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Hira
Mandi’s new avatar Nirupama Dutt When
Urdu writer Ghulam Abbas wrote a classic Urdu short story called Anandi
way back in 1939, and inspired a memorable film by Shyam Benegal
called Mandi in 1983, was he playing the role of a clairvoyant?
Well, if one looks at the fate and fortune of Lahore’s Hira Mandi one
would certainly believe so. Well prophecy does accompany major literary
endeavour but it was more a case of understanding human nature and power
games. The story is a satire on politics and prostitution, both
professions having many common principles, in which a brothel occupied by
sex workers in the heart of the city is chosen by some politicians for
its prime locality.
A lifetime later, Hira Mandi of Lahore seems to have become the target of the politicians’ imagination and the area known better for its sex and sleaze in present times is now the place for the rich and famous to dine on the choicest delicacies of Pakistani cuisine and pay a pretty packet for the fare.The new Food Street is the realisation of Pakistani Punjab Chief Minister Shahbaz Sharif’s dream to replace the Food Street created by his predecessor Pervez Elahi’s at Gwalmandi in president Pervez Musharraf’s times. The V-shaped offshoot of the road connecting the Mandi to the Fort opened as Fort Road Food Street, with 27 buildings acquired for the project, opened business a couple of months ago. The old buildings have been renovated, painted and decorated to supposedly resemble the Mughal architecture of yore and Pakistani newspapers report that concentrated here are the business interests of multinational companies, business tycoons and others close to the ruling party. Maryam
Rabi, an architect at the Agha Khan Cultural Service, Pakistan, working
on the walled city of Lahore, criticises the makeover in a blog for The
Dawn: "On visiting the Fort Road Food Street, one would expect
to be introduced to the true culture and experience of the walled city
– the project, however, rarely brings forth that opportunity and
instead presents a ‘Disneyfied’ version of itself to the public. The
words, conservation, restoration and protection are widely misunderstood
in most of Pakistan. What has been implemented on the Fort Road is merely
a superficial facelift and a complete disregard for its historic context
and cultural value." French journalist Claudine Le Tourneur d’lson,
who recently released her novel called Hira Mandi in India and
Pakistan, disparages the appropriation of the buildings, and says her
1988 visit there showed how the red-light area of Lahore was different
from those of Mumbai or Cairo: "There can be no comparison. In
Mumbai or Cairo all you see is flesh trade. Nothing more, nothing less.
In Hira Mandi you saw colour, you saw dance, you heard music. There was a
culture to it. Sadly, it is no longer there. The girls have mostly gone
to the UAE, where they make more money and where there is no moral
police. The ones who have stayed behind practise their profession in posh
localities of Lahore or are at the beck and call of hotel guests."
Hira Mandi, which came up as the bazaar of the courtesans during the Mughal period and was reduced to the red-light area in modern times, is certainly in the royal neighbourhood just behind the grand Badshahi Mosque built by Emperor Aurangzeb. While some of its sanctity was lost in colonial times, it yet retained its grandeur, giving some great singing stars to the radio and films. Pran Nevile, the chronicler of Lahore, describes it thus: "It would be a mistake to take Hira Mandi for a prostitute’s street, which certainly it was not, even though some of its inmates carried on the world’s oldest profession for a living. The courtesan’s home was essentially a place of culture when some of the singing and dancing girls found their place into the royal court." The
settlement came to be known by this name after a General of Maharaja
Ranjit Singh called Hira Singh Dogra who lived in the vicinity. Many an
exceptional musical talent was nurtured in the kothas here,
including Noor Jahan of the Awaaz de kahaan hai-fame who rose to
get the title of Malika-e-Tarannum in Pakistan. She is remembered well
for her sonorous rendition of the poetry of Faiz Ahmad Faiz. Sardar Bai
is still remembered. There were others who made it to Hindi films like
Mumtaz Shanti, Shamshad Begum and Khurshid and others who were a hit on
the radio, including inlcuding Umra Zia who became a radio star of the
1930s, singing Mera salam le ja, taqdeer ke jahan tak. Nevile has
fond memories of Gulzar Begum,daughter of the accomplished tawaif
Sardar Begum, popularly known as Tamancha Jaan, radio star of the 1940s,
whom he went to meet in Lahore when he took a pilgrimage to the past in
1997. "Most of my patrons were Hindus and Sikhs and they left Lahore
with the Partition. Soon I shut down my salon and stopped singing and
educated my children." Munni Bai, who supported by singing on kothas
the music career of Ustad Amir Khan, one of the greatest exponents of
Hindustani Classical music and founder of the Indore Gharana, was
originally from Hira Mandi. Classical
arts lost out to popular folk and film numbers and the era of 'keeps' or
'mistresses' ended and vulnerable sex workers grew out of the Mandi, with
little protection and no patronage. And now their habitation is valuable
real estate and up for grabs. Perhaps even the writer Ghulam Abbas could
not envisage way back in the 1930s that the Mandi would come to such a
pass.
The Sunday Tribune: April 29, 2012
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