Page 9 - Seniors Today Jan20 Issue
P. 9

While I was in my final year my father passed        technology. The area from Japan to the Middle
        away and that was a huge blow. Driven by the          East, including Pakistan, were my territory.
        emotional trauma of my father’s death and the         After the Partition I was very reluctant to visit
        need to be independent. I decided to join the Navy    Pakistan in spite of being the Director of Region
        and to my good luck I was selected. However,          Ten. However, I went to Pakistan and had
        while waiting to be commissioned I saw an             meetings in Lahore and Rawalpindi but I longed
        announcement in the paper for a government            for Peshawar because that was my home. My wife
        scholarship to study at the Queens University,        also joined me on these conferences and always
        Canada for a course in electrical engineering.        looked forward to visiting Pakistan as much
        To my surprise I was awarded the scholarship          as I did. She had spent a lot of her childhood in
        to study power engineering at one of Canada’s         Rawalpindi and this would have been the first
        premier institutions, in Kingston near Toronto.       time since Partition that we would be going there.
        The Navy agreed to release me from their              The schedule for the Pakistan conference was
        employment and I set out for Canada in 1946.          one day in Karachi, one day in Islamabad and

         My family were among the leading business            two days in Lahore.
        houses in Peshawar. We owned a large
        department store called Kirpa Ram & Brothers,         Swarn Kohli:
        and had over a hundred employees, right from          I was born in Rawalpindi. My grandfather was
        horsemen, coachmen, tailors, accountants, store       a well-known lawyer. My father was a sugar
        managers, etc. We lived in a lavish house above       technologist, his elder brother was a lawyer
        Kirpa Ram & Brothers and it was one of the            and the younger was in insurance. Twice a year
        largest establishments in Peshawar. I left in 1946    we all congregated in Rawalpindi. I studied
        from an undivided India. After doing my masters       in a boarding school in Simla in Tara Hall, a
        at MIT I worked with General Electric for some        branch of Loretto Convent. I happened to come
        time and when I returned in 1951 India was            to Rawalpindi for my brother’s mundan (the
        divided. The Partition had affected my family in      ceremony when a child’s head is shaved for
        numerous ways and in the meanwhile I got a job        the first time). It was like a mini wedding. My
        offer from the Tata’s and I decided to stay back in   grandfather decided that he would like to keep
        India.                                                me with him in Rawalpindi. I was the eldest
         When the troubles started in January 1947,           grandchild and his will overrode everything else.
        my brother’s families were sent on a holiday to       I left Tara Hall and got relocated to Rawalpindi.
        Mussoorie where Kirpa Ram & Brothers had               Since people in school did not speak English
        another leading departmental store. My mother         well and I was good at the subject, I was given
        decided that she was going to stay back and my        a double promotion, going from the sixth grade
        eldest brother stayed back with her. One evening
        the governor of the province came over to see
        my mother and convinced her to catch the last
        chartered flight out of Peshawar where he had
        reserved last two seats for them. My mother was
        reluctant but he would have none of it and said
        he could not guarantee their safety, and they had
        to leave right then. My mother wanted to go to the
        bank and bring all her jewellery, but he told her
        to come back later. She packed a small bag with
        two pairs of clothes, her medicines and she left.
         In the 1970s I got an opportunity to visit
        Pakistan again. At that time I was the director of
        Region Ten, an institute of electrical engineering
        9                                                                    SENIORS TODAY | Issue #7 |  January 15,  2020
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