Who is lal khan
He wanted to study medicine, to become a doctor. And the intolerable injustices of society led him to seek the road to socialist revolution.
One of the hardest things he had to bear was not being able to be with his father when he died, being unable to travel to Pakistan under the dictatorship. But he remembered his father with great fondness. Remember you are a soldier. Never turn your back on the enemy.
If you are going to be killed, make sure that you are shot from the front. In the s, Tanvir was a student of medicine in college and a political activist in Pakistan, participating in gun battles with the fanatical Islamist counterrevolutionaries on campus. After the military coup led by General Zia-ul-Haq he was imprisoned for a year. He managed to escape to the Netherlands in , where he began to organise a group of left-wing Pakistani exiles around a paper called The Struggle.
It was at this time that he went to London with the express purpose of establishing contact with the leading British Marxist, Ted Grant. From the very first moment, Ted formed a warm friendship with this young Pakistani revolutionary, of whom he had a very high opinion. For his part, the attitude of Tanvir towards Ted was one of profound admiration, almost, one might say, of reverence. In his house in Lahore, a large photograph of Ted with Tanvir still occupies pride of place on the wall.
I was in Spain at that time, conducting revolutionary activity. But I often met Tanvir at international meetings, and we struck up a great friendship. Like Ted, I had a very high opinion of his abilities. Towards the end of the s, he decided to go back to Pakistan. Although the situation had improved after the death of the hated dictator in an air crash, undoubtedly an assassination, the situation in Pakistan remained very difficult.
Ted had doubts as to the wisdom of his return, but Tanvir persisted, and achieved remarkable results in a short space of time, starting virtually from nothing. At the time of split in the International, Tanvir was absolutely firm in his support for the minority led by Ted Grant. I was made responsible for Pakistan section of what later became the IMT and visited the country on many occasions. I have very fond memories of those visits, during which I was able to observe first-hand the extraordinary growth and development of the Pakistan section.
Of course, there were difficulties and problems of all sorts, but despite all the problems, the section grew by leaps and bounds. The congresses of the Pakistan organisation were very impressive affairs, although, to tell the truth, they were more like rallies than congresses in the proper sense of the word.
This is not the place for me to talk in any detail about the political activities and achievements of the section. Nor is it the purpose of an obituary to do so. However, I must say that I met some very extraordinary people during these visits. On DawnNews. Latest Stories. Most Popular Must Read. Shazminay Durrani. He was imprisoned for a year, then went to a university in Islamabad.
He moved to Netherlands in and during his time in exile, he graduated from an Amsterdam university. He returned to the country in and quit his profession as a doctor, in order to work full-time for the politics of Left. He was the leading member of.
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