I’m here (can you be anywhere else?) (a shaming question, ultimately). Â Bill Bryson said this of foreign travel: “Your whole existence becomes a series of interesting guesses.” Â Not sure if my guesses have been interesting (“we have those kind of trees at home, I think”), but Islamabad has been fascinating, all 16 hours of it. Â So, without any real understanding of what’s going on, here’s what I’ve done:
I found my way to the Fulbright House with the help of Sikandar, the night driver and a really engaging tour guide. Â I like arriving in the middle of the night (3:00 am) because the morning is such a revelation. Â Here’s what I woke up to, along with wonderful birdsong and the faint scent of smoke:Â
Not bad, ya think? (Hello, Heather Meyer). Â For the foreseeable future I’m the only resident in the Fulbright House, along with a cook, two drivers, and three guards. Â Javed, the cook, has made me two delicious meals (including yellow dahl, Â an okra and eggplant dish, and rice that seemed like it could float if gravity were different). Â It’s strange to be sitting alone at a huge table with three English-language Pakistani newspapers. Â I feel like Orson Welles in “Citizen Kane,” although I’ll be more like the Orson Welles of the Paul Masson wine commercials if I keep eating like this. Â To distract from that image, here’s what the outside of the house looks like:
It’s odd having this many people devoted to my well-being. Â An imbalance, to say the least. Â The day driver (Ali, also very nice) took Ahsan (from the Fulbright office) and me out to do some errands, all of which would have been mundane at home but were fascinating here in Pakistan. Â I got a SIM card for the cell phone and actually figured out how to add a contact on a Pakistani device. Â I should go home now because this is the achievement of the century (for me). Â There are armed guards and metal detectors everywhere, and the phone outlet was no exception. Â Same thing with the super market (called Super Market) where Javed, who joined us, took me to get some shampoo, tooth paste, and corn flakes. Â As a vegetarian I didn’t buy the delicacy in the photo below, although I have to say they sound tempting:
Before dinner Sikandar took me on a tour of the Red Zone which is where all the governmental buildings are. Â Photography is forbidden, so I can’t post any photos of the beautiful, stark, angular, glowing-white supreme court building or the turreted office of the prime minister. Â Islamabad is a concocted city; it only became the capital in 1961 and was built specifically for that purpose. Â I read in some travel blog that parts of it look like a wealthy Southern California suburb. Â That’s kind of true. Â The architecture is all very horizontal and angular with gleaming white surfaces flecked with quartz, but the crazy vegetation and the brash neon signs undercut the Mission Viejo-ness of it all. Â (No offense, Mission Viejo) (well, a little offense, actually).
(Imagine a photo of a government building here)
After dinner Sikandar took me to Saeed Book Bank (“Book Sellers to the Nation: Making Books Accessible and Knowledge Affordable”) where I bought two more Mohsin Hamid books. Â Truly wonderful to amble around this enormous, three-story bookstore. Â If they called it a Book Emporium I would applaud that choice. Â The Barnes and Noble in my neighborhood (“Book Sellers to the Ambivalent: Making Independent Bookstores Vanish and Coffee-Drinks Unaffordable”) was replaced by a mini-Target and so I’ve missed wandering about the stacks and coming across something I didn’t know I needed. Â Here’s something I didn’t even know existed until tonight, which is a consequence of ambling without a target/Target (sorry):
Tomorrow I meet with someone from Theatre Wallay, the organization that is hosting me here in Pakistan. Â I’m looking forward to getting started. Â I also realize how incredibly lucky I am to be here. Â All day I kept thinking, “I’m in Pakistan.” Â How weird. Â I do like feeling unmoored and uncertain. Â Everything feels like it’s slightly beyond my control. Â This morning I poured honey into my lap instead of on for the toast. Â For instance.
No “mixed” snooker? Is the table in the street just for the night? There’s more to this story…. but what a fun discovery!
I’ll have to go back and check (and I should read up on snooker…I called it “pool” and was corrected, politely).
Glad you made it!! Love the posts!
Xoxo
Bebo and Zaz
Love you guys!
Chicken donuts! With honey!!!
Looks amazing.