The
        subject in the message of my mailbox was “Bano Bazaar Chaat”. The
        sender was some Tauheed. What could it be? I could not recall the name
        Tauheed. Was it some advertisement or some new “chat” group
        misspelled “chaat”. Curiously, I opened it. It was a fond little
        note from a pretty middle-aged lady I had encountered at the Bano Bazaar
        Chaat shop some time ago in Lahore.
        Now, Bano Bazaar is the name of a shopping market meant for women in
        Lahore’s famous Anarkali. Name the thing a woman may need and it can
        be found in this bazaar. It has rows and rows of charming shops across a
        maze of lanes and one can never tire of seeing the interesting wares
        sold here.
        There are refreshments available for women who may shop themselves
        tired. Most famous is a little chaat shop in the heart of the bazaar
        selling plates of delicious chaat. In a delegation of women poets on
        their way to recite their poems at a mushaira in Gujranwala, we too
        partook of the delicacy.
        This pretty woman across started chatting. Learning that we were a bunch
        of bards from India, she was very pleased. “I love literature and
        wanted to write but that was not to be. Instead, I worked as an accounts
        officer. My one wish is to see Amrita Pritam,” she gushed.
        She did not know that the famed poetess had passed away the previous
        year. We talked a little and then parted ways with a “Khuda-Hafiz”.
        Half an hour later, she traced us at a curio shop and insisted that we
        came to her place for dinner. We declined because we already had a
        dinner appointment. However, e-mail addresses were exchanged.
        Much later, there was this e-mail with a reminder of the Bano Bazaar
        Chaat rendezvous. First, she wanted to know where she would be able to
        get an Amrita Pritam book in Shahmukhi. Then she revealed that she
        remained single and took care of her parents. But now with both of them
        gone, especially her mother, she was depressed.
        The story seemed familiar and I told her that I went through the same
        when I lost my mother some years ago but overcame it by writing about
        her. Why didn’t Miniya, for now we were on a nickname basis, try the
        same.
        Some days later she sent me a poignant poem written in memory of her
        Ammi: ‘Sham dhale paon se poochhti hoon din ki thakan, Aur soone ghar
        mein aati hai ammi ki awaz, Aa gayi bitiya…”. So the Bano Bazaar
        Chaat has the power not only to forge crossborder friendships but also
        inspire cathartic poetry.
 
     
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