Syed Babar Ali and Sardar Harcharan Singh Brar : A lifelong school friendship that transcended borders, faiths

🌐 Dawn Pakistan (PK) —
Syed Babar Ali and Sardar Harcharan Singh Brar : A lifelong school friendship that transcended borders, faiths

AI Summary

Syed Babar Ali and Sardar Harcharan Singh Brar shared a lifelong friendship that began at Aitchison College in Lahore in the 1930s. Their bond transcended religious and national divides, symbolizing multi-faith unity and long-lasting personal ties across India and Pakistan.

LAST week, Syed Babar Ali dedicated a classroom in memory of his best friend, Sardar Harcharan Singh Brar, at their alma mater Aitchison College in Lahore. Babli Brar, the daughter of Harcharan Brar, came from India to attend this special gathering. Babar Ali and Brar came from very different backgrounds. Brar, born in 1922, was from a Sikh landlord family of Sarai Nanga near Ferozepore; while Ali, born in 1926, hailed from a Syed Muslim business family of Lahore. Both met at Aitchison College in the mid-1930s and developed a friendship that lasted about seven decades and transcended the trauma of the partition, the narrowness of patriotism, and their professional careers. What brought them together was Aitchison College, established as Punjab Chiefs College in 1886 – 140 years ago – which is known for its multi-faith pre-partition roots, and was set up and established to provide quality education to the landed gentry, princes and elite chieftains of Punjab. Babar Ali joined Aitchison College in 1934 at the age of seven, and Harcharan Brar joined in 1937 at the age of 15 years. Despite their age difference, the two became buddies. During their time at Aitchison, Babar Ali was a ‘day-boy’ (day scholar) at Jubilee House, while Harcharan Singh Brar was a boarder at Godley House. They graduated from Aitchison at the same time in December of 1943. Both spoke chaste Punjabi, and while their faith was important to them – one attended the campus mosque built in 1901 while the other frequented the campus Gurdwara built in 1910 – it never got in the way of their deep friendship Both excelled at cricket and tennis, receiving college colours. Both received the prestigious full school sports blazer in 1942. Babar Ali was chosen as the school prefect in 1942, while Harcharan became prefect a year later. Babar Ali received the Albel Singh Watson Gold Medal and the Dane Bhima Gold Medal in 1941. Meanwhile, the Rivaz Gold Medal, the medal for the best-leaving boy, was awarded in 1943 to Harcharan Brar. The six years spent together at school laid the foundation for a 72-year friendship. Both developed family terms during their time at the college. Brar was the favourite of Syed Babar Ali’s family and was loved by his parents, Sir and Lady Syed Maratib Ali as their ‘fourth son’. Despite being in Purdah, Syed Babar Ali’s mother – who hailed from the Fakir Khana family herself – would insist on meeting her son’s best friend, who would in turn greet her and touch her feet out of respect, which reminded her of her ancestors’ relationship with the court of Maharaja Ranjit Singh. She would refer to Brar as “Badshah” out of affection. All of Syed Babar Ali’s sisters referred to Brar as their brother or “bhai”, while his nieces and nephews still refer to him as “Mama/Mamu Harcharan Singh” meaning “maternal uncle” in Punjabi/Urdu. On the other hand, Brar’s grandchildren refer to Babar Ali as “Dadaji” meaning paternal grandfather. After graduating from Aitchison in 1943, both attended Government College in Lahore, where they completed their degrees in 1945. Brar then left Lahore to enter politics in Eastern Punjab, while Ali left to study at Harvard University in the US. When Babar Ali returned from the US in late 1947, most of his friends were gone, including his best friend. This traumatized both of them. Ali was keen to meet with Brar and arranged to meet with his Aitchison buddy in early 1948 at the newly-created border crossing of Ganda Singh Wala, between Kasur and Ferozepore. The meeting was brokered through Khan Qurban Ali Khan, the then Inspector General of Police, who was a friend of his family. Brar brought bananas from his side, which were rare in Pakistan at the time, while Babar Ali presented him some silk ties that he had bought for his friend from America. Many tears of sadness and uncertainty were shed at this nostalgic meeting, but it seems they both pledged not to let the trauma of the partition mar their friendship. In his memoirs Learning from Others, Babar Ali recalls that he and Brar were allowed to go watch movies at the local cinemas of Lahore once every two weeks. He also writes that Brar joined his class in 1937 and they soon became friends. Harcharan was very good at mathematics during their time at Aitchison. He also observes that Harcharan Singh Brar never touched alcohol. Amongst the more interesting anecdotes from their time as students at Aitchison, Babar Ali recalls that Brar had a great sense of humour. There was a fruit vendor, Meher, who used to extend credit to the boys and did not maintain a written account, as a result of which the boys would always be in debt. One fine day, Brar remarked” “The payment for your fruit dries out more blood in our bodies than the amount of blood your fruit makes in us!” After Partition, Syed Babar Ali became one of the most well-known businessmen of Pakistan, establishing Packages Limited and the Lahore University of Management Sciences. He was awarded the Orde

World friendship partition Aitchison College India-Pakistan multi-faith education

Read original source →