You’re from Bombay? So what? You are like my brother!” Our guide’s voice rasps out through the lobby of the Eagles Nest Hotel in Pakistan’s Hunza valley. We had got through another Pakistani military checkpoint on our 1,250 km drive on the Karakoram Highway, from Islamabad to the Chinese border at Khunjerab, and I had just told him to keep my origins to himself.
Ali, the dry-fruit seller, delivers ceaseless commentary on passing historical and cultural sights: Here a bridge destroyed by floods in 1995 and rebuilt by the Chinese; there a shrine to a local pir (saint) and a fort that fended off a British invasion in 1891. The bus stops at a roadside dhaba. We try a chapshuro — spiced minced lamb and cheese roasted in a fresh naan — which is delicious. Ali doesn’t let me pay. He invites us to dinner, writing down his address in our Lonely Planet.
We spend the night by the Hunza River in Passu, a small village overshadowed by the mouth of a spiny glacier and Tupopdan, a dramatic cathedral of spire-shaped rocks. The cavernous, dimly lit dining space of the Soviet-inspired hotel is not welcoming. The food is oily and unappetising, but the Chinese beer is refreshing, and our host, Ahmed, is worldly and wise. My Indian identity opens a reservoir of goodwill. We talk about social isolation in big cities, where offering a ride to strangers is rare. Growing up in Passu, Ahmed and his friends rolled burning rubber tires down the slopes at night. The mountains create an unbearable urge, he explains, to escape the mental cage imposed by the high horizon and the narrow valley. Pyromania is suddenly understandable. Ahmed refuses payment and the night leaves a lump in my heart as we part with yet another stranger who opened his arms to us.
(This story appears in the 02 July, 2010 issue of Forbes India. To visit our Archives, click here.)
How difficult is it to get visas/permits for this area for Indian citizens.....I do want to visit there alongwith the rest of the Northern Areas of Pakistan. Thanks.
on Apr 16, 2014Meher - Thanks for your comment and for reading the piece. Not easy. You need to get an unrestricted visa. Your best bet is to go through someone you know in the Pak embassy.
on Jun 8, 2014I just read the article, it is nice. Thanks for the showing the good image of Pakistan.
on Jan 8, 2014Truely heart touching, as i live on the other side of gilfit baltistan.Ladakh. Even in ladakh we have same terrain and climate , most importantly same culture of centuries but nation states has divided us.we are known as indians and they are known as pakistanis. But we still hope that one day we would see all together..www.ladakhzanskar.com.... Ankur shah, nice experience
on Apr 13, 2013A truly heart warming article. If only the Indo-pak political relationship were as simple as the joyous camaraderie the author experienced in his neighbor state. ... sigh..
on Jul 22, 2010