• About us
  • Contact us
Monday, October 27, 2025
Dateline Islamabad
No Result
View All Result
  • Login
  • Home
  • E-Paper
  • National
  • Current Affairs
  • International
  • Opinion
  • World Digest
  • Business
  • Entertainment
  • Sci-Tech
  • Health
  • Sports
  • Home
  • E-Paper
  • National
  • Current Affairs
  • International
  • Opinion
  • World Digest
  • Business
  • Entertainment
  • Sci-Tech
  • Health
  • Sports
No Result
View All Result
Morning News
No Result
View All Result
Home National

RESCUE ON THE SEA

Story by Zeenat Iqbal Hussain

Daily Dateline Islamabad by Daily Dateline Islamabad
March 19, 2025
in National
0
RESCUE ON THE SEA
0
SHARES
12
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

Very little has been written about the ancient coastal people of Lyari – the irrepressible Makranis – who take their name from the Makran coast of Sindh and, Balochistan, which also indicates a common history of the two provinces; the Makran coast constitutes the South-East of Iran and the South-West of Pakistan; a 1,000 km stretch along the Gulf of Oman from RA’s (cape) Al-Kuh, Iran (West of Jask), to the Lasbela District of Pakistan (near Karachi). The Makran coast is on the Arabian Sea, to the North-West of Quetta in Balochistan.

The following is a story of one such coastal village:
Children on bare – back camels, watch the sea, its vastness spanning even beyond the grasp of their eyes. Fishermen on the beach watch the sky, like the city dwellers read their newspapers first thing in the morning. Through the knots of their nets hanging on the line, they seem to predict the weather. This exercise determines whether they should take a boat out or not on the deep sea, for their daily expedition to catch fish. The air is filled with the smell of rancid water that is due to the deposits of oil, resulting in decayed and dead sea-life. Music, which is a part of their lives, plays in the background. The sounds are a fusion of musical cultures from the Middle East, Indo-Pakistan and Africa.

READ ALSO

Ajoka Institute students shine in compelling production “Marya Hoya Kutta” at PILAC

27th Annual General Meeting of Punjab Municipal Development Fund Company (PMDFC) Held

​The shells on the beach look like the abandoned toenails of the old fishermen, and they are more beautiful there, than on the foot. The broken wings, the sand-logged crabs, a woman’s lonely shoe, a rusty toy damaged beyond recognition, the plank or sail from a doomed boat, all lay sprawled on the beach, each with a story behind it, cleansed and sterilized by the salt and iodine in the great hospital of the sea. In the night, the light from the tower was but a spot against the background of the sky and spectacular cliffs.

​The weather beaten villager’s munched dates from the interior while watching holidaymakers trying to teach their children to swim, like fish to water, amidst the shouts and screams of the children who are already submerged in the waters. The steps of the ladies faltered as they approached the sea, clad in shalwar kameezes filled with the wind, the Shalwar Kameez itself a deterrent for swimming.
​The story told here is that of a villager who because of his sharp sense of hearing helped in the rescue of a drowning man. The villager was alone and as he had no family to fend for, hence he had no responsibilities to drain his energy. Somehow he had also preserved his youth, which he owed to mother nature. Religion that usually comes into the house with the presence of a woman was lacking in his and he was quite oblivious of it.

​One evening when it was well after ten and the moon was full with black clouds scudding in ordered masses across the sky, he was still sitting on his wall, all alone. A cool wind suddenly sighed from an unexpected quarter and in its wake was a noise like that from a distant cavalry charge. His razor sharp ears picked up the sound. His brow creased up as his eyes searched the distance. He hobbled to his neighbours house and banged on the door of his traditional mud-hut – the two men, though natural life-guards, knew thoroughly all that was written in the books about rescue on the seas. The coastal blacks were descendants of imported slaves – the fishermen being known as the Meds and the seamen as the Koras – when there was no response; he banged on the door again. A groggy fellow soon appeared. He pointed towards the horizon and mumbled something in the Makranic dialect. The man’s eyes tried to see beyond the direction of the location being pointed at. A boat in trouble, he thought aloud. Without wasting any time they woke the other men.

​A rule of the sea states, that half the purchase price of the vessel of the sea is given to the rescue party. This prize money was quite a temptation, but since it was always dangerous the case required to be argued, all hands knew that the proposed journey was perilous.
​The village women all having gathered on the beach, saw their men disappear, reappear, disappear, reappear and finally disappear into the darkness. They were now a tiny speck in the vast vista of the sea – the ocean that is open to all and merciful to none, that which threatens even when it seems to yield, pitiless always to weakness.

​Many of the Makrani women now worked as domestic servants in Karachi; they were also experts in the art of massaging any mother and child after birth. Their traditional long dresses with hand-woven embroidery gave them a distinct ‘folk’ touch, separating them from the typical Karachiites. The skirt-like look, with its wide circumference, and the loose shalwar could be compared to the costumes of the pathan and Kabuli women. The men in the rescue boat changed sides, so as not to tip the balance of the boat as the surf sprayed them from head to toe. The taste of salt lingered in their mouths during the voyage. They were not bothered by their appearance. On the contrary, they felt no different from when they started out dry.

​Suddenly, a dark object was thrown at them on the crest of a wave. It was a man. They held on to the poor fellow and eventually succeeded in dragging him aboard. Nobody felt sorry that this time, there was no prize. They rowed back to their village.

​Couples fought with each other to offer hospitality to this half dead man; and they almost came to blows in their struggle for this visa to heaven.
​They fetched a doctor from a nearby village, while the women sat all around him wearing their beads. The doctor was a Karachiite who had been sent to the village to serve them. The doctor prompted the man to speak. The man said, “Mahganj” very faintly. Repeated attempts, received the same response. The diagnosis stated that he was a victim of a traumatic shock and was suffering from amnesia, which meant a loss of memory, if only temporarily.

​The Priest, who was also a member of the village council, was also summoned, as was the case in other similar incidents. “What’s going on here?” he asked one of the ladies. “A miracle” said all the ladies together. The Makrani women are predominantly Muslim.

​The Priest was briefed about the rescue and what followed. Being an elderly fellow, he recalled that a girl by the name of ‘Mahganj’ had been registered in the mosque some eighteen years ago. ​Now, it was easy to put two and two together. The man they found was associated with Mahganj and was discovered as belonging to the same village as her’s. He was also supposed to marry her.

​Mahganj was the granddaughter of the village tailor. Thus it was decided that the man be taken back to the same village that he originated from. Similar surroundings would help to revive his memory, it was hoped.

​A therapist was hired from the city and surely, slowly though, his memory came back in bits and pieces. Mahganj’s presence always evoked a response in the man, so strong was the bond of love. His memory did eventually return, which in turn led to their marriage. They led a happy married life.

Related Posts

Ajoka Institute students shine in compelling production “Marya Hoya Kutta” at PILAC
National

Ajoka Institute students shine in compelling production “Marya Hoya Kutta” at PILAC

October 27, 2025
27th Annual General Meeting of Punjab Municipal Development Fund Company (PMDFC) Held
National

27th Annual General Meeting of Punjab Municipal Development Fund Company (PMDFC) Held

October 27, 2025
SSP Usman Butt chairs key meeting on pending investigation cases
National

SSP Usman Butt chairs key meeting on pending investigation cases

October 27, 2025
SNGPL ensures transparent billing, addresses bakers’ association’s concerns
National

SNGPL disconnects three more meters, checks 65 meters

October 27, 2025
117 policemen, 181 civilians martyred in terror attacks this year
National

117 policemen, 181 civilians martyred in terror attacks this year

October 27, 2025
Addressing population growth, climate change crucial to accelerate pace of uplift: CM
National

CM orders health screening for special children across Punjab

October 27, 2025
Next Post
We will identify and eliminate foreign miscreants, says IG Islamabad

Islamabad Police strengthens security, traffic plan for Eid shopping

POPULAR NEWS

FAO Employee’s Death Sparks Outcry Over Workplace Stress

FAO employee’s death sparks outcry over workplace stress

March 5, 2025
Nepotism and Incompetence rampant in CDA’s appointments

Nepotism and Incompetence rampant in CDA’s appointments

June 7, 2023
Major Police transfers and postings ordered in Punjab

Major Police transfers and postings ordered in Punjab

May 30, 2024
PWD Chief Engineer placed on ECL by PAC

PWD Chief Engineer placed on ECL by PAC

May 31, 2023
Allegations of injustice and corruption surface within CDA

Allegations of injustice and corruption surface within CDA

July 4, 2023

EDITOR'S PICK

Nihao China! 你好!中国2024 China Ice & Snow Tourism Overseas Promotion Season Launched in Pakistan

Nihao China! 你好!中国2024 China Ice & Snow Tourism Overseas Promotion Season Launched in Pakistan

December 28, 2023

October 27, 2022
Govt to send declaration against PTI to SC in prohibited  funding case: Marriyum

Two aircrafts with relief goods from Turkiye to arrive today: Marriyum

August 28, 2022
ICCI demands withdrawal of notices for gas suspension  to commercial consumers

ICCI demands withdrawal of notices for gas suspension to commercial consumers

October 29, 2022