. All these branches of fine
arts have their own respective mediums. The writer works in
words, the musician in line and colour, the sculptor in stone and
the musician in sounds. They are different aims to achieve end
i.e., the expression of one'semotions.
This is the recurring thesis of Edward Said's
Culture and Imperialism: "the lines between art and politics
do not really exist; the culture and imperialism, far from being
separate of activity, depend upon and reinforce each other".
Ghani Khan though born in an era of the British
Imperialism, was quite familiar with the cultural heritage and
social values of his own people-the Pukhtoons and this is
apparent in all his works. But it was Ghani's fine lines and
masterly control over his brush that lends common everyday
happenings a genuine and enigma.
His love for nature and the local habitat of
the simple Pukhtoon people is visible in his prose. "Pathan
is not merely a race" says Ghaani "but, in fact, a
state of mind; there is a Pathan lying in side every man, who at
times wakes up and overpowers him".
The Pathans have no written history but they
have thousands of ruins where the carved stones tell their story
to anyone who would care to listen. "The Pathan", Ghani
asserts, "are rain sown wheat-they all came up on the same
day they are all the same!.... But the chief reason why I love
him is because he will wash his face and oil his beard and
perfume his locks and put on his best pair of clothes when he
goes out to fought and die".His poetry is about humanism,
and the search for truth. It is about self realization. "I
want to see my people educated and enlightened. A people with a
vision and a strong sense of justice who can carve out a future
for themselves, in harmony with nature".
Abdul Ghani Khan a gifted son of Pukhtoonkhwa
was born in 1914 in Utmanzai Charrsadda Pushkalavati (means full
of lotuses), the ancient capital of Gandhara. The lotus flower
dominated the mind of the people of Pushkalavati so much that
they created in popular imagination a goddess of the city named
in the coins as Pushkalavati nagar devada meaning "the city
of the goddess of Pushkalavati".
The history of Charsadda goes back to the 6th
century BC. It remained the capital of Gandhara from 6th century
BC to 2nd century AD. Many nations like the persians, the Greeks,
the Mauryans, the Kushans, the Bactrians and the Parthians, the
Huns, and the Hindus have ruled over this region at different
times of history. Alexander the Great himself laid siege to the
city in the third century BC.
After the Hindu era, the area witnessed the
glorious Empire of the great Sultanates of Delhi and the great
Mughal Empire. Then came the Sikhs in 1818, and after the fall of
the Sikhs, the British annexed the area in 1849, holding it until
it became part of Pakistan.
Situated on the north east border of the Indian
Sub continent it was a cross road for the invaders and area was
involved in constant wars. On the one hand it was in close
contact with Afghanistan, China, Central Asia and with the West
through the caravan routes, and on the other hand it was
connected with the Sub-continent's plains.
Charsadda was for long a time known as Ashnagar
or the modern Hushtnagar, which means "Eight Towns".
Which are situated in this region. These are Charsadda Town,
Sherpao, Utmanzai, Umarzai, Turangzai, Tangi Town, Prang and
Rajar. The name of Ashnagar may be misconceived to mean the
"City of Ashtakas". the peoples who lived in this area
at the time of Alexander the great's invasion, were ruled by a
king called Astes or Ashtaka Raja.
Born during the great war (First World War) the
distinguished son of the modern Pukhtoonkhwa and of the ancient
Gandhara lost his mother in the epidemic in 1918. He started his
early education with the Mullah in the village mosque. It was due
to his religious education that Ghani Khan was very fluent in
Arabic and Persian. Ghani Khan recollected his memories by
saying: "My childhood was miserable, my mother died during
the influenza epidemic when I was six and Wali was about four.
Baba had found a new love-his people. He opened "Azad
Schools" all over the Frontier Province, in his first
attempt to change the condition of his people". The literacy
rate among the Pukhtoons can be imagined from the fact that the
number of matriculates in the British India NWFP was only 15 in
1891 and 71 in 1903.
During World War-l, the British government
closed Azad school. All teacher and volunteers were sent to
jails. During the war the All India National Congress and the
League supported the British Raj but after the War the Muslims
were disappointed by the attitude adopted by the Allied powers
towards the Ottoman Empire.
Ghani was a devoted soldier of freedom
movement. He had participated in the meetings and agitations of
the Anjuman-Islahul-Afghana and Khilafat Movement since school
days.
Ghani mixed mystical, mysterious mode of Malang
with the Occidental philosophical verbosity with the oriental
aesthetic romantic mysticism. Sufi literature was a part of his
education, but he did not believe in negation and self
abnegation. "I think by embracing life you can be closer to
God" commented Ghani,"Allah created light and colour,
poetry in nature and taught so that we can appreciate them and
creator AlMusavvir".
Ghani spent nine years in religious
institutions and then he was enrolled in the Jamia Millia
University. In the Jamia he got acquainted with scholarly
personalities like Dr. Ansari, Hakim Ajmal Khan, Maulana Abdul
Kalam Azad etc.. Dr. Zakir Hussain was the principal. But after
spending one year\, Ghani was again recalled by his father to
Peshawar in 1928. There was a civil war in Afghanistan and
doctors were needed, so he was given first aid training, but due
to political circumstances the mission was not allowed by the
British. A committee know as "as the Afghan Red Crescent
Society" was formed to collect donations and medicine for
Afghan government.
There insurgency against Amanullah by certain
Mullahs under the pay of Raj created hatred in the minds of all
nationalist progressive forces on both sides of the Durand Line.
In 1929, Ghazi Amanullah Khan left his homeland and Habibullah
Kalakani alias Bach Saqao became the ruler of Afghanistan. The
fall of Amanullah was not a major set back to Afghanistan only
but to the entire Pukhtoonkhwa. Amanullah-became the symbol of
nationalism, modernism and liberalism for all nationalist
progressive forces of the region.
This tragic incident changed the political axis
of the Pukhtoons from Central Asia or rather from Kabul to Delhi
and from radical adventurism to evolutionary change and
non-violence.
Dr. Khan Sahib, Ghani's uncle, decided to send
him to England. On July 23,1929 Ghani left for England.
"Baba wanted me to stay with a noble English family to study
their ways of life and know the causes of their national
ascendancy" said Ghani, "If this was his (Baba's) wish
he should have sent me to either the University of Oxford or
Cambridge which had played a great role in raising the English
nation to great heights of power and supremacy".
In England he studied Old and New Testaments in
a priest's family. In 1931, Ghani went to US from England with
the help of Sardar Shah Wali Khan, the Afghan ambassador to UK,
and joined South Louisiana University to study chemical
engineering.
In Europe and US, Ghani saw a new world totally
different from his own so he was naturally impressed by its
standard and ways of life. He was particularly impressed by the
development of these nations in the field of science and
technology.
The study of great oriental religions. Islam,
Judaism and Christianity and western philosophy moulded his
thoughts and perceptions about man and movements in his
motherland. In the passage of knowledge from Orientalism,
religiosity to the Western modernism and US experience of
scientific knowledge changed his world outlook but not his mind,
which was continuously in search of an ideal-perfect and
universal in nature.
When Ghani Khan came back to his native village
his father was behind the bars. In 1934, Jawahar Lal Nehru made
arrangements to send Ghani Khan and Indira Gandhi to the Shanti
Niketan, a university on the border of Biher and Bengal. Shanti
Niketan was founded by Rabindra Nath Tagore in 1901. He wanted a
revival and renaissance of Indian culture and civilization and
wanted to create a love among the students irrespective of their
religion, colour, creed and race. It was for this reason that the
institution developed itself in the Vishwa bharati University in
December 1921. In this institution there were no chairs and no
benches. The used to sit on the Chabutra of mud with the students
sitting around them, in semi circles on the ground.
Ghani Khan joined the department of journalism
and his tutors were Nandlal Bose and Krishna Kirpalani, his
subject was literature. Ram Kinkar taught sculpture. Rabindra
Nath Tagore was too old but active. One day Ghani went with Bose
to the Art school. The students were busy in making different
things from clay. Ghani Khan also took some clay and made a frog
and thin something else. His tutor saw in him the hidden man and
appreciated his work and encouraged him to go to the school
regularly. From that day Ghani Khan used to come regularly to the
school for painting and sculpture. Nanelal Bose said: Ghani had a
natural talent for sculpture.
In Ghani's own words "shanti Niketan was a
whole new experience for me. from Hashtnagar I had gone to
Europe. In Shanti Niketan, I got the opportunity to assimilate
Asian philosophy, literature and appreciated the performing and
visual arts". Lata Indira Gandhi, the then Prime Minister of
India, in three letters to her father Jawahirlal Nehru mentioned
Ghani Khan and his activities in the Shanti Niketan. These
letters are edited by Sonia Gandhi, the wife of Rajiv Gandhi in a
book "freedom's Daughter, letters between Indira Gandhi and
Jawahirlal Nehru (1922-39) 1989.
After spending one year in Shanti Niketan,
Ghani was recalled by his father. When Nandlal Bose came to know
that Ghani would not return, he dashed to Wardha. He met Gandhi
and told him about Ghani's artistic talents. He predicted that,
if Ghani was left in the Shanti Niketan, he would become such a
great artist that India would be proud of him. Nandlal requested
Ghani to persuade Bacha Khan to change his decision. But Bacha
Khan did not change his decision. He asked Gandhi what would
happen to the world if Ghani applied red and green colour to it.
So Ghani Khan left once again his education incomplete after
short stay at the Shanti Niketan. "I am great admirer of
Bacha Khan" says Ghani, "was one of the finest
Pukhtoons that I have known. But we differed on some things. I
strongly uphold the view that you can live without art, but you
cannot progress without it".
Ghani was of the view that beauty is the
essence of civilization and culture which includes almost all
human creative activities like paintings, sculptures, songs and
music etc.. "Without the search for beauty in though, word
and deed we cannot have any kind of civilization".
According to 'Ghani Khan human life has very
lofty ideals. In a letter to Abdur Rauf Benawa, an eminent Afghan
writer and poet, he writers: "Man is essentially an animal.
He wants food, sex and comfort and nothing else. It is the duty
of us poets to turn his face to those higher centres of his being
where he might see the reflection of his own perfection and the
face of his own eternal beloved beauty. I think a poet must
worship beauty ... in thought, word and deed force man to turn
his face from the rubbish heap of his appetites to his garden of
Eden ".
Ghani's stay in the Shanti Niketan had lasting
impact on his mind. He himself recollects his experience in the
said University by saying: "My stay in the West left many
imprints on my psyche. I was deeply impressed by their society,
culture and politics. When I came back, I had an inferiority
complex about the backwardness of my country and people. It was
in the Shanti Niketan that I discovered myself and the past
greatness of my own culture and civilization, which has produced
several man of versatile genius, who have been appreciated by the
historians and scholars of the West".
Ghani was inspired by the impressionists,
Monet, Manet and Van Gogh. He said: "Gaugin's colours are
brilliant. Michael Angelo's David is superb, so is Rodin's Cupid
and Psyche". According to Ghani "I have nurtured my
senses and my perception in search for the truth. And I glorify
the truth with whatever is at my disposal. Beauty is the truth
harmony, proportion, equilibrium. It embodies symmetry and
rhythm. I believe that beauty is from God and He is the most
beautiful-Al-Jameel".
Even in his "childhood Ghani Khan drew
very clear and vivid pictures of his friend and fellows"
said one of his relatives. He had vast knowledge of art history
and its various modes, techniques and branches. His paintings are
alive with expressions. He painted only human faces as, according
to him, face is the most venerable and significant part of human
body because it reflects all kinds of human sentiments. A
person's thoughts, ambitions, his character, are reflected on it.
Ghani's method of working was quite erratic. "He gets an
idea and then gets charcoal from the kitchen or children's
pencils or dry pastels and sketches it there and then". He
was of the view that the most difficult task in the art of
painting is the exposition of feeling through a human face. He
argued that Iand scapes, mountains and tress can be painted by
any ordinary artist.
Ghani had practiced different techniques in his
work. He had used ole colour, pastels and acrylic but prefers
pastels through which he can transfer his "brief but
intensive inspiration" in a short time on paper. He was an
abstract impressionist. An impressionist presents nature
according to his own vision and not as it appears to other
people.
Like paintings 'Ghani's sculptures also consist
of only faces, which are like living pictures of human
sentiments. "Ghani has put tongue into the mouth of stones
through his art" writes Raza Hamdani. His sculptures seem to
be replicas of the famous Gandhara art. The museum at his
residence Darulaman in Charsadda is valuable treasure house of
the masterpieces of his paintings and sculptures. Most of his
sculptures are in wood, and quite a few of them are at the Shanti
Niketan.
It is true that the portraits on view have less
to do with aesthetic value and are more of a psychological
exploration of character. Thus the fascination with the
expressions on the face, particlarly the eyes. True to the
humanistic tradition, the portrait here is not interested in
passing judgment, not in formal abstraction, but in capturing
something of the fleeting soulfulness of a character.
Ghani did not remember the titles of many of
his paintings nor when he completed work on a particular canvas.
He was unusual, vibrant, interesting because he did not conform
to the stereotypes of the artist built of media hype. For him art
was neither spectacle nor commodity. In art as commodity or
spectacle, all traces of process, human Iabour, community,
tradition are erased. The simulation that then generally pass for
art seduce us because they seem alien, exclusive and place us the
passive position of the dreamer, the spectator the consumer.
In 1934, Ghani joined the Gola Gokarnath Sugar
Mill in UP as Labour officer. But due to his extraordinary
talents he was promoted Chief Chemist in a short time. It was the
love of a Parsi girl Roshan that the fire of love once again
ignited in the temple of Zoroastra of Balkh (the first Pukhtoon
prophet of the ancient Bakhtria) in the heart of Ghani. Roshan
was a daughter of Rustam Ji Parsi of Hyderabad Deccan and he
married her in December 1939.
When the Takht Bhai Sugar Mill was set up in
1940, Ghani joined it as technical Manager. But he resigned from
service in 1943 due to government's hostel attitude and the
behaviour of Mill's administration. He was elected as a member of
the Central Legislature of Official delegation to represent India
in a Conference of FAO (Food and Agricultural Organization). In
1947, he presided over the all India Youth Conference held at
Cownpur. He organized Zalmay Pukhtoon on April 26, 1947.
"The Zalmay Pukhtoon follows Sher Shah Suri and Ahmad Shah
Baba. The Zalmay Pukhtoon only listen to the Pukhtoon... The
Zalmay Pukhtoon is not a political intrigue. But it is an attempt
to awaken the Pukhtoons. It was not a violent group but it was
formed for the defence of unarmed people. Late Sardar Daud Khan,
the Prime Minister of Afghanistan wanted Ghani Khan to come to
Afghanistan and represent their country in the UN. But Ghani Khan
refused with thanks.
Ghani's work is as much an expression of his
life and times as it is of art. He was mast Young, he was master
of all crafts. He was musr he was Malang (hermit) when he was
old. His personality reflects a cultural bridge and bound between
Central Asia and south Asia, a blend of Occidental and oriental,
a milieu of and rural and urban and Muslim and non Muslim. And
lastly, in the words of n artist "art is traumatic
discovery. What that discovery is may be beyond the hyper-reality
of art and closer to the supernaturalism of Ghani Khan when he
speaks of the artist behind his art Al Jameel and Al
Musavvir".
Abdul Ghani Khan died in the age of 82 on
Friday night (15th March, 1996) after a protracted illness at
Lady Reading Hospital Peshawar.
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