Partition of India

The summer of 1947, shortly before India gained independence from Britain and split into two nations, was one of the worst ever periods in the country’s history, with riots, killing and burning throughout the country on a horrendous scale. In this part of Saeed’s memoirs, he describes the tensions in the city of Lahore at the time — as well as the “moment of great joy, elation and pride when, at the stroke of midnight between 13th and 14th August 1947, we heard in the stately and pure-washed language of the announcer Shakeel Ahmed: This is the Pakistan Broadcasting Corporation, Assalam-u Alaikum Radio Pakistan, Lahore, Shakeel Ahmed at your service. Pakistan Zindabad.”

“I can still”, writes my father, “vividly remember the thrill that went through my body on hearing that historic announcement.”

Click the link below to read more.

Pages24_26_Partition

Life at Government College Lahore: part 1

Saeed Durrani was educated between the ages of 15 and 22 at Government College Lahore — a premier educational institution that had been founded in 1865. He came fifth out of about 55,000 candidates in a province-wide matriculation exam to gain entry to the College in 1946 and was the top candidate from outside Lahore and the highest-placed Muslim student. This section from the memoirs includes Saeed’s early experiences at the college and his involvement in protest movements against the British for the freedom of India and the creation of a new country — Pakistan. Those protests culminated in him getting arrested and spending 12 days in prison. Rich curries provided by his Auntie Shafqat, however, led to him gaining 12kg in weight while in jail.

Read more by clicking on the link below.

Pages19_24_GovtColl_Part1

Early Days at Cambridge

This next selection from Saeed Durrani’s memoirs describes how he settled in at the University of Cambridge as  a new PhD student in 1953. The transition from Pakistan to 1950s England was something of a culture shock, not least because it meant having to learn how to eat peas off the back of a fork, taking cold showers and getting his own clothes washed for the first time. He did manage, though, to “save a few pennies” by never giving his socks for washing…though this had some rather unfortunate (and malodorous ) consequences.

Click the link below to read more.

Pages17_18_EarlyDaysAtCambridge

Arrival in England

This part of Saeed Durrani’s memoirs describes his first experiences as a 23-year-old arriving in England from Pakistan in the autumn of 1953. He had left his homeland to begin a PhD in nuclear physics at the University of Cambridge, taking up residence at Gonville and Caius College.

Click the link below to read more.

Pages15_16_Arrival_in_England

Welcome to Saeed Durrani’s memoirs

Hello. My name is Matin Durrani and welcome to a new blog that contains selected parts of the memoirs of my father, Professor Saeed Durrani.

He wrote the memoirs beteween 2008 and 2009 and, after I had them typed up, proofread, and printed out, I presented them to him in December 2012 on the occasion of his 50th wedding anniversary.

The memoirs are almost 240,000 words long — over half the length of War and Peace — and over the next few months I intend to add  interesting chunks of the memoirs to this blog.

I won’t include everything that’s in the memoirs, but will post selected highlights that will be of most interest to readers.

So let’s get going…