kashmir and pakistan: part two

our car didn’t careen over the cliff but i definitely thought it would at several points during our trip. while the road was well developed and had guard rails along its entire length, cars would pass us at blind spots as other cars were coming down the mountain in the opposite direction. i didn’t want to die that way and to be the cause of my parents’ demise when it was my idea to go to kashmir.

we made it to azad jammu and kashmir in record time. breathtaking couldn’t accurately describe the views. when my father asked me what i thought about kashmir, i said, “it looks like the norwegian fjords and the south island of new zealand.”

the hindu kush
the valley
on the road to azad jammu and kashmir
the neelum river
another view of kashmir

we checked into the mess hall in muzzafarabad. my cousin rabia’s husband is a general in the army. my father thinks he will soon become commander and chief of the pakistani armed forces because of his meteoric rise up the chain of command. he’s well liked and well respected among army brass. and it’s only through his connections that we were able to stay in such secure accommodations. azad jammu and kashmir has its fair share of lodgings, from hostels to small boutique hotels but the mess hall has the most incredible views of the mountains and the valleys below. plus, we had our own private servant and chef. the pathan servant said the chef would make us anything we wanted. i almost asked for monkey brains and camel meat as a lark but the poor guy already looked so downtrodden, i didn’t have the heart to add to his misery.

the general had arranged for me to meet with dr. munir, the head of the geology department at the local university. dr. munir was kind enough to take my father and myself around muzzafarabad, pointing out where the 2005 earthquake did the most damage and how so much still needed to be done even four years later. at 7.6 on the richter scale, the quake’s epicenter was muzzafarabad but the shocks could be felt as far away as lahore. dr. munir said that relief efforts were slow but continuing. turkey had immediately sent envoys to help and the united nations wasn’t far behind. saudi arabia was also helpful. i would like to think that the saudis did it out of a sense of helping their muslim brethren but i think it has more to do with spreading wahhabism to non-arab countries. sickening.

we met an old woman on one of the streets who was walking with a severe limp. i asked her what had happened and if she needed help. she explained that part of her home had fallen on her and when she was rescued from the rubble, she was immediately taken to the local hospital but since others’ injuries were life threatening, she had had to wait for medical attention. when they set her leg, it was too late and it healed incorrectly. her face was etched in pain but she still wore a smile. she thanked my father and me for coming to muzzafarabad to see the damage and to try to help. i wanted to cry.

earthquake devastation
earthquake damage
more earthquake damage
more damage
another damaged building

thousands of people had lost their homes and some even lost their entire families. one of the schools had crumbled and more than 35 children had perished. many families were living in tents or temporary UN-sanctioned shelters. dr. munir said that kashmir’s fault line is one of the deepest in the world and another powerful quake is around the corner. “why don’t people move to safer ground,” i asked? dr. munir said, “they are kashmiris. their families have lived here for centuries. where else would they go?” he had a point.

tent housing
another tent shelter

as we left the city, several kashmiri children saw my camera and asked me to take photos of them. they were naturally inquisitive as to who i was. i told them my name and that i was american but pakistani born and that i was there to help. they smiled, posed for pics and gasped in awe at the beauty of hawaii (i still had my pics from that trip on my camera).

the cutest boy in kashmir
another cute kashmiri boy
triple threat of kashmir cuteness

if you want to help the relief efforts in kashmir or anywhere else for that matter, contact unicef at http://www.unicef.org/ or the united nations high commission for refugees at http://www.unhcr.org/cgi-bin/texis/vtx/home

Published in: on April 14, 2009 at 9:03 pm  Leave a Comment  

kashmir and pakistan: part one

after spending 24 hours traveling yesterday and getting no sleep on the plane due to a stomach ailment, i am up bright and early on tuesday to post about part of my kashmir and pakistan trip.

i haven’t been to the region since i was kid. the last time i visited, that bastard dictator, zia ul-haq, was president. he has much to answer for the current situation in pakistan and afghanistan. a general under zulfikar ali bhutto, benazir’s beloved father, haq (who incidentally shares a last name with my mother’s side of the family but is not a relation) overthrew bhutto, had him summarily executed and took control of the country for more than 11 years. during that time, he helped a nation that was progressing, albeit slowly, get mired in the heartbreaking afghan-soviet conflict, brought about the rise of the ISI, pakistan’s answer to the CIA, and aided the birth of taliban-like groups in both afghanistan and pakistan. these things have contributed to so much of the strife in afghanistan and pakistan. may he rot in hell.

haq also spent millions funding the kashmiri conflict. i am a pakistani-born afghan but i don’t think india or pakistan should have control of the region. while it was intended to be dispensed to pakistan after the partition of 1947 because of its predominantly muslim population, it’s been more than 50 years since then and the two nuclear powers can’t seem to come to a compromise. i have always believed that kashmir is for the kashmiris and never more so than now.

i didn’t know how my recent trip to azad jammu and kashmir would pan out. while i expected natural beauty—from waterfalls to what the norwegians call fjords to majestic peaks—and wonderful, hopeful people, what i didn’t expect was a tortuous four-hour drive from islamabad that had me clinging to my seat as the hired driver, naseem khan, traversed his way up the mountain on a two-lane road littered with more than a dozen landslides.

landslides in azad jammu and kashmir
cleaning up a landslide

was i going to be a landslide victim? stay tuned to find out…

Published in: on April 14, 2009 at 6:36 am  Leave a Comment  

asia trip update

some of you know that i had planned to do relief work in central asia. initially, my heart was set on my ancestral homeland of afghanistan. but i was recently told that the situation is dire and that my family can’t ensure my safety. as an afghan-american female, i am placing myself in jeopardy. i next set my sites on baluchistan, which is a province in western pakistan and eastern afghanistan but i would be on the pakistani side. an earthquake devastated part of the region in the fall. i was told that would be a no go as well.

my third option was kashmir. i have always wanted to see it for myself after having heard that it’s a magical place, much like the mythical camelot. verdant valleys and mist-covered lakes abound, according to my sources, and those same sources have said it’s quite possibly the most beautiful place on earth. 

lucky for me, i get to go. i planned on traveling this month but was told by my mother that they close the roads in and out of kashmir for fear of avalanches. march is the earliest i can get there. my friends have asked me what my plans are once on kashmiri soil. i would like to volunteer with a local agency, doing whatever i can to help the local populace, and then i’d like to travel around the region, interviewing the locals and photographing my journey. my cousin’s husband is a general in the army so i will have unfettered access to the area. this may be the trip of a lifetime.

Published in: on January 8, 2009 at 6:41 pm  Comments (1)  
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