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Peshawar is Peshawar

Tuesday, November 17, 2009
Rahimullah Yusufzai

Peshawar, or Pekhawar as it is called by Pakhtuns and Pishor by its old Hindko-speaking residents, has always been a city under attack. Past invaders coming from Central Asia, Persia, Afghanistan, India, and beyond have raided and plundered the place. Aryans, Greeks, Persians, Mughals, Afghans, Sikhs and the British occupied and lost Peshawar during their various campaigns of colonial conquest. And then there are the Pakhtun tribes living so close to the city in the Khyber and Mohmand tribal regions and the frontier regions of Darra Adamkhel and Hasankhel and threatening it whenever they are attacked.

Peshawar is, once again, under attack. It is one of those periodic attacks that test the resilience of its brave and proud inhabitants. There is no doubt among its residents that they will overcome the latest threat to their city. But this will require lot of sacrifices and patience because it is a different kind of warfare. Terrorist attacks through vehicle-borne suicide bombers using up to 200 kilos of explosives are something new, and far more dangerous than anything Peshawar has experienced in the past. No place is safe in Peshawar nowadays -- not even the military, police and government installations that are supposed to protect the people and also public places and bazaars crowded by innocent commoners.

Lahoris are proud of their city and justifiably so. Terms like "Lahore, Lahore aie" and "Zindadalan-e-Lahore" are well-known and widely used because those born and brought up in Pakistan's cultural capital are lively and, at times, boisterous.

Peshawar isn't far behind even though this city of almost three million people is much smaller than Lahore. "Pekhawar kho Pekhawar dhay kana" (Peshawar is Peshawar) is how the city is described by those living in the NWFP. To say that is 'Peshawar is Peshawar' means that the city is one of its kind quite like the way that Lahoris feel about the city. It is also true because where else will you find the warmth and hospitality that one experiences in Peshawar?

Peshawar is among the most ancient cities in Central, West and South Asia. The Kushan king Kanishka is believed to have founded it in second century AD. The Kanishka stupa on the outskirts of present-day Peshawar at almost 700 feet was said to be the tallest in the world at the time. Old Peshawar was known as Purushapura (city of men), a Sanskrit word in keeping with its Hindu and Buddhist past. If this is what it meant, those who gave the name excluded from their equation the entire female population of the town. Though times have changed and women are now active in many walks of life in Peshawar and the rest of the province, the conservative ethos of the place shows that the men here are still reluctant to allow the females some of the freedoms that they deserve. Or it is possible the term "city of men" meant a place inhabited by strong people ready to fight for their honour and independence?

In the Mughal period, Peshawar was referred to as the "city of flowers." Babar, upon reaching Peshawar on his onward march to Delhi, wrote that he could see flowers as far as the eye could see. Those were still glorious days for the city. It was strategically located near the entry point of the Khyber Pass, which served as the gateway to Central and South Asia. The Afghan king of India, Sher Shah Suri, had made Peshawar commercially important by ensuring that his Delhi-Kabul Shahi Road, now the Grand Trunk (GT) Road, passed through this great city.

Peshawar was the main trading centre on the Silk Road at the crossroads of various civilisations. It was west of the river Indus, or Abasin as the local people called it and the life-line of agriculture and prosperity for the plains of Pakhtunkhwa, Punjab and Sindh. It functioned as a frontier city for both South Asia and Central Asia. It was the capital of the glorious Gandhara civilisation, basking in the glory of its Buddhist past and proud to be the home of an array of people from different faiths and races. Bukharan Jews, Zorastrians, Baha'is, Hindus, Sikhs, Mongols and Afghans at different periods of time called it their home. The widely different features of the people one comes across in Peshawar is testimony to the fact that so many races came to live here, inter-married and co-existed in harmony.

All that and much more is now under threat. The once well-defended city with its ancient walls and 16 gates is vulnerable to attacks. Peshawar has spread haphazardly on all sides and could be easily infiltrated. The "city of flowers" has been gradually losing its greenery, parks and flowers to encroachments, bad planning and greed. It is now known as an over-crowded and polluted city. Western journalists writing about Peshawar often refer to it as a dusty place. It has been abandoned and forgotten by its most famous sons and daughters, many moving out in search of greener pastures never to return. Those still remaining are thinking of shifting to safer places, Islamabad being the preferred destination for those who are able to afford the move to a new place.

Peshawar's recent misfortunes started in the 70s when Sardar Mohammad Daud became Afghanistan's president after overthrowing his cousin and king Zahir Shah in 1973, and took up the cause of Pakhtunistan with renewed vigour. Pakhtun and Baloch nationalists from the NWFP and Balochistan were now more than welcome to visit Afghanistan and were assisted with arms and money to destabilise Pakistan. The government of Prime Minister Zulfikar Ali Bhutto began harbouring and backing Afghan dissidents like Gulbaddin Hekmatyar, Burhanuddin Rabbani, Ahmad Shah Masood and Maulvi Yunis Khalis in a tit-for-tat response. All of them were accommodated in Peshawar and their fighters were trained and infiltrated into Afghanistan. The Afghan government assisted Pakistanis who were exploding bombs in Peshawar and rest of the NWFP.

The bombing campaign intensified when Afghan communists staged a coup d'etat in Kabul in April 1978 and triggered a series of events that led to the Soviet military intervention in Afghanistan in December 1979. Pakistan, along with the US, was now the biggest supporter of the Afghan mujahideen, and NWFP and Balochistan became the front-line provinces for waging jihad against the Red Army occupying forces across the Durand Line. Peshawar suffered the most as it was the headquarters of the Afghan mujahideen, the nerve centre of international jihad and the world's biggest spy capital. In the 80s and early 90s, Peshawar experienced so many acts of sabotage and terrorism that on an average there was a bombing a week. The recent bombings in public places appear familiar if one recalls the period when bus stands, cinema houses, restaurants and schools were bombed, apparently by the KGB and Khad agents retaliating against Pakistan's support for Afghan mujahideen.

The present wave of bombings in Peshawar is retaliation by militant groups now under attack in their tribal strongholds in Waziristan, Orakzai, Kurram, Darra Adamkhel, Khyber Agency, Mohmand, Bajaur and Swat. As the provincial capital of the NWFP and its business and commercial hub, any attack in the city makes a huge political impact, damages the economy and creates international news. Peshawar, as was the case throughout history, is close to the hide-outs of the militants in the adjacent tribal areas and is, therefore, accessible and vulnerable to attacks.

However, Peshawar's residents and its countless fans have become attached even more to their beloved city. Pashto folk songs have always celebrated the city with songs like "Larsha Pekhawar ta" (Lets go to Peshawar!). It was the only "khar" or city for the people of the Frontier and beyond in the past. Folk songs are still being written to show love for the city. But they are now mostly melancholic due to the bombings and suffering that Peshawar has endured in the recent years. So now there are Pashto songs that say "I don't want my Peshawar to suffer bomb explosions" and "Let Kabul heal first before Peshawar starts suffering injuries and pain."



The writer is resident editor of The News in Peshawar. Email: rahim yusufzai@yahoo.com
Peshawar is Peshawar

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And Peshawar shall Inshallah return to its glory days again.
 
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Peshawar is among the most ancient cities in Central, West and South Asia. The Kushan king Kanishka is believed to have founded it in second century AD. The Kanishka stupa on the outskirts of present-day Peshawar at almost 700 feet was said to be the tallest in the world at the time. Old Peshawar was known as Purushapura (city of men), a Sanskrit word in keeping with its Hindu and Buddhist past. If this is what it meant, those who gave the name excluded from their equation the entire female population of the town.
"Purushapur" does not mean city of men!

This Purusha is in the context of "Purusha and Prakriti", i.e. unmanifested Spirit and its expression in manifested Nature.

Such philosophical ideas were in all likelihood common knowledge in the past - but that awareness has been lost with the conversion to Islam.
 
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Doesn't matter how many more divides are yet to be created, doesn't mater how long the red rain going to continue, PAKISTAN WILL NOT FALL, PESHAWAR WILL NOT DIE.
 
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Yet again a crisis gels the Nation of Pakistan.
After the earlier dastardly suicide attacks, Lahore was later further rocked by half a dozen explosions within the space of an hour.
The latter explosions, albeit of low intensity were destined to spread fear and panic amongst the citizens. And although authorities asked people to remain indoors, but the Locals were having none of it and thronged onto the streets to support and help the authorities in the need of the hour. Those with any mode of transport helped in shifting the wounded to hospitals, while others assisted the law authorities in searching and clearing the area, long ques of young men formed outside hospital to give blood and assist the injured. Although there was a danger of further explosions, but it didn't deter the citizens of Lahore from displaying their uncompromising resolve, a clear message was sent to the terrorists that Pakistan and it's citizens will never bow to their cowardly acts and regardless of the consequences, no Pakistani will be intimidated. As the Police officer in charge put it, "Today I didn't feel that I was protecting 90,000 citizens of Lahore, rather there were 180,000 hands and arms assisting us".
People, history is witness, this is not the first time spirit of Lahore has shined through and we have witnessed the same resolve in Islamabad, Peshawar, Karachi and lately in Swat and other areas.
We are indeed proud of our security forces but hats off to the remarkable country fellows as well. Zinda Dilane Lahore.
 
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Yet again a crisis gels the Nation of Pakistan.
After the earlier dastardly suicide attacks, Lahore was later further rocked by half a dozen explosions within the space of an hour.
The latter explosions, albeit of low intensity were destined to spread fear and panic amongst the citizens. And although authorities asked people to remain indoors, but the Locals were having none of it and thronged onto the streets to support and help the authorities in the need of the hour. Those with any mode of transport helped in shifting the wounded to hospitals, while others assisted the law authorities in searching and clearing the area, long ques of young men formed outside hospital to give blood and assist the injured. Although there was a danger of further explosions, but it didn't deter the citizens of Lahore from displaying their uncompromising resolve, a clear message was sent to the terrorists that Pakistan and it's citizens will never bow to their cowardly acts and regardless of the consequences, no Pakistani will be intimidated. As the Police officer in charge put it, "Today I didn't feel that I was protecting 90,000 citizens of Lahore, rather there were 180,000 hands and arms assisting us".
People, history is witness, this is not the first time spirit of Lahore has shined through and we have witnessed the same resolve in Islamabad, Peshawar, Karachi and lately in Swat and other areas.
We are indeed proud of our security forces but hats off to the remarkable country fellows as well. Zinda Dilane Lahore.

We shall prevail, Inshallah.
The blood of our martyrs is making us stronger, the nation is realizing that it cannot let dogs run wild in its midst...it has taken time but the extremists will lose.
 
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We shall prevail, Inshallah.
The blood of our martyrs is making us stronger, the nation is realizing that it cannot let dogs run wild in its midst...it has taken time but the extremists will lose.

There is a saying that just before a flame goes out, it flickers for a few more gasps, the same could be said for these scumbags, they are running helter skelter and in desperation making last efforts to deter our resolve. Pity they never really got to know us.
 
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These blasts have played a positive role for Pakistani nation and they Terrorists have proved themselves that how effective was Pakistani military operation.

First, they donot posses the power they used to enjoy before, the frequencies of blasts have greatly reduced.

Secondly, these blasts no matter they were 7(apart from morning2) within 2 hrs in different places, they were of very low intensity a mere half kg of explosive material each and also planted in empty plots in a residential area and the total of explosives used in these bombs was just 3.5kgs :rofl: and it dint cause any causality of (obvious).

Planting these bombs is a kids play at night in a dark empty plot its not a big deal.

These blasts have shown there inability to carry out any major offense and also there shrinking resource line, this was the most they could play with 3.5kg sand and the only way to show themselves active.:pakistan::pakistan::pakistan::police:

(by the way,i personally belong to Iqbal Town and have lived there for years before moving to Qatar).
 
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Yet again a crisis gels the Nation of Pakistan.
After the earlier dastardly suicide attacks, Lahore was later further rocked by half a dozen explosions within the space of an hour.
The latter explosions, albeit of low intensity were destined to spread fear and panic amongst the citizens. And although authorities asked people to remain indoors, but the Locals were having none of it and thronged onto the streets to support and help the authorities in the need of the hour. Those with any mode of transport helped in shifting the wounded to hospitals, while others assisted the law authorities in searching and clearing the area, long ques of young men formed outside hospital to give blood and assist the injured. Although there was a danger of further explosions, but it didn't deter the citizens of Lahore from displaying their uncompromising resolve, a clear message was sent to the terrorists that Pakistan and it's citizens will never bow to their cowardly acts and regardless of the consequences, no Pakistani will be intimidated. As the Police officer in charge put it, "Today I didn't feel that I was protecting 90,000 citizens of Lahore, rather there were 180,000 hands and arms assisting us".
People, history is witness, this is not the first time spirit of Lahore has shined through and we have witnessed the same resolve in Islamabad, Peshawar, Karachi and lately in Swat and other areas.
We are indeed proud of our security forces but hats off to the remarkable country fellows as well. Zinda Dilane Lahore.


Lahoris are like that. You can't contain them. Zinda Dilan Lahore no doubt.:pakistan:
 
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Lahoris are like that. You can't contain them. Zinda Dilan Lahore no doubt.:pakistan:
Although i read all the stories about Lahoris during the 1965 war but,
I visited Lahore in 2002 for the first time, we went to see the cermony at the Wagha border, i tell you there is a different energy level. I was witnessing the reason why Lahore is known as the heart of Pakistan. :pakistan:
 
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I am NUMB since yesterday .....But i know we will WIN !

Inshallah
 
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I am NUMB since yesterday .....But i know we will WIN !

Inshallah

No worries buddy, the blood of our comrades will not go in vain.
They have sacrificed their today for our tomorrow.
We will come through this more determined and much stronger.
Inshallah.
 
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Terrorists fail to dampen Lahori spirit

* Majority of markets remain open day after series of blasts across city
* Shopkeeper says businesses open to show terrorists they had failed to defeat Lahoris

By Afnan Khan

LAHORE: The city showed on Saturday that it would not give into fear and stay indoors as life returned to normalcy after Friday’s twin-suicide blasts in RA Bazaar and low-intensity explosions in Allama Iqbal Town.

Government offices, schools and colleges remained open, along with a number of private institutions, although numbers of students in attendance remained low in public schools.

Also, an impression that private schools remained closed because of the attacks was not justified, as private schools stay closed on the weekends in normal routine. Many business centres were also closed until noon though they opened up in the evening.

Most of the city’s markets, despite closing in the late hours of Friday, were seen open with the exception of two major markets, namely Liberty Market and Hall Road. The markets, which remained open, included DHA commercial markets in H and Y blocks, MM Alam Road, Mehmood Kasuri Road, Ghalib Market, Moon Market, Kareem Block Market, Fortress Stadium, Shahalam Market, Akbari Mandi, Brandth Road, Anarkali, Mozang, Ichhra, Samanabad, Barkat Market, Model Town Link Road, Township Market, Panorama Centre, Yateem Khana, Pakki Thatthi Bazaar and Ghalib Market.

The traders’ body had announced to observe a strike on Saturday to show solidarity with the victims of the RA Bazaar bombings, as well as to avoid any further untoward incidents in the city.

However, most of the shopkeepers decided to open their businesses after the City District Government Lahore announced that government institutions would remain open, with a promise that the provincial government would provide citizens with “maximum possible security”.

The general public, especially businessmen, blamed India for creating such chaos through the resurgent terrorism. People from all walks of life strongly condemned Friday’s horrific incidents, saying terrorist activities were aimed at weakening Pakistan’s economy. They said unscrupulous elements who did not want to see Pakistan as a developed Asian nation were bent on scaring foreign investors away.

They also said they would not let Pakistan’s enemies succeed in their evil intentions and fight terrorism together. They urged the government and opposition parties to sit together and evolve a strategy to counter terrorism. Muhammad Ali, a shopkeeper at Fortress Stadium, told Daily Times that traders had decided to open their shops on Saturday in order to “show the terrorists that they could not scare the city into hiding”.

“It would not be advisable to close up the city, as it would give the terrorists the impression that their bloody campaign had been effective and that they were succeeding in their agenda to impose their ideology upon the masses,” he said.

Naila Mazhar, a customer, said she had come out to shop with her family despite Friday’s blasts. “Giving in to the terrorists and staying at home is not a good idea in the current situation, although life is dear to everyone,” she said, adding that citizens should be aware of the people around them and should support the soldiers who were sacrificing their lives to protect the country.

The Horse and Tattoo Show at the Lahore Race Club also drew a massive crowd, including families, and the Rangers’ officials who performed different activities received a thundering response while the tent-pegging activity also took place.

Several schools in Allama Iqbal Town and Cantonment remained closed on Saturday after Friday’s twin-suicide blasts in RA Bazaar and the low-intensity explosions in Allama Iqbal Town.

Normalcy has returned in the area, however, parents remained apprehensive about sending their children to school. An impression was formed that perhaps the closures meant that school administrations had caved into fear, although it is common practice for most educational institutes to remain closed on the weekend.

Daily Times - Leading News Resource of Pakistan
 
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Gentlemen, pause and think for a minute, in what other country would you witness where a low paid Police Constable or even a poorly paid Security Guard would put his life on line by running after, scuffling and grabbing a suicide attacker as we have witnessed repeatedly.
This is the true "Jazba of Imaan" and the spirit of Pakistan.
 
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