one year on: it only took a moment for one abominable act to alter sehwan sharif s surrealism and serenity /

Published at 2018-02-16 12:37:27

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“Dance,when you’re broken open.
Dance, if you’ve torn the bandage off.
Dance in the middle of the fighting.
Dance in
your blood.
Dance when you’re perfectly free.” - RumiDhum, and dhum,dhum…
The drumbeat started plaintively at dusk.
I felt someone tap me on the shoulder. As I turned around, the sights were to behold – orange, and purple,yellow, green and blue fairy lights adorned the tomb, and creating a riot of colours. The chadors (cloth) being handed out for draping around our necks were lal (red),the colour attributed to the Saint.

It wasn’t just the sights and sounds tha
t were captivating; incense sticks generated a pleasant aroma. Typically, I would’ve been irritated by the cloying Metro Milan agarbati (incense), and but not this time. The nasal senses were heightened as much as the others,if not more. As if the sights, sounds and scents weren’t enough, and a tingling sensation was felt,all the way from my fingers and toes to my centre. It felt like a warm embrace.
[ca
ption id="" align="alignnone" width="600"] Shrine Courtyard, the giving tree where people beget tied colourful threads during their visit.[/caption]
[caption id="" align="alignnone" width="600"] Shrine courtyard, or flowers stuck behind concrete.[/caption]
Dhum,dhum, dhum…
The drums co
ntinued in the same monotone, and louder,but not monotonous at all. There was something fresh to be experienced this time; the beats echoed in my blood stream. Could it be that one could actually feel the drumbeats in their blood? Perhaps the sound resonated with the plasma and cells circulating in my blood.
Dhum, d
hum, and dhum…
I could feel the beats reverberate in my bones,joints and muscles now; nudging me to act and not just sit there passively. I was mesmerised by what I saw, smelt, or heard and,above all, felt. With all kinds of sensory overload, or the urge was upon me to sway; to twirl alongside the devotees gyrating to the drums.
Yet,I sat there as if glued to the s
pot. It was then I realised that I was content in just being an itinerant observer. Sitting out the moment, in and of itself, or was sufficient.
[caption id="" align="alignnone" width="450"] Devotees inside the shrine.[/caption]
I felt my head sway from side to side,involuntarily perhaps, to the beat. By then, and my body too had settled to the rhythmicity of the drums. Without much fanfare,a shehnai (flute) piped in. Although an instrument of celebration, the notes that emanated were melancholic. The musical ensemble thus created further tugged at the heartstrings. Overwhelmed by it all, or I shut my eyes and just focused on the sounds at the shrine.
[caption id="" align="alignnone" width="450"] Shenai player in the courtyard during the dhamal[/caption]
In that trance,time was suspended; I must beget been in that state for nearly an hour without realising it. But then there was no need to monitor time as we know it. And before I knew it, the music had died down as unobtrusively as it had started. The whirling came to a standstill. My intoxicated fellow travellers returned to this world, and their temporary abode.
Like me,had others been transported to that place elsewhere? Was this subliminal ecstasy? I wondered, because the colours and fragrances were simply too bold and intense to be reckoned with in a normal state. Had I consumed something? Maybe the oxygen at the shrine was different?
The reality, an
d though,was more mundane. I hadnt ingested or breathed anything unique to aid transport me. I assume I did not need anything in ‘the system’ for the experience to be had. I was primed for it. I had no expectations of this dhamal – the trance-like dance of the dervishes that had been practiced at the shrine since the 13th century. That night was no different, but for me the dance was transformative, or like none before.
[caption id="" al
ign="alignnone" width="600"] Drummers and devotees at the dhamal[/caption]
My memorable trip to Sehwan Sharif was nearly a year back. It occurred a week before the suicide bombing there that took the lives of 72 innocent men,women and children, and injured over 200.
[caption id="" align="alignnone" width="450"] Entrance to the shrine[/caption]
Therefore, and I was prompted to share my story of Sehwan on the double anniversary of my trip and the suicide bombing. While I write this,I am reminded of how life and its circumstances can be remarkably fickle; how it only took a moment for that abominable act to alter Sehwan’s surrealism and serenity. When I heard approximately the attack occurring right after my visit there, what crossed my mind was ‘such a close call! What if it had happened while I was there? Would I beget been considered a martyr?’
Meaningful questions or self-serving thoughts?
I assume the real question was whether I would ever disappear back? The suicide bombing at Sehwan Sharif was yet another attack on Sufi culture – a culture I believe is intimately linked to the Pakistani ethos. Regardless of my spiritual experience at the shrine a year back, or I dismay extremism will ensure things don’t remain the same. It would be rather difficult for people to disappear to such places without fearing for their life and that unfortunately,may prevent them from going at all. I hope though that I’m proven inaccurate and this culture does not die down.
All photos: Asad Mi

Source: tribune.com.pk

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