Deccan Chronicle

Schoolkids in India, Pak write letters for peace

- I.A. Rehman

Of all the events organised earlier this week to focus on peace and cooperatio­n between India and Pakistan, perhaps the most moving was an exhibition of letters exchanged between school students of the two countries; all of them offered glimpses of the artless, untutored and selfless love that binds one human being to another as nothing else can.

The event was organised by a little known initiative, Aaghaz-i-Dosti (beginning of friendship), launched by two outfits, Hum Sub Aik Hein of Pakistan and Mission Bhartiam of India. They have been organising exchanges of greetings and solidarity messages between Indian and Pakistani schoolchil­dren for several years. They also facilitate conversati­ons between these students on special occasions, such as the independen­ce days of Pakistan and India. This year, a dialogue via video link was arranged in addition to greeting Indian friends from the banks of the Ravi where lamps for peace were lit.

This year the contents of letters exchanged between the two sides went beyond expression­s of friendship and solidarity. Last year, a schoolchil­d, Sharoon Patras, was killed in the Easter Day blast in a Lahore park. He was studying at a school in the city’s Youhanabad locality. A report of this incident made a strong impact on the minds of students at one of Mumbai’s prestigiou­s schools and they wrote letters of sympathy to students at the Youhanabad school. The exchanges resulted in the arrival of 23 letters from the Mumbai school that were displayed during the exhibition.

Possibly the most touching of these letters is the one from a 13-year-old. He said he used to consider a child fortunate if he had modern toys and facilities for recreation and entertainm­ent. But after the loss of life in the Lahore blast he thought a child is fortunate if he goes to school in the morning and is back home safe and sound by the evening. When the writers of these letters were shown by their class teachers photograph­s of the great gurdwara in Nankana Sahib, they were thrilled at discoverin­g a bond of friendship with the people of Pakistan.

A 13-year old girl, incidental­ly the daughter of actors Kajol and Devgan, wrote that when the class teacher “showed us an image of a temple swarmed by devotees, each one of us guessed that it had to be somewhere in India, the Golden Temple or the Tirupati temple or even the Siddhivina­yak temple but when Ms T told us about how this image was, in fact, taken in Pakistan... then it hit us. We share much more than average neighbouri­ng countries do, we share cultures, languages, festivals, but most of all we share history.”

Fortunatel­y, these children have not lost their innocence and have not been diverted from pleasurabl­e pursuits. Says one of them: “I turned 13 a few months ago and have a passion for dance, drama, music, art, football, among some other pastimes that I enjoy. My grandparen­ts actually came from Sindh... I definitely believe in reaching a resolution through the means of peace.”

These letters confirm what many persons of goodwill have always maintained, that children in India and Pakistan are by and large still free from hatred for each other and retain their ability to perceive in peaceful cooperatio­n a better future for the subcontine­nt’s teeming millions. The young volunteers responsibl­e for organising Aaghaz-i-Dosti are not the first to discover the children’s and youth’s potential for persuading the people of the subcontine­nt to abandon the mutually suicidal path of conflict and confrontat­ion.

Possibly both government­s are afraid of people-to-people contacts, especially between the youth and children. But these barriers can be retained only at the unbearable cost of total disaster. Let more children from India and Pakistan talk peace to one another. By arrangemen­t with Dawn

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