Sunday 14 July 2019

On 25th August in 1966, a Pakhtun Doctor, Aurang Shah, was shot dead by his patient in this building in Sacramento, California. The shooting occurred in the room encircled in the attached photo. So who was this doctor and what is his story?

Dr. Nafees Ur Rehman (Twitter @NafeesRehmanDr)

On 25th August in 1966, a Pakhtun Doctor, Aurang Shah, was shot dead by his patient in this building in Sacramento, California. The shooting occurred in the room encircled in the below photo.

So who was this doctor and what is his story?

Let's have a look at his life and his political activism for Pakhtunistan.

Photo Source: https://sacramento.pastperfectonline.com

Dr. Aurang Shah was born in the village of Manki in Swabi (present day in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Pakistan) in the family of Rahim Shah Faqirkhel. There is, however, confusion around his Date of Birth. According to Mian Wakil Shah Faqirkhel, he was born in 1890, same year when Bacha Khan was born. But according to findgrave.com, he was born on August 5, 1896.

There is a reason for highlighting this inconsistency in his DOB. Acc. to Mian Wakil Shah's write-up published on the Afghan Express Blog (https://afghanexpress.wordpress.com/), Aurang Shah was offered job as a Tehsildar by the D.C Peshawar as soon as he did his matriculation in 1905. While according to the book The Joffrey Ballet: Robert Joffrey and the Making of an American Dance Company, Aurang Shah and his brother Daulat Khan both attended Bacha Khan's school. Please note that the first school that Bacha Khan had opened in 1910 was in a mosque and it was shut down by the British in 1915. So I wonder if British offered jobs to the graduates (if there were any graduates in the first place in the 5 years of school operation) of Bacha Khan's school.


On the other hand, the book The Joffrey Ballet: Robert Joffrey and the Making of an American Dance Company published 1997, contains interviews of Dr. Aurang shah's son, Naim Shah and his cousins, adding more credibility to the book's take on the subject of schooling.





But lets leave this topic here and discuss Dr. Aurang Shah's journey to the US, his education and his political struggles for Pashtunistan. Aurang Shah and his brother Daulat Khan were encouraged by their mother to go to the US for further education. Their father had earlier been murdered owing to a feud, possibly a family feud. 

So in 1916, they boarded a freighter to the US. Below is the account of their journey.



Both brothers had lived their american dream. They started off with selling food on pushcarts with their own original recipe of chili that earned them big bucks later. With that money, they parted ways and pursued different careers.



Daulat opened a restaurant in Seattle while Aurang Shah did his MA from Harvard and then obtained a medial degree from the Tufts - achieving the goals that he & his mother had setup for him. Even after success, the two brothers always carried the chili recipe in their wallets.


Aurang Shah was always politically active and founded Azad Pakhtunistan Association of America in 1928 in California and with this he also founded the idea of an independent Pashtunistan/Pakhtunistan. According to Mian Wakil Shah, Dr. Aurang would send funds to Bacha Khan to support his political agenda. Its worth-noting that Bacha Khan was against the partition of India meaning he wasn't for an independent Pakhtunistan, at least not until the partition was agreed upon.

According to a recent PhD study[1], Aurang Shah's political activism was sparked after creation of Pakistan when Bacha Khan got arrested. This contradicts the account presented by Mian Wakil Faqirkhel that Dr. Aurang Shah was actively pursuing the idea of Pashtunistan since 1928.




Mian Wakil Shah didn't provide any references and sources in support of this claim neither have I been able to find them. On the other hand, there is a lot of evidence that points to Dr. Aurang Shah political acivitism post Pakistan's creation.

For example, the pro-Pashtunistan protest in 1950 in California when Pakistani premier, Liaquat Ali Khan visited USA.

Kabul, Number 267, Volume 20, Issue 7, June 22, 1950; Kabul Afghanistan.



And the letters that he wrote to the editor in the Sacramento Bee [1] protesting the arrest of Bacha Khan in Pakistan, and US refusal to issue visa to Bacha khan in 1956 and 1965.


This shall give a better picture of Dr. Aurang Shah's activism for Pashtunistan supported by Afghanistan.

Afghanistan awarded him the 2nd highest civil award for his activism.





However, as we all know, the idea of Pashtunistan never materialized owing to the fact that there was not enough public and political support behind it.


On 25th of August, 1966 when he was in his clinic, a disgruntled patient named Lovato shot him dead with a pistol. According to his will, he was buried in Kabul and his funeral was also attended by king Zahir Shah of Afghanistan and Khan Abdul Ghaffar Khan aka Bacha Khan.


Bibliography:

1. Baden, J. (2018). Through Disconnection and Revival: Afghan American Relations with Afghanistan, 1890-2016. (Electronic Thesis or Dissertation). Retrieved from https://etd.ohiolink.edu/
2. Anawalt, S. (1998). The Joffrey Ballet: Robert Joffrey and the making of an American dance company. University of Chicago Press.
3. Kabul, Number 267, Volume 20, Issue 7, June 22, 1950; Kabul Afghanistan.
4. Sacramento Archives, URL https://sacramento.pastperfectonline.com/, accessed July 8, 2019.
5. FindAGrave.com, (URL: https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/128232028/aurang-shah), accessed July 8, 2019.
6. Article د پښتونستان د تصور ګمنام خالق, Mian Wakil Shah Faqirkhel (URL https://afghanexpress.wordpress.com/) accessed July 8, 2019.

No comments: