Friday, April 19, 2024

PROPOSAL FOR A PROGRAM “HELLO LAHORE” FROM THE FUTURE ALL INDIA RADIO STATION IN AMRITSAR

Suraiya
Harjap Singh Aujla
Shut down abruptly in 1953, All India Radio is in the process of resurrection once again in Amritsar. The old station was operating in the medium-wave spectrum. This new station will be modern, digital and in the FM mode. The construction project is moving at a snail’s pace, but even a tortoise can be expected to finish the race. Let us hope the long delayed project finishes without much delay and the people living in the border belt of Punjab can get the news, information and entertainment from their own public sector broadcasting organ. Our brethren living across the Radcliffe line are enjoying a very powerful and well meaning Pakistan Broadcasting Service from its second most powerful radio station in Lahore. India has been complacent for too long. Work on the Amritsar broadcasting tower started in May of 2007 without the customary fanfare associated with the foundation stone laying ceremony. The work of the foundation went according to the schedule, but the above ground super-structure proceeded at a dull pace. In 2014, the contractor abruptly stopped the work at an elevation of 280 meters, instead of the full height of 300 meters. The matter is in litigation now. I still have a faint hope that the stalled work will restart soon and the border people will have a state of the art FM service of All India Radio.
No project can really succeed without proper planning. When the British authorities built All India Radio in Lahore in 1937, they relied on the vast experience gained from the working of the British Broadcasting Corporation. All India Radio does not lack in experience, but the needs of the benefitting areas in the Amritsar – Lahore belt are different. Prior to 1947, Lahore and Amritsar were regarded as twin cities. In fact Amritsar was considered as the business and industrial satellite of the administrative, educational and cultural capital of Punjab, the grand city of Lahore. Just as Amritsar falls within the local medium-wave and FM range of Radio Pakistan Lahore, by the same yardstick Lahore falls within the local range of All India Radio’s Amritsar station. There is no way to stop the people of Amritsar from tuning in to the air-waves of Radio Pakistan Lahore. Likewise there is no way to stop the dwellers of Lahore from tuning in to the signals of yet to be commissioned All India Radio Amritsar. There is a lot in common between the populations of the two cities. Amritsar district used to be a part of Lahore division. They shared a common language and a similar dialect. Many artists from Amritsar flourished in Lahore and the singers and musicians of both cities enriched the film industry of Bombay.
Lahore and Amritsar enjoy a lot of common bonds. The rich elite of Lahore had its manufacturing units in the Chheharta, Khasa, Verka and Ferozepore (Tarntaran) road industrial clusters of Amritsar. If Lahore was the capital of Punjab Province, Amritsar was its financial and industrial capital. Several top notch singers of Amritsar used to sing for All India Radio in Lahore and they were cutting discs of their music in the studios of the Genophone Recording Company, owned by Janki Nath Kumar and brothers of Lahore and the studios of His Master’s Voice recording company in Lahore. Lahore’s retail store owners used to get their supplies from the whole-sale merchants of Amritsar. All that was lost in 1947.

I have a plan for reviving the age old friendship and comradery between the people of Lahore and Amritsar, through the medium of All India Radio in Amritsar. A host of film music directors, poets and singers migrated from Lahore to Bombay. They all flourished in Bombay. Among them were music directors Husan Lal and Bhagat Ram, Pandit Gobind Ram, Master Hans Raj Behl, Roshan, Vinod, Allah Rakha, Ghulam Haider, Shyam Sunder, Khayyam, S. Mohinder, Sardul Singh Kwatra to name a few. The poets of Lahore, who migrated to Bombay among others included Dina Nath Madhok, Rajinder Krishan, Aziz Kashmiri, Mulkh Raj Bhakhri, Naksh Lyallpuri, Qamar Jalalabadi and Manohar Singh Sehrai. The most prominent singers of Lahore who ended up in Bombay included Suraiya, Shamshad Begum, Zeenat Begum, Noorjehan, Surinder Kaur and Mohammed Rafi. The finest songs of all these artists can be picked up and broadcast in a one hour program daily. We can name this program as “Hello Lahore”. The people in Pakistan will be, I am sure, hooked to this full of nostalgia show. Vice – versa, a similar program can be presented on the airwaves of Radio Pakistan Lahore, which will be equally popular in the border areas of Indian Punjab. This is a way to build cultural and linguistic friendship between the two otherwise feuding nations. In the initial stages I can write the script, choose the songs and assist All India Radio Amritsar in preparing this program.
Harjap

harjapaujla@gmail.com

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