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Attabad Lake: Teardrop miracle

farhanalee7

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The Attabad Lake was formed following a massive landslide in 2010, which buried 20 people beneath it and blocked the flow of River Hunza, creating a natural dam. The water has displaced thousands of people and inundated over 19 kilometres of the Karakoram Highway. PHOTO: FRIDA KHAN

Popular myths surround the formation of several geographical landmarks in Pakistan. The lake at Katasraj, Choa Saidan Shah in Punjab, is said to have formed from the teardrop of Lord Shiva mourning the death of his wife Satti.

Ansoo lake in Kaghan is believed to have been created from tears of jealousy shed by Deuo Sufaid, the white giant, when he learnt that Badr Jamal, the fairy princess he was in love with, had chosen to marry Prince Saiful Mulook. Attabad Lake in Hunza, however, was born of less romantic circumstances. In January 2010, a massive landslide blocked the flow of River Hunza, creating a natural dam and burying 20 people beneath it. The rising water displaced thousands of residents and submerged countless villages, fields, orchards a well as a 19-kilometre stretch of the Karakoram Highway (KKH). In 2012, a spillway was created to release a steady flow of water and as the water receded, it revealed the villages that had been buried beneath. It is only now that people have started returning to rebuild their homes and lives.

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Passenger boats ferry people, their belongings and even cars from one side to the other, all through the day. Traffic is prohibited after dusk, and it becomes almost impossible to travel in winter when the lake freezes over. PHOTO: FRIDA KHAN

The KKH is also being rebuilt. A new connection is being carved into the mountains around the lake. The highway begins in Abbotabad, runs through the mountain ranges of Gilgit-Baltistan, crossing over the Chinese border at Khunjerab and into China up to Kashgar. Reaching an elevation of 4,693 metres (15,397 ft), it is the highest paved international highway in the world. During its 20 years of construction, from 1959 to 1979, approximately 810 Pakistanis and 200 Chinese workers lost their lives mostly in landslides and falls.

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People have started rebuilding their homes and returning. They hope that once the road connection is restored, life will become better with easier access to work, education and health facilities. PHOTO: FRIDA KHAN

The reconstruction work is also being done by Chinese companies. Pakistani labourers work under the supervision of Chinese engineers in trying circumstances. The strong, howling gusts of wind often whip up dust, sand and tiny stones that sting the workers’ faces and eyes. They do not have a lot of protective gear other than scarves and sunglasses.

Until the connection is restored, the only way to reach the villages of Shishkat, Gulmit, Passu and places onward to the Chinese border is to cross the beautiful, blue lake by boat. Boats ferry people, their belongings and even cars from one side to the other, all through the day. Even the trucks coming from China, carrying material and equipment for the Karakoram Highway construction have to cross the lake on a barge.

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Given the importance of the location, work to build a new road and tunnels higher up in the mountains to restore the Silk Route is underway. The reconstruction work is being done by Pakistani labourers under the supervision of Chinese companies. PHOTO: FRIDA KHAN

It’s easy to see how, once the road is functional, this place will become dotted with food points, restaurants and resorts. Tour guides will narrate the story of how the mountain fell and buried 20 people beneath it. Facts will become a story and the story will become a legend. The 20 people might become 20 suitors coming to win the hand of the princess of Gulmit, whose loud collective wail on finding out that she has already been betrothed, brought down the trembling mountains, while their tears flew into the crater and became a bottomless blue lake. If the tale takes a more contemporary twist, they might become 20 brave village women who encircle the mountain to stop evil corporations mining for the jewels beneath, who blast the mountain anyway and end up burying the women underneath.

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The Karakoram Highway (KKH) is too important a connection to be left buried in the water. It was built by the governments of Pakistan and China with work starting in 1959 and completed in 1979 (open to the public since 1986).The route of the KKH traces one of the many paths of the ancient Silk Road and is sometimes referred to as the eighth wonder of the world. PHOTO: FRIDA KHAN

But by some miracle, the stone melts and flows past the miners and out of the corporation’s greedy hands, forming a lake of liquid lapis. Whatever form the story takes, they will be remembered. And like Shiva’s sorrow and Deou Sufaid’s heartache, it will perhaps explain why it is that when we see something of great beauty we sometimes feel like crying — while the heart leaps with joy, a tear springs to the eye.
Attabad Lake: Teardrop miracle – The Express Tribune
 
For a minute i thought the article was about Ansoo (Teardrop) Lake, which in it'self is a wonder and yes i have been there.

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now that is messed up. a pakistani news using reference of hindu gods?

So everything which does not have to do with Islam should be banned in Pakistan? That my dear is messed up...
 
So everything which does not have to do with Islam should be banned in Pakistan? That my dear is messed up...
Why is pakistan slowly showing its true color? First Islam is used for the purpose of creation and ditched later, then other religion and culture are being used for so called modernization? No wonder why Pakistan is in such mess.
Btw no western media will ever use Islam for reference in a non-islamic subject and that too in a positive manner.
 
Why is pakistan slowly showing its true color? First Islam is used for the purpose of creation and ditched later, then other religion and culture are being used for so called modernization? No wonder why Pakistan is in such mess.
Btw no western media will ever use Islam for reference in a non-islamic subject and that too in a positive manner.

Childish and unbelievably obtuse.

Modernization? No, just some realization that there is thousands of years of history of your forefathers that belongs to you. Converting to Islam does not wipe that history out, nor does it make the Arab history your's. Denying this is just insecurities and stupidity talking. Oh and Pakistan is a mess because of the Pakistani mentality, of which your posts are a good example of. Wonder how almost every nation that's prosperous right now is non-Muslim. I'll tell you how; it was the Islamic values that they imported, of which, again, your posts and the Pakistani mentality go against.


Actually tonnes of programs, books, etc. out there in the west telling of the Islamic and Muslim contributions to the world. Funnily, the way things are going, our future generations might have to learn of the Islamic works and values through them, they way they learnt of the Greeks through the Arabs.

Wonder why everything non-Islamic freaks you people out so much? Are you that insecure of your faith?
 
Why is pakistan slowly showing its true color? First Islam is used for the purpose of creation and ditched later, then other religion and culture are being used for so called modernization? No wonder why Pakistan is in such mess.
Btw no western media will ever use Islam for reference in a non-islamic subject and that too in a positive manner.

Oh screw you asswipe, got o Iraq and be useful.
 
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