Introducing a new column by one who insists on calling himself the Headless Chicken as he claims the nomenclature is suffused with symbolism that is subject to, well, subjective interpretation.
Greetings gentle readers,
Do you care who or what is this Headless Chicken, one who seems to have access to a keyboard, to top it?
The headless chicken is inspired by Manto and by R.K. Laxman. [Writer's claim -- Ed] The headless chicken keeps
religion and sex in the bedroom. The headless chicken is plural and singular. The headless chicken strides the
world with absolute ease but is unable to hop across the Indo-Pak border. The headless chicken is you and me
and all of us but most of all it is like the waiter at a 3-star hotel, watching and observing and crying and
laughing and hanging around for tips. The headless chicken plagiarises like hell from day to day life.
Join the headless chicken.
The headless chicken paused to, as it is said euphemistically, answer the nature's call, took a piss at the
top of the world where the GT Road begins and that's where he met a brother. This is where it leaked out into, while they were
chatting, circumcised and uncircumcised.
Here is something from memory of past experiences. I hope you'll enjoy reading it.
Journal Entry: 1
Torkham to Wagah
Scenes in the buses on GT Road
Torkham is the westernmost point of GT Road in Pakistan. From here GT Road passes through Pakistan in ESE
direction until it reaches Wagah – the border post between the two Punjabs.
At Torkham, most of the passengers are bearded men with Pathan turbans; wearing white, light blue or black
shalwar kameez as depicted in old Shashi Kapoor movies . The music played in the buses is familiar -- Pushto
lyrics to old Indian movie song tunes. Only a few men smoke, but Naswar
rules here that requires little more spitting than paan chewing but unlike the paan spits, their spots are washable.
Buses stop at the nearest settlement at prayer times, providing men the option to pray or have another dose of
Naswar or sip a cup of local style tea called kahwa. A small number of women start appearing in the buses at Jamrud, some 20
miles from Torkham. They are mostly shuttlecock burqa-clad, and sit quietly in the women
section, without looking around, like dummies.
From Peshawar onward, the number of beards and turbans as well as the shuttlecock burqas starts declining, their place being taken by clean-shaven men and white chadar-clad women. The tea at the stopovers is served with milk and more smoking men
make their appearance replacing the exiting naswar-chewing men. As for what passes for music, this is the time when Ata Ullah Khan Isakhelvi begins to get played..
Once the buses pass Attock Bridge on Indus River, the influence of nearby Akora Khatack declines and a thin
line of hair above forehead becomes visible among chadar-clad women. The turbans, beards, most of naswar-chewing
men and shuttlecock burqa clad women disappear, giving way to mustachioed men in shalwar kameez and some
black UP style burqas as well as dopatta-clad women.
Now, women actually start looking out the windows and are heard talking to each other. This is the Pothowar region and
roasted Moongphali territory. Men
and women in the buses can be seen eating peanuts off improvised containers made from old newspapers; men
smoke cigarettes as a break from all that peanut-eating The peanut shells and cigarette butts are
casually thrown on the bus floor and stick under the shoes, the Naswar spits acting as the glue that
binds, the way cultures of
the region are glued together.
This is still Ata Ullah Khan territory in music with buses playing, "Kameez tehNdi kaalii, sohne phullaaN
waalii" incessantly until everybody has memorised all the verses.
From Rawalpindi to Jhelum, the Moongphali reigns supreme, interspersed with some bored smoking, but it's time
for turbans of a yet another kind to start making an appearance. The women chadars are no longer only white;
and proof of hair on their heads is now visible. Some
be-haya women could be actually seen with short hair and dopatta only around the neck or shoulder. They talk and
gawk outside the buses, just like the men. Men with their arms around other men also disappear.
After crossing Jhelum River, heading towards Gujarat, dhotis and kurta-clad men make their appearance. The
beards are at an all-time low, but Punjabi turbans are on the rise. Moongphalis have given way to seasonal
fruits. The amalgamation of Scythian cultures is no longer observed under the feet or on the bus floors because
fruit skins and seeds are thrown out the windows instead of creating great Scythian brotherhood on the bus
floors.
The cigarette smoking continues but cigarettes are no longer held between the tips of two front
fingers; they are held in between the bottom two and inhaled from top of the fist. It is no longer
immoral and unethical for women to turn their head and look back at fruit-eating and/or smoking men. The music is
folk as well as movie songs from Punjabi and Indian Hindi movies. Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan is more often heard
than anybody else.
From Gujranwala onward to Lahore, fruit-eating declines, giving way to processed food like pakoras, roasted
lentils and stuff made from gram flour with spicy chutnis in contrived pouches of old newspapers. The GT Road
now passes mostly urban and industrial estates. The number of dhotis and turbans decline, giving way to shalwar kameez and pants and shirts.
Many men with hanging big bellies are now seen in the buses, who mysteriously manage to slump off to sleep
as soon as they hit their seats and start snoring almost instantaneously. Women are seen in more colorful shalwar kameez and dopattas, often wearing
sunglasses even on overcast days. They talk loud and endlessly drowning the noise of bus engines. The trip
from Lahore to Wagah is short and a few dhotis and the turbans reappear.
On entering the Indian Punjab, the scene changes abruptly. The numbers of smokers dwindle to insignificance,
colorful turbans and beards are dominant again, with basanti colours decorating the buses. The women love to call
themselves jattis and beat all standing records of talking and making what can only be called noises with repeated use of "tut paiNey" as
taqiya-kalaam. Gurdass Mann and Hans Raj Hans songs dominate. I wonder if buses stopover for Bhangra
and Giddha the way they stopover for prayers in Pathan territories.
No wonder where you travel on GT Road, every damn person claims to be of unadulterated Scythian blood or of
Arabian heritage. Nobody claims to be of native, Aryan or Hun origin till somewhere in the Indian Punjab when sari-clad Aryans with visible navels and
sometimes some cleavage make an appearance. The polymerised amalgamation of
Scythian and Arab cultures is occasionally scrapped off from the floor of the buses by natives, shudras turned
hospitality workers, so that Scythians and Arabs can start making their multicultural amalgam all over again.
Next week the Headless Chicken travels from Amritsar to Aligarh. Maybe. Maybe not. Did
you like the first journal of the Headless Chicken? [We have reasons to suspect that the Headless Chicken
doesn't really care -- Ed]
Also published at The Chowk