In Lakhnawi Tradition, Communal Harmony in Places of Worship Leaves No Space for Hatred

The history of Lucknow’s culture is replete with stories of harmony between Hindus and Muslims. Temples were either built or maintained by Muslim rulers. Some mosques were raised by Hindus.

Lucknow: “How times have changed. Gone are the days when people lived in utmost communal harmony and peace,” Nawab Mir Jafar Abdullah, descendent of Wajid Ali Shah, lamented, while watching the news on the Gyanvapi mosque case, in his house in Lucknow’s Sheesh Mahal area.

Recalling an incident, the Nawab said, “Once Nawab Wajid Ali Shah was captured by Britishers and was being taken to Metiaburj, where he was kept in exile in a place which was then a suburb of modern Kolkata. As rumour spread that this famous Nawab of Awadh was being forcibly transported to London, congregations of Hindu women gathered in temples across large parts of Awadh and started to sing, ‘Hazrat jate hain London, kripa karo Raghunandan (‘the Nawab is being taken to London, please bless him Lord Ram’).’

Nawab Mir Jafar Abdullah, descendent of Wajid Ali Shah, at his home. Photo: Aman

The history of Awadh is replete with tales of such communal harmony between Hindus and Muslims.

There are some prominent temples, not only in Lucknow but also in Ram’s town of Ayodhya, which were either built by Muslims or maintained by Muslim rulers of those times. Likewise, there are examples of some mosques or imambaras having been raised by Hindus.

Lucknow is not just the name of a city but it is synonymous with adab and tehzeeb (mannerism and culture). Its body may appear like a labyrinth of walls, roads, lanes and bylanes, but mannerism and hospitality are in its soul. The city is the epitome of love and brotherhood of the two biggest communities of the nation. What can be a better example of the Ganga-Jamuni tehzeeb than Awadh’s fourth Nawab Asaf-ud-Daula’s mother Aliya Begum, undertaking the construction of Lucknow’s legendary 250-year-old Hanuman temple. If you find the temple’s old dome still adorned with a moon and a star, sure enough, it was because of her role in building this temple. This is the biggest and oldest Hanuman temple in Lucknow. Almost 30,000 devotees visit the temple every Tuesday and Saturday.

Hanuman Temple. Photo: Aman

Hanuman Temple’s old dome still adorned with a moon and a star. Photo: Aman

According to the temple priest, Pandit Jagdamba, “As the legend goes, once lord Hanuman appeared in Begum Aliya’s dream telling her that he is lying embedded in a garden and that he would be happy if she could have him extricated from that garden and get him installed in a temple. Aliya Begum identified the place and ordered excavation at the spot from where an ancient Hanuman idol was found and duly installed in what is this Aliganj temple today.”

Pandit Jagdamba. Photo: Aman

“Later, it was Nawab Wajid Ali Shah who started a mela (fair) around this historical Hanuman temple in Aliganj on the occasion of ‘Bada Mangal’ in the Hindu month of Jyeshtha,” he added.

The mela is a part of that old tradition that is being followed to this day, when one can witness it during the current month of Jyeshtha that started on May 17.

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Nawab Wajid Ali Shah had also banned the killing of monkeys, which was declared as a serious crime. And as a patron of art, a poet, playwright and an exponent of Kathak, that was known as the dance of traditional storytellers, he wrote the famous Urdu play titled Radha-Kanhaiya in which he himself played the role of the popular Hindu Lord Krishna.

A few kilometres away from the Hanuman temple stands Kazmain Rauza (dargah) in old Lucknow’s Chaupatiyan. The Rauza was made in 1852. It is a replica of a sacred mausoleum in Iran that was built in memory of the 7th Imaam of Khurasan Hazrat Moosa of Shia Muslims.

Kazmain Rauza, in old Lucknow’s Chaupatiyan. Photo: Aman

What makes the Rauza of Lucknow so unique is the story behind its making. “As it can be found in the book Lucknow’s Lost Monument, written by Saiyed Anwar Abbas, Nawab Amjad Ali Shah had a courtier, Jagannath Aggrawal, who used to live in Lucknow’s Chowk. He visited Iran and saw the Rauza of Imam Moosa. He was so impressed by its structure and beauty that when he returned, he immediately ordered a replica of it to be made here. Not only this, he invited Persian artisans to assist in the execution of this mission. This was the first Rauza to be built by a Hindu,” Shamil Shamsi from old Lucknow said.

The 250-year-old monument has the same large, splendid and influential dome set on deep drums with four minarets in four corners and has the same mehrab (niche) as on the original tomb in Iran.

This has been a symbol of communal harmony in the city for centuries. The Rauza, made by a Hindu, receives hordes of Muslim devotees, who also strongly believe that this place is endowed with magical faith-healing. “Whenever I am in some problem or in pain, I come here. I express to the Imaam what my heart feels and it seems as if Imaam holds my heart. I find spiritual peace here,” a devotee told this reporter.

In the narrow lanes of Aminabad in Lucknow, a huge white structure with a golden gate and rectangular flower work will definitely catch the eye of every passer-by.

This mosque, popularly called as ‘Panditain ki Masjid’ or ‘Padain Ki Masjid’ (the Brahmin Woman’s Mosque), is special as it was built by a Brahmin lady for the Muslims of the locality to offer their prayers. According to Nawab Mir Jafar Abdullah,“Rani Jai Kunwar Pandey, who owned Aminabad, was a close friend of the Begum of then Awadh Nawab, Saadat Ali Khan. Their friendship was so strong that she got this mosque built as a gift to her friend Khadija Khanam, the wife of the Nawab.”

Panditain ki Masjid. Photo: Aman

In Lucknow’s Thakurganj mohalla, as the clock strikes 4 in the morning, the loudspeakers are adjusted as it’s time for azaan. The muezzin urges Muslims to come and offer namaz. Devotees offer namaz five times a day in what is popularly known as ‘Jhau Lal ki Masjid’. They also hold Majlis just across Jhau Lal’s Imambara, in the memory of the martyrdom of Karbala. This Imambara and mosque were not built by any Muslim but by Nawab Asafudaula’s Hindu wazir (minister), Raja Jhau Lal Shrivastav.

Mohd. Abbas, manager of Imambara Jhaulal, said, “This Imambara is special; there are many Imambaras built by the Muslims; but this is unique as it was built by a Hindu. Worshiping in this Imambara gives peace of mind and solace.” Expressing concern over today’s drastically changing social ethos, he goes on to add, “What gives the greatest joy is that there was a time hundred years from now, when there was so much affection, understanding and fraternity among people of different faiths.”

The list is never ending. Baba Gomti Das’ temple in Thakurganj is in the same lane as Jhau Lal’s Imambara. This temple was built by Nawab Asaf-ud-daula, who funded its daily running.

Baba Gomti Das Temple. Photo: Aman

Dhruv Lal Shukla, the priest of the temple, said, “Temples like Baba Gomti Das are a source of inspiration for us.” Hinting at the communal politics being systematically fuelled by vested interests, he said, “Earlier, there was so much brotherhood and amity among people of different faiths that there was no room for hatred.”

Evidently, it was Nawab Asaf-ud-Daula who set the real benchmark of communal amity and harmony in Awadh during the late 18th century itself. It is common knowledge that mourning of Muharram is observed  for two months and eight days in Lucknow. During this time, the Shia Muslims wear black clothes and strictly shun any kind of celebration or music. However, Nawab Asaf-ud-Daula went out of his way to even participate in Holi, the Hindu festival of colours, during one such occasion.

According to a popular anecdote, once Holi happened to coincide with ‘Daswi Muharram’, and while the Nawab was returning after carrying out the traditional ceremony of burying the Tazia (miniature mausoleum), from the Talkatora Karbala, he was greeted by a group of Holi revellers who sought to put colour on him. What the Nawab did left his own courtiers dumbfounded.

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It goes as follows, “The entourage of Nawab Asaf-ud-Daula was passing through the old Chowk Bazar, where Hindus were busy playing holi. They asked the Nawab if they could put colours on him. Far from rebuking anyone, the Nawab alighted from his royal cart, greeted everyone and told Holi revellers to feel free to put the popular ‘gulal’ (coloured powder) on him. As the story goes, later, when his minister asked him whether it was appropriate for him to have joined a Holi celebration while he was observing Muharrum mourning, he clarified that he had done no wrong as he had simply participated in the happiness of people who were part of his family.”

That clearly reflected the extent to which he could mould himself in the larger interest of upholding his ideal of religious harmony. In Awadh, dozens of Hindu poets wrote dirges in the memory of Hazrat Imam Hussain. In keeping with the ‘Lakhnawi’ tradition of brotherhood, today’s well-known ‘Dastango’ (storyteller) and scholar Himanshu Bajpai, recites Marsiya or elegiac poetry.

“This is my passion and through this I wish to keep the rich Lakhnawi tradition alive,” said Himanshu, who hails from a highly traditional Brahmin family.

Himanshu Bajpai in Lucknow’s Chota Imambara reciting a Marsiya. Photo: Aman

In Lucknow’s Chota Imambara, Himanshu’s voice echoes as he narrates a Marsiya.

“Har martaba fariyaad thi aur nalaya-e-jan kah

Haq se ye hi karte the dua ro k basad aah

muztar hu bahut sabra ata kar mere Allaha

Aulad ke sadme se mera dil nahi aagha

Jati hai muhammad ki nishani mere ghar se

18 baras baad bichhadta hu pisar se”

This Marsiya expresses Hazrat Imaam Hussain’s pain over the death of his 18-year-old son, martyred in Karbala.

Ganga-Jamuni Tehzeeb Not Mere Tolerance of Differences But Heartful Embrace of Diversity: HC

The court was granting bail to an accused in a case of mob violence following an altercation between two political groups in Hapur district of Uttar Pradesh.

Allahabad: The Ganga-Jamuni Tehzeeb is not mere tolerance of differences but heartful embracement of diversity, the Allahabad High Court has observed while granting bail to an accused in a case of mob violence following an altercation between two political groups in Hapur district of Uttar Pradesh.

The violence took place in the Simbhawali police station area of the district following the declaration of the Uttar Pradesh assembly election results.

The court said the case arose out of an altercation between political rivals which suddenly escalated into a violent brawl. The incident occurred in the aftermath of election results which saw sloganeering and frayed tempers.

Mobs from two sides engaged in violence. The FIR assigns a general and vague role in the assault to the applicant. The applicant has not been identified as the principal offender who inflicted life threatening injuries on the injured persons, the court said and granted bail to Nawab.

The court observed, “Ganga-Jamuni Tehzeeb is not a ritual to be observed in conversations. In fact, it is a soul force to be harnessed in conduct. Ganga-Jamuni Tehzeeb is not mere tolerance of differences, but heartful embracement of diversity. The ethos of the State of Uttar Pradesh brings out the catholicity of Indian philosophy.”

Justice Ajai Bhanot also observed, “Incidents of mob violence spread disaffection in the society and are incompatible with the rule of law and have no place in any civilised nation. Law will take its course and the offenders have to face justice. However, there is another aspect to this issue which cannot be neglected.”

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“Sectarian violence fractures the peace and fissures the society. Politics is indispensable for democracy. But politics cannot monopolise dialogue. Law and courts are not the only instruments to deal with problem. All sections of the society have to own up to their responsibilities to promote fraternity among all citizens and ensure peace”, it said.

The counsels for both sides involved in the matter had told the court that the respective parties would serve cool ‘sherbet’ and water to passersby and thirsty travellers for one week in May-June 2022.

The court further observed, “Many generations of Indians gave their blood, sweat, tears and toil to wrest freedom from the shackles of slavery. The founding generations had steered the country through stormy seas; it is the duty of all Indians to helm the nation into calm ports.”

 

(PTI)

Bareilly, a Syncretic Oasis in Polarised Uttar Pradesh

Be it Khaneqah-e Niazia or Chunna Mia ka Mandir, devotees gathered at these shrines to celebrate Lohri and Makar Sankranti with equal reverence.

Bareilly (Uttar Pradesh): The three-day festivities that began with Lohri on Wednesday and continued with Makar Sankranti on Thursday and Friday brought to the fore an oasis of the Ganga-Jamuni tehzeeb (pluralistic culture) in Bareilly, in the midst of the desert of hate-mongering that many other parts of Uttar Pradesh have become.

Stories of amity, brotherhood, love and co-existence abound in Bareilly, also known as Nath Nagri for the seven Shiva temples. It finds mention in the epic Mahabharata as Panchal – the birth place of the Pandava queen Draupadi, also known as Panchali. It has the shrine of Aziz Niazia, descendent of Shah Ayatullah Indizani of Bukhara (Afghanistan) who had relinquished his empire to adopt Sufism and spread the message of love and devotion over 300 years ago.

Another notable shrine is the Chunna Miyan ka Mandir, also known as the Lakshmi-Narayan temple in the heart the city. This temple has a picture of Fazalur Rahman alias Chunna Mian with a container on his head – a mark of his kar seva to build this temple as recently as 1960, inaugurated by then President Rajendra Prasad – among the pictures of Hindu gods and goddesses. Chunna Mian had donated his land and Rs 1,00,001 at that time to build this temple.

Chhuna Mian ka Mandir or Lakshmi Narayan temple. Photo: Sandeep Abhishek and Asha Sharma

Be it Khaneqah-e Niazia or Chunna Mia ka Mandir, devotees gathered at these shrines to celebrate Lohri and Makar Sankranti with equal reverence. Of course, the celebrations were smaller due to COVID-19 precautions, but the atmosphere was full of love and amity.

Also read: Kairana is Not a Communal but a Musical Metaphor

My colleague at the Invertis University, Nasreen Javed – who guided me through Bareilly’s streets and shrines –first took me to Malion ki Pulia (settlement of gardeners). “My ancestors who were landlords had got malis (gardeners) settled on their land, which came to be known as a Malion ki Pulia. The devotees buy roses to offer to Khanqah-e Niazia and other Sufi shrines, and hibiscus, oleander and marigold flowers to offer to Shiva, Lakshmi and Narayanji in the temples,” Nasreen said, adding, “The number of malis here has dwindled over the years with the malls, restaurants and garment shops coming up, but it still continues to be a favoured spot for buying flowers”.

While guiding me through the streets and shrines on Makar Sankranti day, Nasreen shared her story with me. “When I was in my teens I had a friend, Asha Upadhyay, studying at a coaching centre and living in a town lodge. One day in the late 1980s, she was fear-stricken and felt insecure. I brought Asha (a Brahmin) home and my parents prepared a separate room for her to live in. Asha set up a puja corner in her room. We celebrated Diwali and Holi to keep Asha happy, and Asha celebrate Eid with us with equal enthusiasm. Growing up together, we used to play and visit dargahs and temples.”

Shabbu Mian, the Sufi cleric. Photo: Sandeep Abhishek and Asha Sharma

“When she was older, Asha married a man named Deepak Lotha. The couple visited our home after their marriage. They refer my abbu (father), Javed Hasan Khan, as ‘abbu’ and my mother as ‘ammi’. They are now settled in Haldwani but they are our family members. They visit us often and I, too, call on them,” Nasreen continued, promising, “I will make you meet Asha and Deepak one day.”

No place for hate

Mohammad Sibtain Niazi alias Shabbu Mian, a Sufi cleric and descendent of saint Aziz Niazia, greeted us at Khankah-e Niazia. “Chhodo mujh-e bekhud mera aaram yahi hai; Nam-o-nishan rahn-e do bas naam yahi hai (Leave me to myself with the name, I am at peace here. I don’t hanker for fame, let me live with my name in seclusion),” Shabbu Mian chanted this couplet by Qibla Shah Niazi.

“We don’t ask for the caste or religion of anyone visiting us. We make dua (prayers) for all, and people visit us with love. We are bound by the Almighty’s farman (order) to ensure peace, harmony and brotherhood,” he said, smiling. Asked about the rise of an atmosphere of hate, Shabbu Mian said, “We will keep on spreading love and amity, without seeing what others are doing. We are here to give peace to the distressed. Love is the panacea to all ills afflicting human society.”

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The frequent visitors to Khaneqah-e Niazia include the mayor of Bareilly, Umesh Gautam – who is also a Bharatiya Janata Party leader. “He (Gautam) is a mureed (devotee) of this dargah and is very nice to all of us. He specifically visits during the Urs mela (fair) and oversees the arrangements,” Shabbu Mian said, while inviting us to the Urs mela to be held on January 20.

The pujari at the Lakshami Narayan temple or Chunna Mian ka Mandir, Sandip Tiwary, says the name of Fazlur Rahman alias Chunna Mian – the builder of this temple – with as much reverence as for saints in the Hindu pantheon.

Chunna Mia’s picture stuck on a temple wall. Photo: Sandeep Abhishek and Asha Sharma

“I was not destined to see Chunna Mian ji. But I learnt a lot by hearing from Bhup Ram and other caretakers of the temple, who had seen Chunna Mian ji. Though he was a landlord, he carried containers with bricks and other materials on his head to build this temple. He devoted his entire life to the service of this temple. He was the true son of the God,” Tiwary said.

Tiwary said that previously, many Muslims too used to visit this temple. “The number of Muslim visitors has relatively dwindled of late. But we treat them with care and love when they visit us, offer prasad to them and make prayers for them. I am always conscious of the fact that Chunna Mian ji had built the temple,” he said.

Headquartered in Lucknow, Uttar Pradesh chief minister Yogi Adityanath has made many objectionable comments on the Taj Mahal – the monument of love built by Mughal emperor Shah Jahan and located 221 km from Bareilly – and is on a spree to change the names of many ancient and medieval cities and towns in UP to pursue his politics of polarisation. Though located between Delhi and Lucknow – 250 km from Delhi and 252 km from Lucknow, to be exact – Bareilly is far removed from the “wave” of hate and conflict in Lucknow and Delhi.

Nalin Verma is a senior journalist, author and professor of journalism and mass communications at Invertis University, Bareilly.

Kairana is Not a Communal but a Musical Metaphor

Such villages and small towns in the Hindi-speaking region represent the best features of north India’s composite culture, commonly known as the Ganga-Jamuni tehzeeb.

Such villages and small towns in the Hindi-speaking region represent the best features of north India’s composite culture, commonly known as the Ganga-Jamuni tehzeeb.

Ustad Majid Khan, Ustad Abdul Karim Khan and Ustad Abdul Haqq Khan of the Kirana gharana. Credit: mashkooralikhan.com

Ustad Majid Khan, Ustad Abdul Karim Khan and Ustad Abdul Haqq Khan of the Kirana gharana. Credit: mashkooralikhan.com

Kairana, a small town in Shamli district, is not very far from Muzaffarnagar. Recently, it has been in the news for all the wrong reasons. Historically a Muslim-dominated place, it has been projected by the Hindutva brigade led by sitting BJP MP Hukum Singh as another Kashmir from where Hindus are being forced to flee. Over the past week, the hollowness of this campaign became very widely known and even Singh felt obliged to take a U-turn and acknowledge that his claims could have been wrong because of lapses committed by his assistants who drew up the list of those who had left. Sadly, Kairana’s name has got associated with communal politics because of this baseless calumny.

Yet, this incident had a silver lining too as people were reminded that Kairana, also spelt as Kirana, has been closely associated with the Hindustani classical music and one of the most influential gharanas bears its name.

Nearly all the major gharanas and styles of dhrupad, khayal, thumri, tappa and dadra have their origins in the Hindi-speaking region. Most of them were associated with Delhi and the towns and villages surrounding it within a radius of 300 kms. The dispersal and migration of these gharanas took place after the cataclysmic events of 1857 and the consequent disappearance of the last vestiges of the Mughal court. There was an exodus of Muslim musicians from Panipat, Sonepat, Meerut, Kairana, Chhaprauli, Ambeta, Atrauli, Agra, Bijnor, Moradabad, Khurja and many other villages and small towns in search of patronage and livelihood.

Although Kairana had produced many stalwarts like the been player Bande Ali Khan, vocalists Kale Khan and Nanhe Khan and sarangi player Haider Bakhsh Khan, the Kirana gharana as we know it today owes its existence mainly to Abdul Karim Khan and his cousin Abdul Wahid Khan.

Born on November 11, 1872 in Kairana, Abdul Karim Khan was hailed as a child prodigy and gave his first public concert at the age of eleven at Meerut. Taking a cue from dhrupad, he introduced slow tempo alapchari in khayal and devoted utmost attention to swara (note). While in his late teens, he had visited Mysore and had heard many great artistes of the Carnatic system. He incorporated their sargam patterns into his singing. In many ways, he broke with the social as well as musical norms and displayed a remarkably modern outlook.

In 1894, he, accompanied by his younger brother Abdul Haq, went to Baroda and shocked the musical fraternity by his unconventional behaviour. It so happened that famed singers Ali Bakhsh and Fateh Ali, who were known as Aliya-Fattu and had earned the sobriquet of Jarnail-Karnail (General-Colonel) of music, were invited to sing at Maharaja Sayajirao Gayakwad’s court and they gave an outstanding performance. When the maharaja asked his court musicians to sing after them, all of them made some excuse or the other. However, Abdul Karim Khan and Abdul Haq readily agreed to perform when the maharaja asked them. This was in direct contravention of the unwritten protocol among musicians that forbade junior artistes to perform after their seniors.

But 22-year-old Abdul Karim Khan took the risk and both the brothers sang with such mesmerizing effect that their performance completely overshadowed the one given by Aliya-Fattu. Overnight, Abdul Karim Khan became an all-India celebrity. His next daredevil act was to elope with Tarabai Mane, daughter of a close relative of Maharaja Sayajirao Gayakwad, and marry her. Tarabai bore him five children, three of whom made a name for themselves as vocalists.

Abdul Karim Khan sensed that the times were changing and the pattern of patronage and the composition of music audiences would not remain in the same. Moreover, unlike other gharanedar ustads, he was able to realise the importance of new technology as well as experimentation. Initially, most ustads were not willing to lend their voice for cutting records but Abdul Karim Khan broke ranks with them. Had he not done this, perhaps the music world would have been deprived of a phenomenon called Bhimsen Joshi. As Joshi’s biographer, Mohan Nadkarni, informs us, one day he heard a record of Abdul Karim Khan that had two of his famous renderings – a khayal composition, ‘Phagwa Braj Dekhan Ko Chalo Ri’ in Raga Basant and a charming thumri ‘Piya Bin Nahin Aavat Chain’ in Raga Jhinjhoti. The eleven-year-old boy Bhimsen became so restless that he left home in search of a guru because he wanted “to sing like Abdul Karim Khan.”

Disregarding tough opposition from other musicians, the ustad chose to collaborate with English musicologist E. Clements who was making serious attempts to make a harmonium that could produce all the 22 shrutis (microtones).

Abdul Karim Khan also broke another convention. Those days, musicians did not announce the name of the raga that they sang or played. Even when they taught their disciples, they told them how to master a composition (bandish) and present it but very often kept the name of the raga to themselves. It was Abdul Karim Khan who realised that in a public concert setting where the audience was not made up of only cognoscenti, it was necessary to announce the name of the raga. In 1909, he organised a ticketed programme in Sholapur wherein he presented his seven-year-old son Abdul Rahman and four-year-old daughter Champakali on the stage and announced the name of the raga whose alap Abdul Rahman would present and whose sargam Champakali would sing. Later, Abdul Rahman came to be known as Sureshbabu Mane and Champakali became famous as Hirabai Barodekar, who was one of the most widely respected and acclaimed vocalists of the Kirana gharana.

Those who are abusing the name of Kairana to further their communal politics must know that Abdul Karim Khan, the best known son of Kairana, was criticised by the Brahmins of Pune for reciting Gayatri mantra and it was the great Sankritist R. G. Bhandarkar who had defended him. On the other hand, some of his co-religionists were unhappy with him for producing only Hindu students such as Balkrishnabua Kaplieshwari, Rambhau Kundgolkar alias Sawai Gandharva, Ganesh Ramchandra Behrebua and a host of others and most of them were also Brahmins. He had sung the bhajan ‘Hari Om Tatsat’ before Bal Gangadhar Tilak after he returned from the Mandalay prison and also sang a few bhajans and the Ramdhun for Mahatma Gandhi. He opened a music college in Pune in 1913 and named it Arya Sangeet Samaj. His life and music were an example of secularism. One of his non-Hindu disciples who rose to the top was the legendary Roshanara Begum, who migrated to Pakistan after 1947.

His disciple Sawai Gandharva trained the likes of Gangubai Hangal, Bhimsen Joshi and Firoz Dastur. His cousin Abdul Wahid Khan spent most of his life in Lahore and taught Hirabai Barodekar (who could learn from her father Abdul Karim Khan only for a few years as her parents parted ways and the children went away with their mother Tarabai), Pran Nath, sarangi player Ram Narayan and the one and only Begum Akhtar. The great vocalist Amir Khan was deeply influenced by his ati vilambit (extra-slow) elaboration of the alap and the merukhand style permutation and combination of notes.

Kairana is not a communal but a musical metaphor. Such villages and small towns in the Hindi-speaking region represent the best features of north India’s composite culture, commonly known as the Ganga-Jamuni tehzeeb. Hindustani classical music is the best representative of this secular tradition, which never discriminates or differentiates on the basis of religion. In the pre-indepenence era, when Hindu as well as Muslim communalism was baring its fangs, attempts were made to vitiate this tradition but they were largely unsuccessful. Those shared notes are coming under strain again but the communalists will not succeed this time either.

Kuldeep Kumar is a senior journalist