|
friendship from the
beginning. If Bhaya or Bebe tried to comment on your modern way of life, or your daring
dressing, I stood up for you and supported you with all my heart and soul.
I guess I had accepted that
in every relationship, there has to be a 'giver' and a 'taker'. I had willingly opted to become the giver and I think, over a span of
thirty odd years it remained the same. I
have to admit there has been great joy in this friendship - the hours we spent
talking and philosophizing about life, love and laughter. I learnt a lot about real life from you.
Remember the days we would come home from college, collapse on the sofa
in your house, listen to soul music and talk non-stop? Baba commented that we talk at the same time and no one listens to the
other - but he was wrong. We did listen. It was very important to listen to each other because our opinions were
what mattered most to us in those days. We were selfish and self-opinionated
like all other teenagers.
Over a period of
time, we became inseparable. We
went to college, came home, shopped, gossiped, talked, studied and were together
24 hours a day. Although you had
other friends, I was the permanent
side to the triangle. You went to
many parties where I was not allowed to go, but I was happy to just see your new
clothes and hear about it from you. You had all the freedom and things that I
could not have - except for a mother. You
never expressed any feelings about lack of a mother in your life. I don't think you even recalled what it was like to have one because your
mother had died when you were a child. However,
you took to my mother and soon you were like another child in my house. In retrospect, I can see that my other two siblings were rather jealous
of you and the attention you got from my mother and I. They could see that I was totally influenced by you but they did not
dislike you.
You were the
first one in our class to travel to
England to meet your future in-laws and then get married. By this time I had accepted that your 'cousin' was really your fiancé,
the dashing Dr. Anwar Ali. Your
wedding was fun but traumatic. Since
you had no relatives, we took it upon ourselves to get everything done. Remember
how the dupatta in your shaadi ka jora didn't match the gharara? We were so scared, we
didn't
tell anyone! Then Ammie decided
that you had to become a Muslim and
arrived with the Maulana on the day of your 'Mehendi'. Baba did not object because you were marrying a Muslim so your given
Muslim name became Aneeta. The funniest incident was when someone called Anwar
on your honeymoon and asked "Is Raheel with the two of you?" - he was
livid and always related that incident, even 20 years later. Then you left for England and I was left in a vacuum without a friend to
turn to. Due to the depth of our
friendship, I never made another close friend. The day you left I cried and howled so much that your father and my
mother were astonished at the intensity of my despair.
You settled in
England and proceeded to become a "pukka" housewife. I, too got married and visited you.
Luckily Anwar and Sohail hit off right away and our friendship was
clinched. I found myself spending
more time with you in Birmingham, than
with my own siblings in Karachi. I
was there for the birth of all four of your children. You used to wait for me to arrive, hand me the latest baby and say
"okay, now I can sleep and Raheel khala will look after you". I loved it. I was truly a "khala" to your kids and even Anwar
had grudgingly accepted me as the "saali" he never had. He always welcomed me warmly but warned me that if, in our gup
shup, he missed a regular meal, there would be hell to pay. Of course, we talked non-stop and I remember that I always lost my voice
in two days and Anwar would give me throat medicine and threaten us with dire
consequences - but secretly he loved the hangama. Life at your house was always one big party.
All your friends knew us as sisters. Every time there was a crisis in your life, you'd call me to come and do
a 'Quran Khatam' and for all happy occasions, I organized the milaad for you.
You were so proud of me and would immediately call everyone
and announce
"Raheel is here."
You
saved up all your secrets, gossip
and worries to tell me and we used to talk all night. The kids were surprised at
our closeness. Once your daughter, Narmeen asked us if we ever fought and I
remember your telling her "the true test of our friendship is that we can
say whatever we like to each other, fight and still remain best friends. You
kids will never have a relationship like ours." During this period
Ammie died and you grieved for her the way I did - like losing a mother, because
every time she wrote to me, she used to write to you as well.
You and Anwar
used to fret over my lack of kids - when I had my first son both of you
rejoiced. When I was
expecting my younger son, I came to you and stayed for six months. This was when Baba died in Bangladesh under stressful circumstances. You
left for Dacca and met up with your brother after many years. In Baba's death, the two of you found each other again, because he was
the only blood relative you had. This
is when I realized how inwardly strong you are because you weathered this crisis
stoically although I knew you were hurting inside.
Many good things
in our life originated from your house. The birth of Zain, my younger son and
our immigration to Canada are two of them. You and Anwar shared in our joy.
Some of the happiest times in my life were spent with you. Across the
Atlantic, our friendship grew more solid. You
came to visit me, Narmeen came and of course I continued to go whenever I could.
In 1992, I saw
the film "Beaches" in Toronto and I called you to see it. I recall that you immediately called me back and said that you were the
one who would die and would I look after your kids? I joked "No, of course
not, because if I die first, I don't want you to look after my kids".
Both of us sniffled and then laughed at our own
stupidity.
We had the best
of times, Antra and although our relationship was not one in which we ever
became sentimental with each other, I think you know how much I miss you. Not a day passes when I don't think of you or think about all the little
news items I have to share with you. Your
children are now the only link we have and I wish they were here with me. Maybe I didn't have daughters of my own because I your daughters like
they were my own. You do know that I care for them very deeply and will always
look out for them.
Perhaps the most
painful thing I ever did in my life, was to put away your personal things and
itemize your jewellery. I had
always told your girls about the wedding dress episode and sure enough when we
unpacked your shaadi ka jora after 30 years, the dupatta and gharara did not
match. In your bedside drawer were
letters I had written you from day one, every cutting and pictures I had sent.
That's when I knew that you also cared for me deeply as a friend and
sister - but you never said anything. Among your jewellery were some pieces of your mother's that I knew you
had, there were the little trinkets
you had collected for your daughters and of course some jewellery that we had
made alike. Your girls gave me some of your clothes which I wear with
great
love and reverence.
Was ours the
friendship of a lifetime? I don't
know. All I know is that it was unique and that you have left a vacumn in my
life that no one can fill. Ours was
more than a friendship - we were soul mates and soul sisters.
Farewell my
friend - I miss you and I always will.
EPILOGUE:
In May
1995, Antra was diagnosed as having low grade lymphoma with 99% chances of
recovery. I went to see her and we found that we were both touchy
and sensitive - we talked about the 'good ol days' and cried a lot.
I sensed that this trip was different from the others but could not pin-point
the problem. I came back and Antra started deteriorating but she didn't tell me.
I would call and write and I worried but never even suspected that her health
was so bad. She was always like a rock, strong, so alive, so overpowering
- how could anything ever happen to Antra? Every time I asked Anwar, he
said "she' doing well - great chance of recovery". End of
October, he called and said "she's going fast. Come and see
her". On October 29, Sohail and I flew to England to see her. I'll
never forget the look on her face when she saw us and burst into tears. She was
a skeleton - already a dead body and I was not prepared for this shock.
Still her spirit was so strong that she came home from the hospital for that
weekend and what a soulful and touching weekend we had with me sitting by her
side the entire time. We cried a lot but she had hope. The kids were
subdued and sad. When we dropped Antra at the hospital on Monday, I knew
it was goodbye, but I did not say it. I hugged her for the last time, and
I wanted to say "kaha suna maaf kar daina" but the words stuck in my
throat.
Three
weeks later, on November 23, 1995, Antra died, free from her agony and pain. I
went to bid my last farewell and found myself in the agonizing process of
helping prepare her 'kafan', the same way I had dressed her as a bride.
Antra died a believing, practicing Muslim, and more than a thousand people
attended her namaz-e-janaaza. Anwar and the children were shattered.
Nine
weeks later, on February 4, 1996 Anwar died of a heart attack.
Today
Anwar and Antra Ali are buried side by side in a graveyard in Birmingham where
fresh flowers are put every week. They leave behind to grieve for them,
Narmeen 23, Meena 19, Shehla 17, Razi 15 ....... and me.
|