Pere
Pavandee Saan Chavandee Saan...
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Above:
Ruins of Bhambhore
(photo submitted by Dr.Amir Abbas Soomro) |
I
have always loved the above Sindhi, ancient folksong. There
was a time when I could sing reasonably well, my husband would
then, request me to sing the above 'kalaam' It goes something
like this:
'Pere pavandee saan
Chavandee saan
Rahee vanyu raat Bhambhor mein
Which
means:
I
will fall at his feet and implore him to stay the night in
Bhambore
Utha
ta Aareeya Jaam Ja
Vaagoon vathandee saan, chavandi saan...
Which
means that the camels are from 'Aareeya Jaam'
So I shall hold on to the reigns and implore him to stay the
night in Bhambhore
Chaddhee
ta jabal chot te
sadraa kandee saan, chavandee saan...
Which
means: that I shall climb on mountain tops and cry out to stay
the night in Bhambore
Sartyoon
Shah Lateef chavey, lochey lahandee saan
Which
means that Shah Lateef (poet, mystic) says that I shall find
him...
These
folk songs were addressed to the Lover as well as to the
Lord...
It
is a beautiful song, and I have always wondered about Bhambore.
As I was reading: "Among the Believers" by V S
Naipaul, I came across a mention of it. I was fascinated by
the story, so sharing it with you...
An
excerpt from:
'Among
the Believers' by V. S. Naipaul
Banbhore
....Chach
rules for forty years. It is Chach who repulses the first Arab
attack, a sea attack on the port of Debal (which might be
Banbhore) On Chach's death, the kingdom passes to Chach's
brother and then to his son, Dahar... Dahar consults an
astrologer who predicts good fortune but this clouded by what
the astrologer says about Dahar's sister. The man Dahar's
sister marries, the astrologer says, will rule the
kingdom...So Dahar goes through a marriage ceremony with his
sister. Much is made of this incident, though it has no
important sequel. It serves only -in this Persian Arab
narrative-to stress that the kingdom of Sind is morally
blighted, and the cause of the dynasty of Chach cannot
prosper. Attention shifts now to the Arabs...After the failure
of the first two expeditions against Sind, the third Caliph,
Osman or Uthman (644-56) orders a detailed report on the
affairs of "Hind or Sindh"-its rules of war, its
strategy, the nature of its government, the structure of its
society... "O Hakim," the caliph says, "have
you seen Hindustan and learnt all about it?"
"Yes,
O commander of the faithful"
"Give
us a description of it."
Its
water is dark and dirty. Its fruit is bitter and poisonous.
Its land is stony and its earth is salt. A small army will
soon be annihilated there, and a large one will soon die of
hunger... Towards the end of the seventh century Hajjaj
becomes governor of "Iraq, Sind and Hind...Hajjaj's army
is defeated by King Dahar's son... Hajjaj selects 6000
experienced soldiers from Syria, appoints as general his 17
year old son-in-law, Mohammed Bin Qasim...
The
army- with a full complement of pack camels and camel men-is
to go by land. King Dahar died in battle and the sister Dahar
had married for the sake of his kingship burned herself to
death with other women of her household. Dahar's real wife was
bought by Bin Qasim with part of the loot of Sind. And Dahar's
two daughters were sent in charge of Abyssinian slaves to the
caliph. They were admitted into the caliph's harem. He allowed
them to rest for a few days. Then he asked for them to be
brought to him at night. He wanted to know who was the elder;
he wished to take her first. The elder was called Surijdew.
When the caliph tried to embrace her she jumped up and said:
May the king live long! I a humble slave am not fit for your
majesty's bedroom, because the just amir, Mohammed Bin Qasim,
kept us both with him for 3 days and then sent us to the
caliph. Perhaps your custom is such, or else this disgrace
should not be permitted by kings."
The
caliph bit his hand. He immediately ordered a letter to be
sent to Bin Qasim, ordering him to put himself in raw leather
and come back to the chief seat of the caliph.
Bin
Qasim did as he was told. He died within two days. The body
when it came to Baghdad, was displayed by the caliph to the
daughters of King Dahar. "Look," he said, "how
our orders are promptly obeyed by our officers."
And
then Durijdew said said she had lied, to be revenged on Bin
Qasim. She and her sisters were both virgins; they had not
been touched by Bin Qasim. The caliph immediately ordered the
two sisters to be buried alive in a wall. From that time up to
our own days, the banner of Islam has been rising higher and
higher and gaining greater and greater glory day by day.
With
that apparent inconsequentiality the narrative ends...
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