The Kartarpur corridor met the two calf brothers at the time of partition
Ask Imran Khan to give me a visa. I have no one in India.
Come to Pakistan, I will arrange your marriage."
This is the conversation of two brothers who have met for the first time since the independence of Pakistan.
The Kartarpur corridor met the two calf brothers at the time of partition |
The story of Muhammad Siddique and Muhammad Habib is like that of millions of people for whom the post-partition partition is not just a story. He is one of the characters in the story who left when his family left Jalandhar for Pakistan in chaos. His father died. Siddique arrived in Pakistan with his sister. Habib stayed with his mother who later died.
They still do not fully remember how all this happened. But the meeting of the two brothers through Kartarpur almost 75 years later is one of the countless stories that began with the partition.
I ask Imran Khan to give a Pakistani visa to my brother Muhammad Habib to reunite the calf brothers. If we spend the last breaths of life together, maybe the pain of being separated from our parents and siblings will be lessened.
This was stated by Muhammad Siddique, a resident of Chak 255, Faisalabad district of Punjab.
Eyewitness of their meeting in Kartarpur Nasir Dahlon says that the meeting of the two brothers was very emotional. About a hundred people were present at the meeting.
There were tears of joy in everyone's eyes. After a few hours of meeting, when the brothers were parting again, every eye was wet again.
The first contact between the two brothers took place two years ago. Not a day goes by that the two brothers do not make video calls to each other. Mohammad Siddique cannot use his mobile phone but his children and villagers help him in this matter.
Similarly, Muhammad Habib does not use mobile phone but his Sikh friends help him. Muhammad Habib lives with a Sikh family.
When we reached his village Chak 255 to meet Mohammad Siddique, he was talking to his brother Mohammad Habib about Zoom. Mohammad Siddique was saying to his brother Mohammad Habib, "Your grandchildren, great-grandchildren and great-grandchildren miss you. You are not married If you come to Pakistan, I will arrange your marriage.
Mohammad Habib was telling his brother Mohammad Siddique, "Tell Imran Khan to give me a visa." I have no one in India. I am very lonely at this age. Life is no longer so lonely.
Mohammad Siddique talking to his brother Mohammad Habib about Zoom
How about a family calf?
Muhammad Siddique remembers well the story of his separation from his family. At that time he was about 10 to 12 years old while Muhammad Habib does not remember anything like that. Except for the names of their mother, father, siblings and the area in which they now live. From what I heard from the people there. He was about two and a half years old at the time.
Muhammad Siddique explains that our village was in Jagrawan, Jalandhar. "My father was a landowner. I remember there was a lot of melon in our fields. I also remember my mother. 'She remembers that her mother took her younger brother Muhammad Habib to her home in Phoolwala which is still called Phoolwala and is located in Bhattanda district of India.
"After they left, our village was attacked," he says. People were leaving the area in a state of chaos. Everyone was turning towards Pakistan. Everyone was trying to save their lives. "
"I remember being with my father and sister. I don't know how my father died in the riots. We somehow reached the refugee camp of siblings Faisalabad.
Mohammad Siddique says, “My sister also fell ill and died in a refugee camp in Faisalabad. I don't know how my uncle reached the refugee camp in Faisalabad in those days.
Muhammad Habib says, "I have no one in this village and area. People in the area told me that when the riots broke out, my mother and I were trapped in our own mecca. Meanwhile, the distribution was completed. When Pakistan and India were formed, reports were received that father and sister had all been killed. Nothing was known about the brother.
"My mother could not bear the shock. At first her mental balance deteriorated and then she left the world. In this way the people of Mecca also went to Pakistan.
Ask Imran Khan to give me a visa. I have no one in India |
"I have only seen my chief friends since I was a child," he said. I live with them. I grew up with them. "
Mohammad Siddique says that the caravans coming after the partition of the subcontinent were giving some information. We used to get the news that my mother had also died. But more effective communication could not be established because my mother's Mecca had also moved to Pakistan. He could not say much about Muhammad Habib.
Mohammad Siddique says that in our time identity cards were not made but in any case I am 10 to 12 years older than Pakistan. He spent many months and years of his life remembering his brother. The mother's death was confirmed. She had seen the bodies of her sister and father. But all my life I have believed that my brother was alive.
Recalling the past, he says that now my guardians were my uncles in Pakistan. We lived in different areas of Faisalabad. Then we were allotted lands in Chak 255 after which we moved to this village.
"I was also married to my cousin. He spent his whole life farming and landownership. |
"I was also married to my cousin. He spent his whole life farming and landownership.
The PCB board says that when buying tickets, spectators will have to show a code of vaccination certificate, while a maximum of 6 tickets can be purchased on an identity card.
PSL 7 Player Details and How get Tickets
Muhammad Habib is not ready to talk much about his childhood and past. "It simply came to our notice then. I just spent my life in the village where my mother left me and died. '
Muhammad Habib doesn't talk about why he didn't get married, why he didn't build a house, he just says that my chief friend and the people of Phoolwala are my everything "He is the one who introduced me to my brother."
0 Comments