{"id":82801,"date":"2026-05-18T11:31:00","date_gmt":"2026-05-18T15:31:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/apnaorg.com\/wp\/columns\/general\/the-house-that-ruchi-ram-sahni-built-48\/"},"modified":"2026-05-18T18:24:07","modified_gmt":"2026-05-18T22:24:07","slug":"harking-back-a-small-step-to-honour-forgotten-heroes-of-our-city","status":"publish","type":"columns","link":"https:\/\/apnaorg.com\/wp\/columns\/majid\/harking-back-a-small-step-to-honour-forgotten-heroes-of-our-city\/","title":{"rendered":"Harking Back: A small step to honour &#8216;forgotten&#8217; heroes of our city"},"content":{"rendered":"<table width=\"80%\" border=\"0\" align=\"center\" cellpadding=\"5\" cellspacing=\"3\">\n<tr>\n<td>\n<p align=\"center\" class=\"style5\"><a href=\"https:\/\/www.dawn.com\/news\/1583127\/harking-back-a-small-step-to-honour-forgotten-heroes-of-our-city\">Harking  Back: A small step to honour &lsquo;forgotten&rsquo; heroes of our city<\/a><a href=\"https:\/\/www.dawn.com\/news\/1481939\/harking-back-faint-traces-of-lahore-that-was-once-a-jain-city\"><\/a><\/p>\n<div align=\"center\" class=\"style4\">\n<p class=\"style6\"><span>By Majid Sheikh <\/span>      <\/p>\n<p align=\"left\" class=\"style7\"><span>Dawn Oct 4, 2020<br \/>\n        <\/span> <\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\" style=\"border:none;padding:0in\"><strong><span style=\"font-family:'Segoe UI','sans-serif';font-size:13.5pt;color:#252525\">Often the question does prop up in the  mind &lsquo;just how much has Lahore changed over the last 70 years?&rsquo;. Then comes the  thought just how are we, as individuals, helping to bring about positive  change.<\/span><\/strong><\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\" style=\"border:none;padding:0in\"><span style=\"font-family:'Segoe UI','sans-serif';font-size:13.5pt;color:#252525\">The Partition of 1947 hit the ancient  city of Lahore the hardest and changed its entire ethos beyond recognition.  With the massive population numbers came a new ethos that damaged its famed  factual way of thinking. In the process we have forgotten the very people who  contributed to our freedom. In short we now have a distorted sense of our own  history.<\/span><\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\" style=\"border:none;padding:0in\"><span style=\"font-family:'Segoe UI','sans-serif';font-size:13.5pt;color:#252525\">The people of Lahore are famed for their  creative and bold way of expressing their talents, let alone having a brave  political vision. The basic traits of the city today is not what it was even  till the 1970s. Today it is a city without, symbolically, its beautiful green  hedges, and then its legendary doubledecker buses have disappeared, what to  speak of a situation where even walking on the streets is not only dangerous,  but many consider it a sign of hidden poverty. Today one&rsquo;s status is determined  not by your intellect or that you still read books, but by your car model.  Surely this reflects a society in sharp decline.<\/span><\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\" style=\"border:none;padding:0in\"><span style=\"font-family:'Segoe UI','sans-serif';font-size:13.5pt;color:#252525\">Some time back I decided to walk home  just a mile and a half from my office. My driver was sent home and he told the  begum that &ldquo;today Sahib has gone crazy&rdquo;. On the way three different friends  stopped to offer me a lift home, which I refused, naturally in true Lahori  fashion. They probably all pitied me. When I got home, full of dust, I realised  that on the way not a single pavement existed for me to walk on. Imagine a city  without pavements, except for what the British left behind.<\/span><\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\" style=\"border:none;padding:0in\"><span style=\"font-family:'Segoe UI','sans-serif';font-size:13.5pt;color:#252525\">Just what has gone wrong? Today not only  have the beautiful green hedges disappeared, but in their place hideous  forbidding walls with barbed wires have sprung up. Opposite my grandfather&rsquo;s  old house in Model Town, the walls of a neighbour are 12 feet high with double barbed  wires and guards with sub-machine guns. This reflects the people we have  become.<\/span><\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\" style=\"border:none;padding:0in\"><span style=\"font-family:'Segoe UI','sans-serif';font-size:13.5pt;color:#252525\">The point is that we have forgotten all  those people who made Lahore what it is today. Naturally, there are reasons for  all this happening. Over the last 70 years after that unstoppable tidal wave of  Partition immigrants shocked Lahore and the world, the city initially held its  own. One cannot deny that the numbers have multiplied to unbelievable levels:  From 850,000 in 1950 to a staggering 12,642,000 in 2019. This comes to an  unbelievable annual average population increase of 14.8 percent. Lahore is  today the world&rsquo;s 8th largest city, while Karachi is the fourth. No wonder the  problems of Karachi are out of hand.<\/span><\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\" style=\"border:none;padding:0in\"><span style=\"font-family:'Segoe UI','sans-serif';font-size:13.5pt;color:#252525\">The result has been massive problems in  transport, crime control, housing, food prices, the rich-poor divide and poor  education, to name a few sectors. In our college days we travelled by  doubledecker buses, or walked on safe pavements to save the fare. Our  neighbours were like family. Today in 2020 there are no buses so people have  taken to motorcycles. They had no choice. Lahore has the world&rsquo;s largest  motorcycle population. The Punjab police website says there are 1.7 motorcycles  per household of seven.<\/span><\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\" style=\"border:none;padding:0in\"><span style=\"font-family:'Segoe UI','sans-serif';font-size:13.5pt;color:#252525\">Today even bicycles are seldom seen  because of the distances involved. Just why have these symbols of a once  civilised society ceased to exist in a city known for its gardens, trees,  hedges, flowers, educational institutions (all with playgrounds by law),  excellent public transport, friendly neighbours, a small library in every  neighbourhood, scores of bookshops and what to speak of its flourishing eating  houses.<\/span><\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\" style=\"border:none;padding:0in\"><span style=\"font-family:'Segoe UI','sans-serif';font-size:13.5pt;color:#252525\">Only eating houses have multiplied in  line with population numbers, with food being the sole intellectual pastime.  But then my effort is to search for a positive indicator that our city needs to  develop. For starters we must recollect our past heroes in a non-partisan  manner. We must learn what they all stood for. The history of our city and its  people is important.<\/span><\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\" style=\"border:none;padding:0in\"><span style=\"font-family:'Segoe UI','sans-serif';font-size:13.5pt;color:#252525\">Today the old walled city has a  population relatively low on the economic scale. The rich wholesale merchants  have taken over almost 64 per cent of this space while they do not live there  themselves. This has impacted on the quality of the old city&rsquo;s environment. The  once posh area of Rattigan Road where once stood only 18 large houses, today it  has 332 houses. Even the historic Bradlaugh Hall, where the resolution for the  subcontinent&rsquo;s independence was passed, is crumbling and its grounds have  numerous illegal houses, naturally with Evacuee Trust connivance. History be  damned.<\/span><\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\" style=\"border:none;padding:0in\"><span style=\"font-family:'Segoe UI','sans-serif';font-size:13.5pt;color:#252525\">Come Pakistan and we saw the residential  &lsquo;paradise&rsquo; Gulberg spring up. Today that green peaceful residential colony has  all its plots subdivided and walls and barbed wires have sprung up. Forget  about pavements, for the entire area is now commercial. The traders always win.  Come the DHAs and even there walls and barbed wires are increasingly to be  seen. Pavements were never planned.<\/span><\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\" style=\"border:none;padding:0in\"><span style=\"font-family:'Segoe UI','sans-serif';font-size:13.5pt;color:#252525\">What has gone wrong to a society whose  founder M.A. Jinnah wished (see Aug 11, 1947, speech) that 20 per cent of &ldquo;our  national wealth should be spent on educating the poor, otherwise each ruler  will be more corrupt than the last, leading to the demise of the State&rdquo;. Our  education and health budget stands at 1.9pc. That is why a double narrative, call  it double-speak has become our very way of thinking. We have become a people to  whom reason does not appeal. Their history starts from 1947. The &lsquo;pious&rsquo; think  it started in 1021 when Mahmud flattened and burnt the city.<\/span><\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\" style=\"border:none;padding:0in\"><span style=\"font-family:'Segoe UI','sans-serif';font-size:13.5pt;color:#252525\">That this should happen to a land and  people who have over 4,500 years of existence, proven by archaeological and  scientific method, not by pious beliefs. That is why it is important to  celebrate some of the finest pre-Partition personalities of our city. We must,  all of us, recognise their contribution to Lahore the city, to Lahore of  artistic fame, to Lahore of brilliant political minds. This has to be done by  the people of Lahore themselves, not the government.<\/span><\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\" style=\"border:none;padding:0in\"><span style=\"font-family:'Segoe UI','sans-serif';font-size:13.5pt;color:#252525\">There is sign of hope as a group of  Lahore residents have come up with the idea of exploring such people. This is a  &lsquo;Sangat&rsquo; of the best. They recognise everyone who lived and worked in our city.  Their first effort has been to put up ten descriptive plaques, from Iqbal, to  Rafi, Gama Pehalwan, Noor Jehan, and a long list of such celebrities. It is  purely a peoples&rsquo; effort to recognise the great musicians, writers, poets,  classical singers, politicians, artists, architects, journalists, soldiers, and  you name them and they are on their list. All these hundreds of plaques will  soon be coming up.<\/span><\/p>\n<div align=\"justify\"><span style=\"line-height:107%;font-family:'Segoe UI','sans-serif';font-size:13.5pt;color:#252525\">This  group collects funds from members and from concerned citizens. It is an effort  of love with no gains but to promote the people who once graced our beautiful  city. Great Lahoris like Amrita Pritam and Anna Molka and Maharaj Kathak and  the great Bhai Ram Singh are now on their next list. So a &lsquo;procession of the  plaques&rsquo; will gather at the Gol Bagh at 4:30pm on Monday. Most importantly they  will also honour the man who was among the very first in Lahore to challenge  the colonial powers, sadly paying with his life.<\/span>\n        <\/div>\n<p align=\"left\" style=\"border:none;padding:0in\">&nbsp;<\/p>\n<\/p><\/div>\n<p style=\"border:none;padding:0in\">&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p style=\"border:none;padding:0in\">&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p style=\"border:none;padding:0in\">&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p style=\"border:none;padding:0in\">&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p style=\"border:none;padding:0in\">&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p style=\"border:none;padding:0in\">&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p style=\"border:none;padding:0in\">&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p align=\"left\">&nbsp;<\/p>\n<\/td>\n<\/tr>\n<\/table>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Harking Back: A small step to honour &lsquo;forgotten&rsquo; heroes of our city By Majid Sheikh Dawn Oct 4, 2020 Often the question does prop up in the mind &lsquo;just how much has Lahore changed over the last 70 years?&rsquo;. Then comes the thought just how are we, as individuals, helping to bring about positive change. [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"featured_media":0,"template":"","columnist":[4085],"class_list":["post-82801","columns","type-columns","status-publish","hentry","columnist-majid"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/apnaorg.com\/wp\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/columns\/82801","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/apnaorg.com\/wp\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/columns"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/apnaorg.com\/wp\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/columns"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/apnaorg.com\/wp\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=82801"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"columnist","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/apnaorg.com\/wp\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/columnist?post=82801"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}