Saving Punjab
A Sikh architect is helping to preserve cultural sites in the north Indian state still haunted by 1947’s heart-wrenching Partition
- By Geoffrey C. Ward
- Photographs by Raghu Rai
- Smithsonian magazine, September 2009, Subscribe
My wife says I suffer from an "India problem." She's right. I lived in New Delhi as a teenager during the 1950s, came home to college at 18 and managed to stay away from India for a quarter of a century. But over the past 26 years I've been back more than 20 times, sometimes with a legitimate excuse—an assignment from one magazine or another—but mostly because I now can't imagine life without a regular dose of the sights and sounds and smells I first knew as a boy, can't bear not seeing the friends I've made there.
When the editors of Smithsonian asked me to pick a place I'd always wanted to see, it took about ten minutes to settle on Punjab, the north Indian state that was brutally halved between India and Pakistan after they won their independence from Britain in 1947. The Delhi I knew growing up—my father was stationed there, working for the Ford Foundation—had only recently been transformed into a largely Punjabi city by the influx of more than 400,000 Hindu and Sikh refugees, all of them haunted by bitter memories of the violence of Partition that had forced more than ten million people from their homes on both sides of the border and may have cost a million lives. Virtually everyone I knew had memories of Punjab. The tutor who struggled to teach me high-school math had stumbled across much of it on foot. His elderly mother, whose gently spiced samosas I can still taste, somehow made it, too. My two closest boyhood friends were Sikhs whose poultry farm on the outskirts of Old Delhi adjoined a sprawling tent city still crowded with Punjabis awaiting new homes seven years after they'd been forced from their old ones.
I'd always wanted to see something of the world they'd left behind. I'd had glimpses: I hunted in those bad old days, so my friends and I sometimes strayed across Punjab's border in search of game. But I'd never been to Amritsar, the city that is to Sikhs what Mecca is to Muslims, Varanasi is to Hindus, Jerusalem is to Jews and Rome is to Catholics. Nor had I seen the lush countryside around it where some of the most appalling violence of Partition took place and where relics of Punjab's history lie scattered everywhere.
Two people who know the region well agreed to accompany me, the photographer Raghu Rai and his wife, Gurmeet, herself a Sikh and also a conservation architect consumed by a desire to help save all that she can of Punjab's historical heritage. They, too, are haunted by Partition. Raghu was a small boy in 1947, living in the village of Jhang in what is now Pakistan, but he still remembers fleeing with his family out the back of their house as an angry Muslim mob banged on the front door. Gurmeet, too young to have firsthand memories of the division of India, comes from a clan that includes both Sikhs who fled from Pakistan and Muslims who stayed behind. When she returned to Delhi from a visit across the border to her family's ancestral village in 2000, she recalled, "It was a homecoming from a place which felt quite like home."
The Grand Trunk Road runs for 1,500 miles from Kolkata on India's eastern coast all the way to Peshawar on Pakistan's western edge. A 170-mile section of the ancient trade route—now designated National Highway Number One—cuts diagonally across the Indian Punjab. "Truly," Rudyard Kipling wrote in Kim, "the Grand Trunk Road is a wonderful spectacle....bearing without crowding...such a river of life as exists nowhere else in the world." That river flows far faster now and is no longer uncrowded. Kim and his contemporaries moved mostly on foot; the fastest travelers rode in horse carts. Now, big gaudily painted trucks race past one another in both directions, blaring horns and spewing black exhaust. Motorcyclists weave among them, wives and small children clinging on behind. Bicycles and sputtering motor-rickshaws join the flow; so do jeeps that act as country taxis and spavined buses so oversold that a dozen or more men ride with the baggage on the roof.
The brilliant green of the countryside through which all this traffic elbows its way is broken only by the trees that set one wheat field apart from the next and by occasional patches of brilliant yellow mustard. Punjab is the heartland of the Green Revolution that turned India from a country that could not feed its people into an exporter of grain.
Gurmeet knows nearly every inch of this highway. As a young architect, she spent a season in 1993 with the U.S. National Park Service, helping to survey historic structures along the C & O Canal between Harpers Ferry, West Virginia, and Washington, D.C. After she returned to India, she persuaded a number of funders, including Unesco and the Indian National Trust for Art and Cultural Heritage (INTACH), to let her lead a team that would create a similar inventory of all the unprotected monuments along the Grand Trunk Road in Punjab. Nothing like it had been attempted before.
It's not easy to tell old from new in India. For most historic structures, there are no laws to prevent damaging alterations or outright demolition. Nonetheless, Gurmeet and her team managed to identify and document some 1,100 historically or architecturally significant structures along the Punjabi stretch of the ancient highway. Their list includes everything from the former palaces of feudal rulers to the rock-hewn wells that once served their tenants; from Hindu temples and Sikh gurdwaras and Christian churches bustling with believers to the lonely roadside tombs of Muslim saints, left behind by those who fled to Pakistan but still visited weekly by Sikh and Hindu farmers in search of miracles. All but a handful of Gurmeet's discoveries are deteriorating and unprotected. To an outsider, the task of rescuing more than a fraction of them seems almost insurmountable. Gurmeet just smiles. "Let's see," she says.
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Comments (12)
The beautiful cultural and religious site of Golden Temple is the most sacred place for Sikhs. It is enthralling and great experience to visit Punjab and golden temple just for once. if you want some more information then you may visit this website for more info http://www.mytravelindiaguide.com/north-india/travel-punjab-a-travel-tour-to-granary-land-of-india/ This website also has some useful info but if you want to have some more information about India then you can bookmark it on http://www.mytravelindiaguide.com/feed/
Posted by travelindiaguide on June 21,2010 | 11:24 PM
Great opening par. Enthralling angle, and beguiling vision of the real India.
Posted by gordon david durich on February 4,2010 | 11:00 PM
I admire Geoff Ward's work - from providing the intellectual scaffolding on which Ken Burns builds his documentaries about America to writing about FDR to writing about India ... he covers a lot of ground with a clear-eyed affection for his subjects unlike, say, Theroux whom you also feature in this issue, and whose writing is pitiably ethnocentric unless his subject is Britain or the United States.
Still, Ward succumbs to the all-too American habit of seeing a "real" India outside Gobindgarh, disorderly and dusty, against his implicitly "unreal" India if Gobindgarh does become a sealed off and antiseptic, American-style spiritual Williamsburg.
Why a disorderly and dusty India should be the "real" India and why a planned area which offers creature comforts with spiritual solace should be the "unreal" India, escapes me.
They are all part of the Indian reality -- as they are of the reality in the U.S. or anywhere else. Or, should we begin to think of American strip malls as the "real" America and the beautifully-laid avenues of Washington D.C. as the "unreal" America?
Punjabis interested in revisiting the shrines of their faith without more than minimal contact with the real India.
Posted by Siddhartha Banerjee on November 6,2009 | 03:52 PM
i am really touched by the writer's emotional empathy .
yes , ido agree that our punjab has been on the forefront since[ the invader mohammed of ghazni ] long and the pepole are always the sufferer .
we have lost in all the ways . what really sadens me the approach of the central goverment towards the punjab policies .
pakistan is sending in so much of drugs and they cannot legally stop the bus service .
well leaders donot think about masses they just think about their SWISS accounts
indu
Posted by indu bajwa on November 6,2009 | 04:03 AM
It is so nice to read an article about India - and especially Punjab - written by someone who actually knows the area and does good research. This is sadly too rare in US publications and I hope to see more well-informed articles like this!
Posted by Jchemist on November 3,2009 | 09:42 AM
why did the writer did not mention the weapons found in the "golden temple" during the raid that occured when Indira Gandhi was ruler?
Posted by michael on October 2,2009 | 04:54 PM
God, or Allah, or Brahman, or whatever name the Supreme Being is known by, is supposed to be the universal unifying force in our lives, It's ironic that men would rend nations asunder, divide families, fight over relics and temples, and kill and maim one another in the name of this unifying Being, the one all mankind is born of. To echo the plaint of one Rodney King, purported victim of excessive police force and street philosopher by default, "Can't we all just get along?"
Posted by Armando Chavez on September 22,2009 | 01:24 PM
picture shown of Darbar sahib is incorrectly labeled as Mecca of the sikhs, Mecca of the sikhs is Gurudwara Sahib at Nankana beacause Guru Nank was born in Nankana not at Amritsar.
Mecca of muslims is Mecca for them beacause Mohammad sahib was born in Mecca not any city outside mecca
Posted by charanjit singh on September 20,2009 | 09:24 PM
What is remarkable about the work on architectural conservation being carried out by Rai's team is it's absolute professionalism. In an environment where political and economic environments eschew "short term fixes " in favour of pragmatic and long lasting solutions their work enjoys a reputation for thoroughness which others would do well to envy.
Posted by Harbinder Singh on August 31,2009 | 03:59 PM
To the editor:
- A minor correction
Photo # 16 in 'Photo Gallery' titled "Preservationist Gurmeet Rai at Golden Temple" is incorrectly labeled. That picture is taken at 'Durgiana Temple' in Amritsar
This temple is occasionally also referred as Golden temple but then author needs to make distinction between both the Sikh and Hindu Golden temples - Sikh golden temple which is AKA 'Harimandir Sahib' and the Hindu Golden temple which is AKA as 'Durgiana Temple'.
Posted by Mr Singh on August 28,2009 | 07:23 PM
Very well written article. Thank you The writer through his experience and research communicates Guru Nanak's view of God as well as a brief history of the sikhs. Thank you. However, I have one correction or comment. The writer on page 2 states "Sikh men are identifiable by the turbans and beards their faith requires the orthodox to wear, ........." This is not true. All Sikh (particularly men) are supposed to wear turbans. After Guru Gobind Singh baptised Khalsa, and since then some woman wear turban, too. In my view point, there are no orthodox or unorthodox sikhs. They are all sikhs. Of course, as Guru Nanak said there are no Hindus and no Muslims, any one can read and gain wisdom of the Guru Granth Sahibs.
Manjeet
Posted by Manjeet Kaur Tangri on August 27,2009 | 01:41 AM
very well written article
impressed by the work done by Gurmeet and her colleagues at the local level.
I have just come back from Dera Baba Nanak. I was driving my bus from Amritsar to the place. As our bus crossed through some village road close to army centre few km from Dera Baba Nanaki saw ancient temple domes. Coulnot see a clear view as there were cow dung piles around it and stack of grass. Someone could take a look. I have taken pictures from bus and could post to you, if there was an email id.
regards
madhvi
chandigarh
Posted by madhvi on August 27,2009 | 01:55 PM