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        Naseer Ahmad  The Dawn: September 18, 2008 
  Having
        endured the horrid heat of the past several days, few people would
        believe that Karachi once had pleasant weather conditions, with a breeze
        sweeping across the city interspersed with drizzles and rains for seven
        to eight months of the year. Reminiscing about pre-partition Karachi,
        noted mystic writer Amar Jaleel insists that when he was a schoolboy,
        studying at the Ratan Talao primary school, the pleasant weather here
        rivalled that of many hill resorts. To prove his point, he says all old
        buildings do not have provision for ceiling fans. 
 He was born and brought up in this city when, according to him, it was
        inhabited by hardly 250,000 people. “It extended from Keamari to Takri,
        the mound where the Quaid’s mausoleum rests now. The heterogeneous
        population of Hindus, Muslims, Parsis and Sikhs lived here
        homogeneously. There was also a sizable population of Marhattas and
        Jews. Close to the Takri lived rich Hindus on one side and Parsis on the
        other. They were all at peace with one another. They wholeheartedly
        participated in one another’s festivals. They would go to one
        another’s places of worship without any inhibition,” says one of the
        top short story writers of the Sindhi language in an interview with
        Dawn. “All that seems a fairytale now.”
 
 Amar sahib is dismayed by the current crises gripping the country from
        within and without. He was among the people who were not happy at the
        partition of India.
 
 “I was born in the Indian city of Karachi. As primary school boys, we
        were filled with nationalism, impatient to drive the British out of our
        motherland. Singing with verve Allama Iqbal’s poem Saray Jahan say
        achha Hindustan Hamara/ Hum bulbulain hein is ki,yeh gulistan hamara, we
        would chant slogans the British must quit.... must quit India.” He
        also recalls his beloved school which was burnt down by a frenzied mob,
        “And I still don’t know why it was done, though it was not the only
        school burnt to ashes.”
 
 Asked if he was opposed to the creation of Pakistan, he says: “Not
        opposed to. I was flabbergasted, …. surprised that how could a mother
        be bifurcated. There are certain things that cannot be divided and
        subdivided. And this feeling has supplied the source material for many
        of my creative writings.”
 
 He says when Maulana Deen Mohammad Wafai, a well-known scholar, heard
        the news of partition, he became very disturbed. He was seen praying and
        crying incessantly for hours. When his young son asked about the reason
        for it, he said: “From now on the Muslims of the subcontinent will
        never have peace.”
 
 Well, both the opponents and supporters of Pakistan have equally
        forceful arguments. “When an Indian asked me why it was that India had
        criminals working underground and Pakistan did not have such dons, I
        said in Pakistan dons don’t need to operate from the underworld.”
 
 Professing to be a Sufi, Amar says mysticism is prevalent in all major
        religions – Hinduism, Christianity, Buddhism and Judaism. “Mysticism
        is the independent views of the mystics about their religion. It is
        different from the religion of the cleric. They interpret the religion
        according to their own understanding. For instance, Shah Latif says
        praying and fasting is absolutely necessary. They are part of your
        faith. But there is something else that brings you closer to your
        Creator. On the other hand, the mullah would say that it is fasting and
        praying alone that gets you closer to God. So, it is a deviation from
        the established tradition. It is a sort of reinterpretation of religious
        thought, which seeks relief for the perplexed mind,” says the mystic
        writer, adding:
 
 “For instance, if you put a question to the mullah that if a Muslim
        astronaut goes into space, how would he offer prayers there as there is
        no sunrise and sunset in space, the mullah would have no convincing
        answer. But a sufi may tell you that since he prays five times daily to
        get closer to God, why can’t he remain in constant touch with him by
        praying on without waiting for a specific time. If the book says that
        you offer prayer five times, okay. But there is no harm in it if you
        pray 10 times a day.”
 
 He says sufism of various religions is as different from one another as
        the religions themselves. “But all Sufis believe in one Creator. Their
        definition of the Creator may vary from religion to religion.”
 
 Besides Shah Latif, he is also a great admirer of sufi poets such as
        Sachal Sarmast, Baba Fareed, Sultan Bahu and Bulleh Shah.
 
 Asked what future he saw for Sindhi fiction, he says: “Whether Sindhi,
        Punjabi or Pushto, these languages have roots here. And such languages
        do not die.” He says Sindhi literature has a very bright future as so
        many writers are doing their job very well. “I do not have authentic
        statistics, but I believe four to five books are published in Sindhi
        daily. Besides, there are five Sindhi TV channels and several
        newspapers, all promoting the language.”
 
 Born on November 8, 1936, he has been writing for TV channels for the
        last 35 years, but he is sceptical about TV channels’ capability to
        promote literature. “Although TV channels give better remuneration and
        one gets instant recognition, writing for the channels is not
        literature. If it were so, Haseena Moin would have been the best writer
        in Pakistan.”
 
 A collection of 30 short stories in English, Love, longing and death, is
        being published from New Delhi. “Being a Sufi, I am not supposed to
        have an ego. But somehow I have never gone to publishers to get my books
        published. And this publisher from New Delhi also contacted me to say
        that he was interested in the publication of my stories, outlines of
        which he had read in my Dawn columns.”
 
 He has 15 collections of Sindhi short stories to his credit. His short
        stories have been translated into several languages. Amar sahib is also
        working on a novel in English to be titled Thus spoke the dumb.
 
 He contributed a weekly column, Mystic Notes, to Dawn for about 13
        years. He has contributed columns to a Sindhi newspaper for many years.
        His columns are different because they are wrapped in mysticism,
        generally in the form of a short story reflecting on the current
        situation.
 
 During his career, he has worked as a programme manager with the
        Pakistan Broadcasting Corporation, as a director and later the
        vice-chancellor of the Allama Iqbal Open University, and also as the
        director-general of the Pakistan National Council of Arts, Islamabad. He
        takes pride in being from the first batch of students of Karachi
        University’s new campus, where he earned a master’s in economics and
        history. He recalls many illustrious names who were his contemporaries
        at the university, including Shaista Zaidi, Syed Safwanullah, Waheed
        Murad and Salman Farooqui.
 
   
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