World’s highest battleground takes centre stage

Published November 1, 2015
A scene from the play Siachen staged at PNCA on Saturday. — Photo by Khurram Amin
A scene from the play Siachen staged at PNCA on Saturday. — Photo by Khurram Amin

ISLAMABAD: Anwar Maqsood and Dawar Mehmood’s Siachen opened at the Pakistan National Council of Arts (PNCA) on Saturday.

The play is based on the projection that tensions between India and Pakistan have dwindled and that warm relations is a probable outcome. The play is an amalgamation of situations facing young soldiers posted to the Siachen region over a six month period. It is a poignant reminded that soldiers on the frontlines are young, and human.

The play opens with the vignettes of a mother whose third son is heading to the India-Pakistan border, a wife who is sending off her husband, a son being bribed with a football to let his father leave, and a sister parting with her brother. Mr Maqsood is heard interpreting the conversations to express that they believe their loved ones will return.

A young man holding an isolated post gives a monologue on the probability of dying for Pakistan and charging forth to destroy the enemy singlehandedly, before his fellow soldiers join him and mock his grandiloquence. One of the other soldiers holding the post is haunted by the ghost of his father, and others receive visitations as well.

In another instance, Pakistani soldiers have screaming bouts of conversation with their Indian counterparts, over a Pakistan-India cricket match which almost leads to the end of the ceasefire.

The play also features a young BBC journalist, who comes to the region to interview the soldiers.

Siachen inspires laughter, tears and everything in between. It highlights the brutality of war but also makes heroes of the soldiers from whom battles are a way of life, and duty. Mr Maqsood’s script was exemplary, walking a fine line between glorifying soliders and ridiculing war, while Mr Mehmood has brought his words into fruition.

“An absolutely fantastic performance about the highest battleground on Earth,” said Dure Najaf. “[It] made me intensely proud of the young men who protect our country.”

Rashid Khan said: “It was a very good play, about an area we all hear about but have never been to. The message of peace, too, was very strong.”

Published in Dawn, November 1st, 2015

On a mobile phone? Get the Dawn Mobile App: Apple Store | Google Play

Opinion

Editorial

Some progress
Updated 27 Mar, 2025

Some progress

The hard-won macroeconomic stability is only a short distance away from a deeper crisis.
Time to talk
27 Mar, 2025

Time to talk

IN an encouraging development, the government has signalled openness to PPP chairman Bilawal Bhutto-Zardari’s ...
Black Sea truce
27 Mar, 2025

Black Sea truce

WHILE the Trump administration may have no problem with Israel renewing its rampage in Gaza, it is playing ...
Kabul visit
Updated 26 Mar, 2025

Kabul visit

Islamabad should continue to emphasise that presence of terrorists on Afghan soil stands in the way of normal commercial ties.
Drought warning
26 Mar, 2025

Drought warning

DRIVEN by rising temperatures linked to climate change, increasing drought events across Pakistan have affected tens...
Deadly roads
26 Mar, 2025

Deadly roads

DESPITE daytime restrictions on heavy vehicles, Karachi continues to witness one horrific traffic accident after...