Tuesday, November 12, 2019

Süno, Sabeen …

Kia hüvā?
Ragni Marea Kidvai
became a mother on the
6th of November 2019
at 12:47am


We were with her in Brooklyn at that time
and could only visit her the day after
(Bloody USA Rules!)

No name was given then
but this is what was decided
by Ragni as an announcement.

Weight: 6lb 9oz
Height: 20"

He was nicknamed after you



Look at his toes



On the 10th November his full name was announced.

MEKA-ELIJAH KIDVAI-WILLIAMS

Meka is short for Milkail

It also has several other meanings:
Hawaiian: Eyes
Chinese: Beautiful Eyes

In some European languages it means
A Gift from God
In USA it can mean Awesome

Elijah has a Jewish meaning that says
I believe in Yahweh

Elijah aka Elyahu was a Biblical Prophet
but his name was also chosen
as a Tribute
to Elijah Cummings
who passed away recently.

The surname is a combination
Ragni's surname KIDVAI
Alisha's surname WILLIAMS






So there you are … all up to date



We all miss you so much, Sab!

Thursday, October 3, 2019

After 'After Sabeen'

Conversations with music in the background, a MacBook Pro on the cushion,
books and films around her, a cup of black coffee in her hand …
and uncontrollable laughter.

To those three who asked me why I was not in the film

1. Films are made by people who may or may not have known Sabeen during her life. 
2. It is up to the film-makers to decide who should or should not be in the film.
3. Film-makers also ask Sabeen's family as to who they should interview, specially if they did not know who they should include in the film. In this case the videographers were staying at Sabeen's mother Mahenaz/Mimi's house so she had to tell her who to include or not. The right obviously belongs to her. 
4. I was told by a common friend that the film was being made and I was not going to be in it because Mimi had given a list of who should be included. My name was not in the list. Which is fine, as far as I am concerned.

The Re-Writing of History is quite another matter

1. This is generally done where Governments (or the Victors in a war) have a different view than what the facts really were, or seemed to them to be very different. They must be seen to show their own viewpoint. This is always done in our history.
2. Sometimes Trauma of a major event removes the actual memory and forces to add new things over time.
3. Quite often one doesn't want all the facts to be added because they are unimportant in a video or writing that has a limited space and is already filled with similar stories.
4.  In After Sabeen another thing happens. Because you want to avoid some names and choose words like 'he' or 'X' and re-write history, it is ridiculous because people who see it for the first time do not understand the full story as it happened, or since they've heard or read other reports that say other things, they are confused. 

So here it goes, just in case someone wants to know. I'll keep it as short as possible …


Sab had been coming every day or every two days and called me downstairs in her car and we'd have a few words ... but she left quickly as she was so tied up in her team's work and her own for Dil Phaink in UK.

 On 24th April 2015 she walked into my room and said that she would sit for a few minutes and talk so that I wouldn't complain about her short visits.

We talked and the talks went on for hours. We discussed her college. Her friends. Some books. And then I asked her if she'd had any threats about the program that Moneeza was going to run in the evening. (She had said earlier that she was too busy and Moneeza would handle it all, which she did.) She said she'd had no threats at all. I said to her that neither Mimi nor I would object to it and she can go right ahead, but can we call Fahim Zaman so he could put a couple of people outside. She said "let's not call him for he's bound to say don't do this for a while and I think it should happen. After all T2F has done this for days earlier and we really had no problems or sorted them out by asking the objectors to come, too." (This is not verbatim but how I recall it in meaning.)

Fahim Zaman, once the Mayor of Karachi, had been a very close friend of Sab and her mother, as well as me. In fact after Sab's assassination he was constantly around and helped a lot with many things that happened after her death, some that we could not have done without him. To say that she wouldn't talk to Mr. X was a really bad spot in the movie. I think it would have been much easier if that sentence had been left out.

Of course I met her again in the afternoon at T2F  and we spoke for minutes until she said, "I must complete the Dil Phaink work now." Oh how the memories of that day haunt me constantly. 

At the event I also saw Mimi and spoke to Sab when she came down for a few minutes in the middle of the event. We felt that that part of the event was getting really stupid. In fact Sab said "Look at Amma, she's got her hands around her head."

When the program ended Sab and Mimi went out and then left (no point in talking about what the delays were, here.) She was driving, Mimi was in the passenger seat and the driver was at the back. Nuzhat driving our car was right behind her and I was in the passenger seat. When we reached the chaorāha I waived to them and turned left to go to dinner. Nuzhat asked my why they didn't come and I said she was going to drop Mimi and head for a party at Raania Durrani's house. (This was not mentioned in the film but it seemed to mention to two people that she was going to meet Marvi at her place.) 

We had travelled three houses when I got a call from Mimi saying they'd been shot. We travelled in a crowded road until we could find a place to turn back and head here. There was no one there as we arrived, so I called Mimi and she said she was taking Sab to NMC so we headed that way.

I called Marvi and said get to NMC right away. Marvi was in her car, I think. She seemed to have a cold. I said get there fast; Sab has been shot. In the film Marvi says that she was waiting for Sab to come at 8 and it had been 9 already. I wish she had called her, though.

Marvi said some friend called her (not that there were any other friends who knew then that Sab had been shot!) and omitted my name. Quite understable if you don't want to use my name, Marvi.

When we knew that Sab was dead (and had died in a second according to the doctors), Mimi had not been informed. Nuzhat had to rush her to AKU because there were 2 bullets in her, too. (One is still there since it would have been difficult to remove it without more risks.)

Marvi arrived as I was waiting in the passageway at NMC (I am not sure whether it was before Nuzhat left with Mimi or they were still there.) The first thing she said to me was "Is Sabeen OK now?". I held her and said "Sab is dead, Marvi". She cried and then left me to go see Sab. This is where Trauma happens to change the fact. She says she found out that Sab was dead when she saw her — forgetting that she had already been told about it minutes or so earlier.

 At one point Marvi does mention my name (a slight mistake?) and it is translated as Zac on the screen instead of my initials that everyone calls me: ZAK.

• 

Was Sab as amazing as the film shows?

Yes.
YES.
YES!

Why was she like this has, of course, much to do with her. But it would not have been possible with a different set of parents, I think.

Her father, Tallat Mahmud, was amazing in many ways and taught her much of her independence and helped it along. Her love of Advertising, her playing wonderful cricket which she played in the streets with servant's children and friends, her amazingly great driving abilities, her looking hard at everything, understanding it, and trying it perfectly right the first time, her ability to do whatever she wanted at anytime — all this came from him.

But much more than her father, Mimi was responsible. If Sab wanted to do something and Mimi didn't like it, she may have told Sab ... but let Sab decide to go ahead and do it. I have heard of so much of this from Sab and have heard Mimi mention this. I have seen Sab grow up from 14 to the day she was brutally killed and can recall many things that Mimi may not have wanted her to do but I never saw her stop Sab from doing. Even at T2F Sab discussed things with her mother but went ahead often and did things she really wanted to do.


Three days later:
Here are some comments I got on this!

https://aurora.dawn.com/news/1141129


An article by Qasim in Aurora quoted by Semyne Ahmed



Sumera


Intellectual dishonesty/apathy is a thing! For as long as I have known you, (I think it was earlier than 2005)

I have seen you & sabeen as one people. Always together. For a long time I thought she was your daughter!!!! I remember the birth of first peace niche, the sittings at your house before it. The wide eyed people around, I have always found you to be a very open inviting facilitating person even though you & I met through my random blogging, and after I stopped writing & deleted it, you would still invite me to your house & qawallis. You & nuzhat aunty have always taken outsiders even isolated people into your comforting fold and sabeen is an example of that. I really hate this country & it’s wretched people sometimes & today after reading your post I feel it one of those days & reasons to do so even more!!!

I am very angry! I hope I haven’t offended you!

Lots of love to you and nuzhat Aunty



Asmaa


And still after all this time , the Sun never says to the Earth “you owe me” look what happens with a love like that ; it lights the Whole sky...

Haféz.

I read the piece about after sabeen and felt like dedicating this quote to u.


Zak we all know Sabeen would’ve never approved of this but Duniya ka style aisay hee hai


Adnaan


I can’t account for you being omitted from her life and death. It’s implausible to even suggest that you had no hand in her life. You were her mentor and her mental solace. That relationship was a constant for you in so many formats.


You cannot edit truth. You can mould it to suit your needs. But the truth remains. You both had a magical relationship.


Zaheer


I am not in pain at all because I was not in the film. I think her mother has every right to decide that. It doesn't take me out of Sab's life or her from mine. My reason was to put things right about the re-writing because that relinks the story in different ways.


Jamal


Her story without ZAK  is incomplete ... half told truth is a lie.. irony is that no one would benefit from it .. 😞

Monday, August 12, 2019

Tetris


Watch it and see the various forms it took.


 Sabeen Mahmud wrote a marvellous piece about Tetris.
Here it is for the who haven't read it
(and for those who loved it)








In fact Sabeen even named her first cat 'Tetris'

Sab was thrilled when she got Tetris
Sadly Tetris died very early due to an inherited disease.
I was with Sab when it happened.
Sabeen was devastated.

(Tetris's brother died the next day at the house where she got Tetris)

The first coloured Tetris
After Tetris died many more versions came out.
Some were free, some were pirated.
Some even had more games built into it
that included shooting the shapes.


Now you even have Tetris on your Airplane Games.

The Start Screen
One of the 4 versions on the airplane game
Loads of fun
but not as much as the
THE FIRST COLOURED ONE


Had Sabeen been alive,
I would have given her this new one as a gift.

She would have loved it!

Yes. It's now on my iPhone 7
as a back cover.

There are 99 different games on it that
must be interesting
(including the shooting one)

But I am stuck on the Original Tetris game
on it and I adore it!


Thank you, Tetris, for coming back like this.
You are now on my iPhone forever.


Saturday, July 6, 2019

It's always worth reading while you s••t!

Sorry about the title, but I didn't know what to say.
OK, so you go to s••t at least once a day (more often if you have diarrhoea). You can waste that time with one end of you piling cr•p-on-cr•p … but how about using the other end for reading :) — This is intended for those that don't read: Please put up a shelf or a place to keep books in you toilet.

My toilet (like many of my friends) has a place that has books

Mir, Ghalib, Faiz
So there are three Shaeri books
that are permanently there

&

Then there are always temporary books.



Here are the ones that live on the shelf these days.


I love Short Stories
(who wants to read a whole novel there!)


or pieces that you can randomly browse through.


Graphic Novels are great here. 


This one was a gift from Joe Sacco,
one of my favouritest graphic novelists.
(Thanks, Muneeza, for carrying it back for me)

 •

And one always has books that are favourites
and readable anywhere, anytime.

Mine, at the moment, is


which has become available among old books.
Try Amazon.
The Rape of the A*P*E* (American Puritan Ethic) is the ultimate sex book. It is the hilarious but true story of 27 salacious years of American history - the Sex Revolution - America's longest and hottest war. Allen Sherman: "There is a brief but telling instant when a boy is taking off a girl's underpants, during which she must give her assistance; if she doesn't lift her behind a split second, it is impossible. Ours was a nation of girls who would rather die than openly contribute to their own seduction. It is a tribute to the girls of 1940 that they learned how to lift their asses without seeming to be lifting their asses. Sometimes they did it with a ho-hum and a stretch, pretending to be utterly bored, meanwhile shifting their position just long enough for the expert panty snatcher to do his job. I have witnessed it many times, this fantastic arabesque girls do and every time I am overwhelmed with the sheer creative artistry of it. It belongs among the great moments of ballet.


If you really like small pieces to read,
there's Blinklist, anyway.
It's a superb introduction and a collection
of books that you may love to buy later,
or be happy with the stuff already there.

Here's an example from today's FREE book.



Don't forget that you can read this
(and the following 6-7 pages)
or even have them read out to you.


My request is to please read.


One of the ways that our nation is in a terrible way
is because they don't read.


Some of you may not like to read
… for which I'd first suggest seeing a psychiatrist …
but there is a solution:
is exceptional.

I listen to AudioBooks very frequently and it is great when I am on a long drive (I don't drive, but my wife is the driving force in the house) or in the s••house. If you haven't tried it, go to Audible and try a FREE trial. Or, if you are not into subscribing, look at LoyalBooks and find free audiobooks.

• • •

While I was writing this blogpost a friend turned up
and saw my photographs.

She wanted to see the Metal Bookend and where did I get it.

I showed it to her (she loved it!) and told her that
this was available years ago in Karachi
when we were a slightly more civilised society.


For others, here it is




(Remember toilets with a chain and cistern above your heads)

• • •

Sad for me was the fact that
Sabeen wanted it to be given to her after I die.

I wrote this on its bottom and shared it with Ragni Marea.


How awful that she was assassinated.
We all miss you, Sab.

Immensely.


Thursday, June 20, 2019

It's her birthday today …

Sabeen Mahmud

20th June 1974 — 24th April 2015


Sabeen writes her name
Faiz Ahmad Faiz,
a poet that she adored




With a picture of Eqbal Ahmed
a person she admired a lot

She laughed at everything …
… and cried at this!


'Meanderings' was her blog (2003-2007)

They loved each other …
… as did we all love her!
She gave us her greatest gift

and made everyone go crazy about her favourite meal: Aaloo Bun Kabab
Loved Arts and the Artistes
 as well as conversation, music, and books!
And Apple, too.

These were the last two pictures I took of her on the day she was assassinated
1. Announcing the event
2. Closing the event



She was not part of the Baluchistan event at all
but was busy working for
'Dil Phaink'
which she couldn't see in London
but where people loved it and loved her ideas.

This is how I felt at her assassination

Curly lines crossed my mind
Red blotches of her blood were everywhere I looked

The Green showed that there was enough life
in her dead body
that we all looked up to and hopefully will follow.

This is at the square in DHA where she was shot!

She was Herald's Person of the Year

Pakistan Chowk has a bench named after her

Sabeen, you are alive in all our hearts.