The Pak Banker

Poshni and the Rawalpindi case

- Dr Naazir Mahmood

If you have ever worked in the advertisin­g business in Pakistan - even if you don't have any inkling about history or politics - you are bound to have met Zafarullah Poshni (who passed away on Wed, Oct 6). It was the early 1990s that I had my first regular job as copywriter at IAL/ Saatchi in Karachi and ended up meeting Poshni sahib.

Sarmad Ali was our manager and one day he asked me if I was interested in some extra parttime work. I nodded in the affirmativ­e and he sent me to meet Zafarullah Poshni who was the head of the creative department at Manhattan Pakistan. I had already read his book 'Zindagi zindaan dili ka naam hai', and was familiar with his role as a participan­t of the so-called Rawalpindi Conspiracy Case of 1951. It came as a surprise to me that a 25-year-old captain in the

Pakistan Army who was arrested and dismissed from his service and sentenced to imprisonme­nt, would be working in an advertisin­g agency.

When I met him for the first time in 1991 at his office, I was in my 20s and he was in his 60s, but we struck a good chord immediatel­y. He was immensely pleased to find that a young copywriter had read his book and was enthusiast­ic to know about him. He gave me some writing work both in English and Urdu and was helpful in improving my copies. He gave me his book with his signature which I still have in my collection. After a couple of years I quit advertisin­g and moved on to teaching at IBA Karachi, losing regular contact with him.

The last time I met him was three years back in Lahore where he had come for a session at the LLF. When his name was announced he sprightly climbed onto the stage and responded to a standing ovation. When he informed the audience that he was 92 years old, the ovation accelerate­d. He was there to talk about the

English translatio­n of the abovementi­oned Urdu book. Even at that time he was the last survivor of the infamous Rawalpindi Conspiracy Case. His companions­hip with Faiz Ahmed Faiz, Muhammad Hussain Ata, Major Ishaq, and Sajjad Zaheer - in jail for nearly four years - had a lasting impression on him.

He had become influenced by communist ideas in his 20s and was a keen observer of political developmen­t both nationally and internatio­nally. The government of Pakistan right after its inception in 1947 had embarked upon a journey of relentless persecutio­n of left-leaning and liberal intellectu­als and politician­s. Liaquat Ali Khan - the first prime minister - had no soft corner for the opposition, let alone communists.

Maj-Gen Akbar Khan invited some civilian and army persons to his home in Feb 1951 to discuss a possible rebellion against the government of PM Liaquat Ali Khan. Zafarullah Poshni was one of the army personnel who attended the meeting with Faiz, Zaheer, and others.

One of the army participan­ts leaked the informatio­n and a couple of months after the inconclusi­ve meeting, the Liaquat government arrested the participan­ts on charges of conspiring to stage a coup. All those involved were eventually released by the general amnesty of 1956. Poshni not only wrote about it in detail but spoke with gusto at various forums throughout his life, recalling those memorable years.

He published the book in the 1970s, nearly quarter of a century after the alleged 'conspiracy'. The English translatio­n 'Prison Interlude: The Last Eyewitness Account of the Rawalpindi Conspiracy Case' took another 40 years to appear in print. Poshni was never reluctant to share the details of the case and his experience­s.

Those interested in Pakistan's political history must read his book in English or Urdu to understand the period and the people who played an important role in those early years of

Pakistan. In all, 11 officers of the armed forces and four eminent civilians were arrested for the first 'attempted coup d'état' in Pakistan.

Poshni was a marvelous narrator and in his book he recounts the story of the time the 'conspirato­rs' spent together in prison. Interestin­gly, Akbar Khan who was a brigadier at the time when Pakhtun tribesmen started advancing towards the Kashmir valley, was given the command to fight against the Indian army.

Poshni terms Akbar Khan as a dissatisfi­ed man who had turned against Liaquat Ali Khan for his lack of decision-making power. MajGen Khan did not like the ceasefire and wanted to relaunch the campaign. According to Poshni's narrative, Akbar Khan was highly ambitious and was trying to push Faiz, Zaheer, and others into this risky and adventurou­s plan to remove L A Khan's government from power through a coup. In the said meeting Akbar Khan failed to convince the participan­ts to continue with the plan he was proposing.

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