Granny's Lost Gold

The ride to her village brought back a flood of memories-and a small fortune.

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The ride to her village brought back a flood of memories-and a small fortune.

IN 1965, when India and Pakistan went to war for the second time, I was 16 years old and living in Amritsar with my three siblings, parents and grandmother. Sirens often went off during air raids by Pakistani fighter jets and people rushed out of their houses and jumped into the nearby trenches. There would be a complete blackout in the city on these nights.

Once, the village of Chheharta Sahib near Amritsar was badly hit by the Pakistan Air Force, leaving over a 100 people dead. We remained glued to the radio to get the latest updates on the war. When we heard that the Indian army had foiled the Pakistan Army's attack to capture Amritsar and destroyed its famed Patton tanks near Khem Karan, some five kilometres from Amritsar, we were jubilant. The Pakistanis had lost so many of their tanks in the battle that the place got to be known as Patton Nagar!

"Why has Pakistan forced this war upon us?" my grandmother often lamented. "It's peace that would bring prosperity to both nations, not bloodshed." A feisty Punjabi woman in her late fifties, she was born in a small village in Lahore in undivided India. My grandfather had passed away in the prime of his youth and, following Partition, my widowed grandmother had settled in Majitha, Amritsar, with some of our relatives. She had raised her two children-my father and my aunt-on her meagre pension, savings and by keeping livestock. She mostly wore a white salwar suit and dupatta and often told us about the happy life she had seen in her village situated just three kilometres across the border-before the horrors of Partition had taken it all away.

Gaining an upper hand in the war, the Indian Army advanced to Ichhogil canal, on the outskirts of Lahore, and the captured territory came under the control of the Punjab Armed Police (PAP).  

When my grandmother learnt about this on the radio, she expressed...

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