"But you speak such a good
Hindi," Huma Ahmar, The News, March 31,
2010
http://www.thenews.com.pk/daily_detail.asp?id=231776
An Indian student’s innocent query triggers off a series of memories
The other day, a new student of Year 5 (age group 10 years) at the school I
work in at Sydney came up to me and asked, “Miss, where in India are you from?”
I explained that I was not from India but Pakistan .
The girl, who obviously had an Indian background, said with absolute wonder in
her voice, “But Miss, then how do you speak Hindi so well?”
“I speak Urdu,” I replied.
“But you even look Indian!” she exclaimed.
Her comment transported me back to Bloomington ,
Indiana in 1996 when I was studying at the university there. As we walked along
a road there, my husband and I were chatting to each other in Urdu. An
undergrad student walked up to us and said, “Hello, it is so good to see some
more Indians here”.
We told him we were Pakistani. “But you speak such good Hindi,” he exclaimed.
We explained that we were speaking in Urdu, and that the spoken versions of
Hindi and Urdu were pretty similar. He was genuinely surprised and said it was
“awesome”.
He ended up coming back to our place for lunch. By the end of the evening we
had discovered many other similarities. By the end of the week our circle of
friends had increased and included many Indians. Over a decade later, we are
still friends with all of them. We realized that the myth that Indians and
Pakistanis can’t be friends because they are completely different was just
that, a myth. We share many cultural values.
And we can work together as I found out while organizing ‘Women’s Day
Festivities 1997’ at Indiana University . I worked
with a team of six wonderful women, two of whom were Indian. We had lively
discussions about the issues that South Asian women face. We concluded that
many of the issues were the same -- lack of education, dowry and so on. It was
a great learning experience.
My parents had migrated to Pakistan after the partition in 1947. Like many such
families some of their loved ones chose to stay back. Many a tear was shed on
both sides when visas were denied and relatives couldn’t join each other for
special occasions.
Growing up we heard stories about how much fun our mother had with her friends
celebrating their festivals of Holi and Diwali, and
them coming over to celebrate Eid with her. On the
other hand we kept hearing from the media and in textbooks about the Indians
who were our arch-enemies. So who were we to believe?
In the 1980’s we moved to Malaysia for about three years and I had my first
experience of meeting Indians. Not the ones that we heard about from Ammi or watched in movies but real
ones in flesh. To an 11-year old mind the similarities were striking. They
dressed like us, looked like us and even talked like us. And guess what, they
even ate food that was really like our food, and their kids liked the same TV
shows we watched and enjoyed the same books. So I guess Ammi
and Abboo were right, we could be friends.
Raised with the values that all humans are the same, that we should respect all
beliefs and that the basic moral values all over the world are the same --
truth, honesty, respect, love -- we had friends from different parts of the
world. So maybe Indians were no different either.
Yet obtaining a visa for going to India always seemed to be a formidable task,
given all the stories I had heard of the long lines and then the heartbreak of
rejection. However I decided to brave it all when my aunt from the US suggested
we travel to India in 1988. To everyone’s surprise and my disbelief I got a
visa pretty easily. The long wait in the line was completely worth celebrating
my birthday at the Taj Mahal.
We went to India again in 1989. It was an interesting experience both times. I
met so many cousins and aunts and uncles that it was hard to keep track of them
all. But it wasn’t just the love that the family showered on us that made those
trips so amazing. It was the love and empathy showed by the local people that
made us feel really welcome. There was the kid selling
flowers outside a temple near the Gomti river in Lucknow who would give me
a flower because I was a guest from the neighboring country, or the girls who
gathered around to get a picture taken with a Pakistani who could speak “Hindi”
and looked just like them.
Visiting the villages that my parents came from was another revelation. Locals,
both Hindu and Muslim, remembered my grandparents and parents and asked after
them and shared stories about them. They were excited and happy to see “Vakeel Saheb’s” (the lawyer’s)
granddaughter visiting the land of her forefathers. When we decided to stay the
night in my mother’s ancestral home, bedding was sent down from so many
different houses that we had far more than we needed. The generosity showed by
these people from our neighboring country tells us that though we may be
divided by people from both sides who continue to fan the flames of enmity for
their own gains we are really not that different and we can coexist in peace
and harmony.
It is time to put the ghosts of the past behind us and move into a happier,
harmonious future. Let us be the ones who leave a legacy of hope, love and
peace for the future generations of the Indian Subcontinent.
My bilingual 11-year old is frequently called upon to translate for new
students from Pakistan and India who do not have much English. “The Indian kids
speak Urdu too but they call it something else,” she says, “and they are cool
just like the Pakistani kids. We should go to India sometime”.
Let us give these children the message that we share common values and hopes.
Let’s use all the energy we waste in harboring animosity against each other to
work together for the progress of our part of the world.
The writer is a teacher based in Sydney , Australia , with an Honors Degree in English
Literature and MA in Linguistics from Karachi University and in Applied
Linguistics and TESOL, Indiana University. She can be contacted at humahmar@yahoo.com