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MEDA JISM VI TOON – MEDI ROOH VI TOON

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MEDA JISM VI TOON – MEDI ROOH VI TOON
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by Nayyar Hashmey & Nidokidos

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Country life is sweet. No doubt about that. The greatest of the poets have sung the praise of it. And the prophets too had the greatest admiration for village life. Great thinkers and philosophers spent their invaluable lives in the countryside. No surprise that village life is highly cherished by all, in all ages, and all societies



A stunning shot taken on the dawn of a new day.



Me, meadows and my cow. But for now, going home.


Green green crop of home….



Even the autumn scenes offer colorful look

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Though mini vans, wagons and Chingchis have gradually replaced the animal transport chiefly a tonga, (horse drawn buggy) in the cities, villagers still find tonga as a cheaper mode of transport. And being conventional transport in the countryside since centuries, they prefer its ride over auto transport.
Moreover, besides being economical, tongas are airy and not prone to atmospheric pollution as do their automotive counterparts, that daily send tons of waste gases to our atmosphere causing the deadly greenhouse gases effect.



Village dwellers are always so eager to reach their home that they would occupy any nook, any corner of a bus plying to their village. In the image above, village youth are sticking on different parts of the bus like a swarm of flies.
Some are even standing on the roof top and other sticking on the footsteps, while still there are others who find the minimum possible space anywhere just to stick on to enough width and hold on to a support anywhere to stay in tact.
Risky! yes a high risk endeavor indeed, but for villagers, the love of their home is so pressive that they would go for taking such risk every day than compelled to stay overnight in a big city
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Charpai, or Charpoy, is a traditional woven bed in Punjab. In Punjabi and Saraiki, it is called a Manjaa or Manji and consists of a wooden frame bordering a set of knotted ropes. Traditionally the user would lie directly on top of the ropes without an intervening mattress. Its making begins with the tying of a jee (Life knot) at one corner of the bed.
In Dera Ghazi Khan, a district of Punjab, the big Charpai is also called hamacha. This city has the world’s largest charpai.
The hamacha or a such large sized manja as in the picture has many diverse functions.
1. It can be used as a joint sitting when village youth get together for gossips, exchanging views about village politics, a hot topic travelling around everywhere of national and international significance (and between you and me!) also about village damsels.
2. In the evening it becomes a meeting place for a chopal, where matters of formal and informal interest to the villagers at large, are discussed.
3. The huge manja or hamacha has other functions too e.g. for holding the meeting of village council or punchayat. Since normally five village elders act either as interlocutors or as adjudicators, therefore, traditionally such village council is called a punchayat.
A punchayat handles village disputes on money matters, distribution of irrigation water, or sometimes also the matrimonial disputes between two parties of the same clan or the ones from another clan. Additionally all types of minor offences, crimes and disputes are also handled by village punchayats.
Instead of approaching the city courts where a case may take years to decide and where solicitors charge too high fees, the villagers prefer the matter to be sorted out by a local punchayat which mostly makes decision on the same day. This decision is honoured by all parties concerned.
Village councils or punchayats are now called union councils.Its members are elected through province wide local bodies elections and these are gradually taking over the role of traditional punchayats. However, the culture of manjaas till persists in the villages of Punjab.

 
and more ................................



A shepherd takes his herd back home. the scene is simply idyllic. Go and See it, Experience the interesting life our villages have……



In many villages of Punjab, jungle wood, dried bushes and shrubs, beef dung are used to prepare meals on traditional earthen or iron stoves (respectively named choolhas and angeethis). Though cooking on such stoves takes relatively longer time and is very cumbersome for the woman doing the job, yet the food cooked over the slow simmering fire, is many times more delicious than the one cooked on gas stoves.
I still recall the aroma and the taste of food prepared on such crude and cumbersome stoves by my late mother. Every thing she cooked on these stoves especially the meals and the parathas done in desi ghee were so tempting that you could not wait any longer. As a matter of fact, I still get nostalgic when I remember the food prepared on choolhas in those good old days.




Milch animals like cows, buffaloes and goats have an important role in the economy of our rural households, but more so the cows and buffaloes. They provide milk, butter and yogurt And the bovine waste which otherwise would go waste is used as fuel for the earthen and iron stoves.
In the scorching heat of Punjab plains, buffaloes regularly need to freshen up in cool waters of a village pond, hence named water buffaloes.






The use of takhtis has almost completely disappeared from our basic academic urban environment. Yet in the government run basic education schools in rural areas takhtis to some extent are still in vogue.
Takhti basically is a rectangular wooden tablet with a handle. It has a size of 12″ x 18″ . Its a learning tool through which the teacher trains the pupils in the starter class to learn the basics as well as phonics of alphabets and numerals. With such takhti, the pupils also learn how to practice for a clear, legible and beautiful handwriting.
In contrast to modern ball pens, a ‘qalam’ or a reed pen and the ink used for writing on the tablet makes the pupils write again and again perfecting thus their handwriting. The usage of such takhtis is also very economical. Once the pupils have finished a day’s lesson, the takhti is washed under tap water and then a layer of paste of multani mitti or ‘gatchi’ is applied over it. When dried the pupil can again take it to school and start writing once again.
But takhtis have many other uses too. I myself being a ‘taatian’ (those who studied in rural or semi-urban schools where there were no writing desks but hessian matting which were laid on bare floor) know how did we use our takhtis in our elementary school. If the school was at a distance, (which was the case in my school too), in the scorching sun of May and June, the takhti was a good implement to cover your head.
And in case, you developed a row with a school fellow, the takhti again was your armour to defend yourself or offend your opponent. Though such cases used to be rare, yet if there was one, takhti was there to come to your rescue.
And finally takhti was also the tool to play and enjoy. These takhtis were made to stand on ground (as in the picture above). The buddies would roll their pencils over the tilted tablets and the speed of each pencil adjudged by the participants.
There were no measurement tools to judge the speed of the rolling pencils, empirical assessment was good enough. And believe me guys, the elation, the jubilation, the merriment of this simple game was immense. It was great fun as any other game of today’s modern gadgets. Simple, economical and to that hilarious, that was the enjoyment of good old takhti in the years of yore….




Punjab country side is very famous for its rich food. The popular recipe is to prepare dishes in delicious gravy and parathas melted in butter/ ghee. The dishes are simple, healthy and yet have their own fascination.
These are relished by one and all for their rich and spicy taste. The use of butter, cream, desi ghee and a wide variety of spices is the secret behind one of the most loved cuisines of Pakistan, be it Makai-Di- Roti and Saron-Da-Saag, Murgh Palak, or Karhi, the rich flavor of all is surely mouth-watering.






Tongas loading passengers at a stand: For villagers tongas are a popular mode of transport even today. They are fun to ride, and are usually cheaper to hire than a taxi or rickshaw. However, in large cities, tongas are now banned to use highways because of their slow pace.
In Pakistan, tongas are mainly found in the older parts of cities and towns, and are becoming less popular for utilitarian travel and more popular for pleasure.
Here in this picture, at a tonga stand, the tonga walas still ferry people from suburb of a large city to villages in the country side.. Tonga has been the means of livelihood for coach-vaans since days of the British Raj and is still the most popular mode of transportation on the 3-5km stretch between an urban fringe to a village.
 
and more...
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Larger part of Punjab dwells in villages which are the smallest but important units of Punjab’s economy. And every unit is like a stream, with its own aura. These are self productive units as they produce almost every commodity at home. However, in spite of separate existence every village is woven into the national mainstream.
According to a western sociologist Punjab is not a society made from different units, its a ghalicha (a cloth knitted by village womenfolk) in which every part- though recognized separately but is woven into an integrated form which cannot be detached from the others.




Aethay Rakh!

A village man tries to fix his gainti. Instead of going to the carpenter or iron smith, villagers mostly use the power of their muscles to straighten out matters like fixing a tool.



A village painter in action.



Villagers mostly prefer sleeping on a charpoy in the open. Here in the courtyard of a village home, the manjis with khes, bedsheet and pillows still can be seen lying in the open. After the men or women of the family are free from making/taking breakfast, the manjis will either be removed inside the house or will be stacked along the walls.

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Tree along the roadside: A common yet scenic view of the country side




Autumn scene captured through lens of the photographer. I do not know whether this image has been photoshopped. If not, the shot is superb. If photoshopped, even then the view here is simply amazing.





I LOVE such big cool leafy trees along the road to a distant, unknown village. Don’t you?




Scene after a heavy rain
 
...see.
...



Children playing marbles outside their home..



The Vill—Trail. The tree bedecked (unpaved) way leading to a village.



The village is a panorama of the charming scenes of nature. The coming and going of seasons imparts a profound effect on the village life as it adds a divine touch into human mind. No wonder, the village life is simple, divine and beautiful.



“Meri myeen mersery koloon vi bohti sohnrhin ai”. My buffalo is more beautiful than a Mercedes Benz car. Except their pitch black colour, a buffalo and the Mercedes have nothing in common, yet this comment by a villager proud of his buffalo shows how intensely love the villagers their beafstock.



Back home with a bountiful harvest.




Innocence at play: A village lad driving wheel in a moonlit night. Serenity, moon and a blissful enjoyment.



Wintry evenings in rural Punjab have their romanticism like nowhere else. Special winter recipes like Gajar-da-halwa and dry fruits like pea-and pine-nuts are most popular. Along with a familiar chant of “Garam Aanday” (hot boiled eggs) you frequently come across hand push carts selling Moong phallies and the Chilghozas, (as in image above).http://www.nidokidos.org/attachment.php?attachmentid=115416&d=1347581706



As elections are soon to come in Pakistan (they are scheduled to be held sometime early next year), such scenes will be a common feature on every turn of a street or a chowk. This one is from a previous election. You can see the posters carrying pictures of former Senator Jawed Hashmi and two of his opponents.
 
This is best
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