“Many of us fear death. We believe in death because we have
been told we will die. We associate ourselves with the body, and we know
that bodies die. But a new scientific theory suggests that
death is not the terminal event we think,” says Dr Robert Lanza,
America’s Chief Scientific Officer of Advanced Cell Technology.
Lanza says while our bodies disintegrate, the “alive feeling — the
‘Who am I?’— is just a 20-watt fountain of energy operating in the brain
… this energy doesn’t go away at death.” It is an irrefutable fact of
science that “energy never dies; it can neither be created nor
destroyed”.
If Lanza is to be believed that energy transcends from one world to
the other, then the ‘20-watt fountain of energy’ that Major Munawar Khan
possessed throughout his living moments is not dead. Eerie it may
sound, but as his son, Brigadier (r) Waqar Ahmad Malik re-lives the
story of his late father, the distinction between past, present and
future suddenly departs from the room where we are sitting one late
evening in Islamabad.
Born in Chakwal, as a child, Munawar Khan had just one wish burning
in his heart — to serve in the army. One day he came upon a throng of
people gathered to witness the British subcontinental race in the area.
When the starter’s gun was fired, the runners took off. Reflexively,
Munawar jumped in. He won the race. “Who is he?” asked everyone, stunned
by the boy’s performance. “I want to join the army,” said the class
eight student, when the head of the regiment approached him.
There and then, the boy’s wish was granted. The British saw the
potential in the boy as a great athlete. They ‘adopted’ him; educated
him and at turning 18, they enlisted him in the army.
When the Second World War broke out, Munawar Khan was sent off to
fight the Japanese who had advanced into Burma and were set to capture
its capital Rangoon. After the fall of Rangoon, Munawar along with his
fellow soldiers was taken a prisoner of war by the Japanese.
While incarcerated, Munawar mastered the Japanese language by
befriending the prison guards. ‘You teach me Japanese and I’ll teach you
English,’ was the done deal. It paid rich dividends. When a Japanese
senior officer came visiting the prison, he was struck by Munawar’s
fluency in Japanese language.
Lady Luck smiled yet once more. Just as the British saw a potential
in the young lad in a remote village of undivided India when he won the
race hands down, the Japanese singled him out as a great asset, worthy
of their notice. From the tiny mosquito ridden cell, Munawar was shifted
to a fancy bungalow with all the frills available in wartime. Joining
the Imperial Japanese Army, Munawar underwent rigorous military
training, the kind Navy Seals in America go through.
In this theatre of war another event spawned. Led by Subhas Chandra
Bose, The Indian National Army (INA) was born in 1942 to fight for
independence from the British in India. Major Munawar was a perfect fit
and joined this army.
The INA already had leading lights like Maj Gen M.Z. Kiani, Col
Shahnawaz Khan, Major Habib ur Rehman and Col. A.I. Dara. When the
Allies won, Munawar along with other INA officers was taken a prisoner
and sent to India for a “treason” trial.
While narrating his father’s heroics mixed with harrowing incidents,
tears often well up in Brigadier Waqar’s eyes. But there is comic relief
too during the tale. A Hindu billionaire’s daughter fell in love with
Munawar Khan and would visit him in jail daily carrying along a bouquet
of flowers. “Marry me,” she said to him one day. “I can’t”, he replied.
“Why?”, she asked. “Because you’re a Hindu and I am a Muslim”, he said.
“I will convert”, she replied. “You’re a billionaire’s daughter and I am
the son of a poor father”, he said. “Never mind, I’ll serve you and
your family happily”.
The young beautiful woman dared Munawar to escape from jail and come
for dinner at her father’s home to prove his bravado. “My father took up
the challenge. Each evening, the jail superintendent made a final
round. My father grabbed him and knocked him out when he reached his
cell. He quickly changed into his uniform and confidently walked out of
the prison to sit in the superintendent’s waiting car. It was dark and
my father’s cap covered his face. He ordered the driver to take him to
the billionaire’s home where the young woman and her family were
speechless. Of course on his return to the prison, my father was given
the third degree and thrown into a solitary cell to be court
martialled.”
Lady Luck once again came to Munawar’s rescue. Partition had occurred
and Munawar with other INA prisoners were free to cross over to a brand
new homeland called Pakistan. “At the border, they received a heroes’
welcome. Pakistanis carried them on their shoulders.”
Munawar settled down with a job in the private sector near
Lawrencepur, Attock. Prime Minister Liaquat Ali Khan who had heard of
his brave exploits, immediately wrote Munawar a personal letter inviting
him to join the Pakistan Army.
From the British to the Japanese to the Pakistan army, by now Munawar
was war hardy and raring to go to the frontlines against India in
Kashmir. An opportunity provided itself when he joined the Azad Kashmir
Regiment that later became the Azad Kashmir Regular Forces (AKRF). The
AKRF had its own intake and training structure separate from the
Pakistan Army.
In 1964, just as Munawar was to become Lt. Col, he suffered a mild
heart attack that sealed his chances for promotion. Still, the army
needed him and sent him to fight yet again.
In July 1965 ‘Operation Gibraltar,’ a code name given by the Pakistan
Army to infiltrate Jammu & Kashmir was set in motion. Major Munawar
distinguished himself yet again. Commanding his troops, he infiltrated
into India through a pass over the town of Rajouri. This pass witnessed
very heavy fighting. According to Wikipedia, the pass was named after
him and called ‘Munawar Pass’ by locals who welcomed the Pakistani major
as their saviour
Major Munawar occupied the 500 square miles area for full three
months. For his acts of gallantry, he was given the title of
‘Ghazi-i-Kashmir.’ While citing Lt. Col Waqi, Lt. Gen (r) Mahmud Ahmed
in a 640-paged tome titled History of Indo-Pak War—1965 writes:
“He [Maj. Munawar] was administering the area, he had his own police
officials, Tehsildar and government. The local population fully
supported him, providing whatever assistance they could. He was
operating in the entire Rajouri valley …”
Suddenly orders arrived that Munawar and his men vacate the area and
report back to GHQ in Rawalpindi. Sad, dejected and disappointed, he bid
farewell to the populace who were loath to let him go. They cried for
him.
Later Major Munawar was awarded Sitara-i-Jurat for gallantry and the
title of ‘King of Rajouri’ by President Ayub Khan. A few years later, he
passed away.
“Immortality doesn’t mean a perpetual existence in time without end,
but rather resides outside of time altogether,” reinforces the scientist
Lanza. A person’s energy never dies. Major Munawar’s ‘20-watt fountain
of energy’ lives on as a legacy of valour and bravado.
Great :)
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