Hindustan Times (Chandigarh)

Faith topples barriers as Pak pilgrims offer prayers in Ajmer

- Deep Mukherjee & Salik Ahmad

AJMER: An Orwellian feeling of being watched by several pairs of eyes writs large on the face of a soft-spoken bearded elderly man, sitting on the floor of Shahjahani mosque at the Sufi shrine of Khwaja Moinuddin Chishti in Ajmer.

“Kehne ko to bohot kuchh hai magar hamein paabandi hain media se baat karne ke liye (We have a lot to say but we have been asked not to speak to the media),” he says. A green strap looped around the collar of his grey kurta suspends his identity-card that proclaims his Pakistani nationalit­y.

He is the victim of his identity. “Aap naraaz na hoyein (Please do not get upset),” says his companion, before turning to the fellow green-strap wearers, uttering something in Pashto.

The men get up and leave. But not before, one of them says that he’ll be questioned for half an hour even about this cursory exchange. This year 402 pilgrims from Pakistan have come to Ajmer for the 805th death anniversar­y, better known as Urs in the subcontine­nt, of the Sufi saint.

Pilgrims often are the casualty of the strained relations between the two neighbours, as was the case in 2013 and 2014 when the visit of Pakistani pilgrims was cancelled.

The cancellati­on was caused by mounting tension following the death of Indian prisoner Sarabjit Singh in a Pakistan jail. The death of Pakistani national Sanaullah Ranjay in a jail in Jammu was also one of the contributi­ng factors. For the last three years, the visit of Pakistani pilgrims to Ajmer, however, has remained unhindered.

The week-long Urs celebratio­n that ended on Friday saw an attendance of over two lakh devotees. Nearly 4,500 police personnel were deployed at the shrine, which was the site for a bomb blast by Hindu-right wing groups ten years ago that killed three.

Pakistanis are staying a few kilometers away from the shrine at the Government Central Girls’ School. The heavy security at the school gate refuses to allow the press inside the campus.

After much negotiatio­n, and a few calls to senior officials, the police agree to bring the head of Pakistani contingent outside the school. 60-year-old Ali Khan, a resident of Islamabad, comes out, accompanie­d by an official of the Pakistan High Commission in India. With police and intelligen­ce men sitting around, Khan dilates on how much he is loving his first visit to India.

“When we got down at the railway station and saw the security personnel sent for us, we felt reassured that we are being taken care of here,” he says.

When he was leaving Pakistan for Ajmer, his daughters made a special farmaaish (request) to him, “They want Rajasthani bangles.”

 ?? HT ?? Visitors from Pakistan say they have received warmth and love from locals, with shopkeeper­s even giving them gifts.
HT Visitors from Pakistan say they have received warmth and love from locals, with shopkeeper­s even giving them gifts.

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