Final Report from Peshawar

REPORT ON THE ‘GREAT NEPAL-INDIA-PAKISTAN SPINAL BEETLE DRIVE’
DATELINE: PESHAWAR, KHYBER PAKHTUNKHWA, 17 November 2011
The ‘Great Nepal-India-Pakistan Spinal Beetle Drive’ arrived in Peshawar on 16 November, ending a 1100-mile odyssey that took the 1973 VW Beetle from Kathmandu through Lucknow, Agra, Delhi, Amritsar, Lahore, Islamabad and Rawalpindi.

“It was an exhilarating journey across the friendly landmass of Southasia, and I hope a pointer towards easy land-crossings for people from all our countries,” says Kanak Mani Dixit, driver of the Beetle. “Most of our journey was along the ancient route which became the Grand Trunk Road, regularised by Sher Shah Suri in the 16th century. The 21st century demands that we open this highway for the people, commerce and ideas to flow.”

The journey of the sky-blue Beetle was conducted with three goals of promoting ‘land connectivity’ in Southasia, developing links between spinal injury institutions across the Subcontinent, and raising funds for the Spinal Injury Rehabilitation Centre in Nepal.

“The matter of land connectivity is important because airline links can never provide the mass-level contact that our people and economies deserve. One would want to see the same cacophony at the Atari-Wagah border as at the Nepal-India border of Bhairahawa-Sunauli, both of which we traversed,” said Dixit.

The trip was helpful in developing linkages between organisations such as the Spinal Centre in Nepal, the Indian Spinal Injuries Centre in Delhi (ISIC), the Mayo Hospital in Lahore, the National Institute for Rehabilitation Medicine in Islamabad, the Armed Forces Institute for Rehabilitation Medicine in Rawalpindi, and the Paraplegic Centre in Peshawar.

As for the goal of raising emergency funds for the Spinal Centre-Nepal in order to cope with sudden rise in demand for its services, Dixit said that a little over half of the USD 110,000 goal had been raised. “We hope to complete our goal through a retroactive campaign because the spinally injured of Nepal are badly in need of the services of the Spinal Centre,” he said.

Dixit is a civil rights activist, writer and journalist who injured his spine in a trekking accident a decade ago. The Spinal Centre was started in 2002 and inaugurated by the late Sir Edmund Hillary.

In the ‘Spinal Beetle’ driven by Dixit, he was accompanied by Shanta Dixit, educator and founding member of the Spinal Centre-Nepal. The back-up car, a Mahindra Bolero, included VW Beetle specialist Naresh Nakarmi, Spinal Centre staff member Suman Khadka, and Eelum Dixit as videographer and photographer. Social worker Meera Jyoti is chair of the Spinal Centre-Nepal. The Spinal Beetle has done the Kathmandu-Dhaka stretch twice, in 2002 and 2005, and touched base at the Centre for the Rehabilitation of the Paralysed (CRP) in Bangladesh. The CRP would be a key institution in the networking of spinal injury rehabilitation institutions that is proposed.

The Spinal Beetle Drive of 2011 was flagged off on 4 November by H.E. President Ram Baran Yadav of Nepal. In New Delhi, it was received by Maj. H.P.S. Ahluwalia, founder of ISIC, as well as journalist Kuldip Nayar and actor Om Puri. The physicist and peace activist A.H. Nayyar received the Spinal Beetle at the Wagah-Atari border. Throughout the Subcontinental drive, the team was graciously hosted by members of the Pakistan-India People's Forum for Peace and Democracy and other organisations, such as the Indian Doctors for Peace and Development in Agra, and Asha for Education in Lucknow.

Among the many interesting aspects of the trip, from the emotional to the historical, Dixit includes the following:

  • The Spinal Beetle team responded to the request of 96-year-old Barkat Singh ‘Pahalwan’ of Jalandhar (Indian Punjab) that some earth be collected from his childhood village of Fatehgarh near Sialkot (Pakistani Punjab). Taking a detour from the GT Road, the team found the place, which had now become an urban suburb of Sialkot, and collected a jarful of agricultural earth for Barkat Singh.

  • The memory of Sher Shah Suri, the Afghan sultan from present-day Bihar who ruled from Agra, followed the team through much of the route, which he had regularised in the mid-16th century as an administrative and commercial artery. His memory was revived by the ‘kos’ markers along the Delhi-Chandigarh stretch of the Grand Trunk Road, a neglected postal station outside Wazirabad in the Pakistani Punjab, the great roadside banyans providing shade to travellers then and even now, and the Rohtas Fort on the approach to Rawalpindi.

  • Having started in the Lumbini region of Nepal, where the Sakyamuni Buddha was born more than 2500 years ago, the Spinal Beetle ended its journey in the Gandhar region around Peshawar, a vast centre for Buddhist learning, art and architecture where the Sakyamuni was first etched in human form a few centuries later. In the Potohar Plateau near Islamabad, the Spinal Beetle visited the gigantic Buddhist stupa at the village of Manikyal.

  • Arriving in Agra, the Spinal Beetle team visited the Taj Mahal on the day of Eid ul-Adha. In Amritsar, it visited Harminder Saheb (the Golden Temple) on the Guru Nanak’s birthday. Passing Gorkha District of Nepal (named after the Gorakhnath temple situated there), the Spinal Beetle traversed Gorakhpur, the base of the Nath sect, and ended its journey in Peshawar where the team visited the Gorakhnath Temple in the old city, opened just a month previously after 60 years of closure. The Delhi-Amritsar leg of the journey was started with a visit to the dargah of the Sufi saint Nizamuddin Aulia.

  • After watching the mock-militarist show at the Wagah-Atari border between the Indian and Pakistani goose-stepping men in khaki, that very evening the team attended a play on Bhagat Singh and his fight for Indian independence, put on by the Ajoka Theatre of Lahore.

  • The Bharatpur government hospital in Chitwan District of Nepal was the first stop of the Spinal Beetle out of Kathmandu. Led by spinal specialist Dr. Krishna Prasad Poudel, the hospital sought help for setting up a spinal injury rehabilitation unit, which is in line with the Spinal Centre’s own vision of decentralising rehabilitation. As a gesture of goodwill for the Nepal-India-Pakistan drive, the hospital committee donated NRs 50,000, which was gratefully received.

  • In New Delhi, Maj. H.P.S. Ahluwalia of ISIC suggested that Dixit work to set up a Southasian network for spinal injury rehabilitation, given the urgency and specificity of the need. There was enthusiastic response to this idea of a network throughout the rest of the trip all the way to the Paraplegic Centre in Peshawar.

  • At the Mayo Hospital in Lahore, the Medical Superintendent Dr. Zahid Pervaiz and Head of Rehabilitation Medicine Dr. Khalid Jamil Akhtar provided information on spinal injury and trauma response that had been developed in Pakistan. They graciously offered four-year full fellowships for two doctors to be sent by the Spinal Centre-Nepal.

  • In Islamabad, the Nepal team got specific information on the response to the 2005 earthquake which hit Kashmir and the Hazara division. The team invited Pakistani activists and specialists to Kathmandu to share information on the medical, rescue, social work and humanitarian aspects, so that Nepal would be better able to tackle the mega-tremor that is projected to hit Kathmandu Valley and surrounding areas before long. The activist Nafeesa Inayatullah introduced the team to the Melody Theatre, which had served as a staging ground for the sudden rush of victims from the 2005 earthquake. Poignantly, this only cinema hall of the city had been set to torch by a radical mob some years earlier.

  • In Agra, members of the Indian Doctors for Peace and Development reminded the team that while there were 8-9 neurosurgeons in the city, there was no rehabilitation centre. There was agreement that such a facility was needed in the city, and in subsequent conversations specialists from Pakistan, Nepal and elsewhere in India were all willing to help with advice and support.

  • The Volkswagen Club of Pakistan (VCP), headed by its president Romano Karim, took the Spinal Beetle under its wings in Islamabad and made sure that the car was made ship-shape after the long and steady climb up from the Jhelum plain. Discussion was started with the club members about organising a VW Beetle rally from Islamabad all the way to Dhaka through India and via Kathmandu, as an exemplary means to develop people-to-people contact in the Subcontinent. This would require cooperation between the VCP, the Association of Nepal’s Beetle Users (ANBUG), the Volkswagen Club of Bangladesh, and the VW Beetle community in India.

  • At a meeting organised by the Pakistan-India People's Forum for Peace and Democracy and the Islamabad Cultural Forum, Dixit spoke on the theme of ‘land connectivity’ in Southasia. “If on an old VW Beetle can do the Kathmandu-to-Peshawar trip with ease, imagine how easy it will be for everyone else.” At this time of geopolitical rapprochement between India, Pakistan and Bangladesh, a special push must be made for land connectivity, he added. “Let a hundred thousand networks bloom across Southasia, in the spectrum from spinal injury to VW Beetles and beyond, to bring the people together.”

A fund-raising drive: The Spinal Beetle Drive was an effort to raise awareness of spinal injury prevention, rescue, care and rehabilitation in the Subcontinent. It was also, crucially, an effort to raise funds for the Spinal Centre-Nepal. The sudden rise of the number of patients over the last year has forced the centre to raise its service from 39 beds to 51. We sought to raise USD 110,000 from the 1100 mile journey of the Spinal Beetle, at the ‘rate’ of USD 100 per mile from friends and supporters worldwide. By the time the Spinal Beetle arrived at Peshawar on 16 November, about half that amount had been raised. The management and staff have now set their sights on raising the full amount by the time of the 10th anniversary of the Spinal Centre-Nepal, in April 2012.

NOTE ON BACKGROUND AND IMAGES
Background on the Spinal Centre Nepal as well as pictures of the Spinal Beetle’s journey can be downloaded at ‘Selected Photographs’ at www.sirc.org.np.
Twitter: @SpinalNepal . Facebook: Spinal Nepal

Kanak Mani Dixit contact
kanakd@himalmag.com
dixitkanak@yahoo.com
Facebook: kanak mani dixit
Tel: +977-1-5552141
Nepal Mobile: +977-9851053209
India Mobile: +91-9560758147
Pakistan Mobile: +92-3043005089

Kathmandu Contact
Esha Thapa, Director
Spinal Injury Rehabilitation Centre
Saanga, Kavre District
Tel: +977 11 660847/48
Mob: +977-9851070320
spinalinju@wlink.com.np
eshthapa@hotmail.com
www.sirc.org.np

New Delhi
Dr. H.S. Chabbra
Medical Director
Indian Spinal Injuries Centre
Vasant Kunj, New Delhi
Ph : +91 11 4225 5225 / Ext 243 / 356
Cell : + 91 98100 54854
email:drhschhabra@isiconline.org
Web : www.isiconline.org

Lahore
Dr. Khalid Jamil Akhtar
Head of Department
Department of Rehabilitation Medicine
Mayo Hospital, Lahore                                                                                                 
Office: +92-42-6699-36174
Mob: +92-301-8411-125
bigbrotherpakistan@gmail.com
drkhalidjamil@yahoo.com

Peshawar
Ilyas M Syed
CEO, Paraplegic Center
Hayatabad, Peshawar
ilyassyed1@yahoo.com
Ph: 92-919217900-2