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Bachlakra

Located in the district of Mirpur and the Tehsil (translation: sub-division) of Dadyal, it is one of over 50 villages within the area. Dadyal could be considered to be a ‘mini-county’ of the region of Azad (free) Kashmir which is a segment of Kashmir annexed by the Islamic Republic of Pakistan during its conflict with India over the territory in 1948.

Bachlakra or Bashkarla literally means ‘the middle one’ in the Pahari/Pothwari dialect of the Punjabi language. It can be found on the world map at 33.2933 degrees Latitude and 73.6268 degrees Longitude. It is also locally referred to as Dhok Bhattian (where Bhatti is the ‘surname’ and is proudly used by many of the inhabitants).

The village is surrounded on all four sides by a range of hills and furthermost by mountains and other villages such as Ankar, Khadimabad, Chattroh, Kandor, Mohra Maera (Zameendar), Mohra Mistrian (Mughal), Batli, Phalla and Mohra Malk (Maan).

The village is inhabited by and hails from the descendants of Rajput’s and the common ancestry actually hails from Hindu castes. The name Bhatti is also found among Punjabi Sikhs. People from the village are known as or referred to as Bhatti Rajput caste. It was much later down the generations that conversion to Islam took place, estimated to be around end of the fifteenth century as the Mughals (descents of the Mongols) expanded into the region. A family tree for all the descendants of the village exists going back 26 generations. Over 400 years ago when one of three brothers by the name of Allah Ditta came to live in and formalise the establishment of this village that subsequently became known as Ankar-Bachlakra. Since its inception, the population multiplied to establish approximately 29 households of which different offspring intermarried and grew the population further. However, in the current period, the village is all but empty of the original descendants of Allah Ditta. It has become a ghost town with only flickers of semblance of the once thriving community of inter-related family members with long-standing interactions with neighbouring villages.

The family tree dates back 27 generations which is approximated as 800 years. By far the earliest mention amongst the family trees in possession of the village family Muslim identity is of an individual by the name of Raja Muksi. This is approximately 450-480 years ago, amounting to roughly 16 generations, where one generation is defined as 30 years.

During the partition era of 1947 many of the villages in and around the area of were occupied by Muslims, but there were also many which were Hindu or Sikh. This was the time of Hari Singh of the Dogra era. Hari Singh dithered as to which way to go; Pakistan or India. Eighty per cent of the territory of Jammu and Kashmir was Muslim, as it is now. As Kashmir ultimately joined with India, under the rule of Hari Singh, it led to intense communal violence. Naturally, elders in the village do not generally discuss any of the violence during partition against innocent men, women and children by pretty much both sides. Other official and personal accounts support that this is what happened. The Hindus were numerically outnumbered, and so ultimately left for the Indian side. Other Muslims subsequently came to the surrounding villages and took over the land as their own. The main family graveyard to the east of the village has one of the oldest traceable graves of one of the ancestors Allah Ditta. As far as can be traced back the inhabitants of Bachlakra have always been all family members and their main professions have been landowners, their trade has been artisans (predominantly tailors, also known as Darzi’s) and teachers of Quranic Arabic to children from the local villages. Anecdotal evidence suggests that the elders used to sew clothes by hand using a needle and thread as opposed to any machinery which arrived much later. This system of trade as tailors reflected the nature of clusters of the local villages, of which specialised in one form of craft. For example, the Misthri were builders and carpenters, and there were some individuals who were barbers (Nai), cobblers (Mochi), Kumhar (potters), Bathere/Pathere (brick makers), Qasai (butchers) and ironmongers (Lohar). These skills were able to support a system of landownership, enterprise and regional development. Power and authority was often held in the lands of wealthy landowning classes, the Rajas and Chaudhry’s. In some instances these were figures of hate and bitterness, particularly if they were exploitative, however many were benevolent and respecting of the needs and aspirations of the artisan classes. Each one had a very important part to play in the structure and support of the local system.

Originally the family of Qazi Noor Ahmed and son Abdullah were ones who started teaching Quranic Arabic and Sunnah to the young and in some cases the old from the surrounding villages. This was later also taken up by other village members and continues to this day. The fact that most individuals, mainly the men, were educated to some level meant that they were in a prime position for sorting out disputes and problems for other villages. The elders of the village throughout the years were very much respected by the other surrounding villages because of their honesty and integrity. For example the Numbardar, (a person responsible for the collection of Malia, a tax which was later abolished) and whose task it was to measuring peoples land, was an advocate for the village in all disputes involving land, rites of passage or water flow through the village. It was an unpaid position, it was first held by Abbas Ali, then Zaman Ali, then Fazal Rehman, and then finally by Mohammed Zaman Bhatti. Dr Fazal Elahi was an individual who put the name of Bachlakra firmly on the map in our region. He ran clinics on a Thursday and a Friday. Patients travelled for miles often bypassing conventional healthcare to be seen by Dr Fazal given his fame and notoriety. Not a formally educated medical practitioner in the westernised sense, his genius was in the use of local and folk hakim-based practices fused with a healthy dose of positive inter-personal psychology.

The original village mosque built over 200 years ago was built by Sikh builders in the time of Ilm Din and Sharf Din was one of the first in the local area and was rebuilt recently and is currently named as Masjid Shan-e-Ali. People from the surrounding villages were regular frequenters of the village mosque until they had their own mosques built. The building of Mangla dam in 1962/3 and the subsequently raising of the water level for the dam meant that the previous source of water from the flowing waters of the river Jhelum would be difficult to harness. In 1956 the village water well located next to the mosque was inaugurated and was used by pretty much all the local villages in the area up to the early 80s where upon the other villages realised their own water sources. With the expansion of the hydro-electricity grids provided by the Mangla dam, by the early 80s a water pump and piping system was used to provide water to all the homes of the village.

Historically, when in many cases it became apparent that certain families in the village could not make a decent standard of living, the men folk would go onto join the merchant navy ships of the East India trading company and the China trading company. The village was fortunate to have Habibullah as the first Sarang and then later his nephew Mehtab Din as a Sarang. They both spoke English and it was the Sarang’s duty to recruit people for the merchant steam ships. The village has had individuals who were in the armed forces for British India. During the Second World War as many as 30 men saw action while serving on the ships, often as stokers or foremen, who then found themselves transporting goods to support, for example, the Battle of the Atlantic. Many from the local villages served on the ships and a number perished in action. Some were shot in the water by Japanese who subsequently captured and imprisoned them in their infamous prisoner of war camps. For those who survived, medals of bravery and honour were handed out. After the end of the war, some of these elders took the decision to move to England and from the process of chain migration began, culminating in the current period where all but a few households find themselves as immigrants and minorities in the UK. Over the years, a number of individuals from the village were encouraged to join the military such as Mehboob Alam Bhatti with the Pakistani Army and Ghulam Younas Bhatti the Pakistani Navy who then subsequently settled in the sea port city of Karachi in Pakistan. Apart from migration mainly to the United Kingdom and USA, descendants of the village also live in other areas of Azad Kashmir such as Potha and Siakh. Some families moved to Gujar Khan in Pakistan after the Mangla dam project in the late sixties. Sea port cities such as Karachi and Bombay have also been pivotal places for the descendants of the village to reside or make a living. The current population of Bachlakrians due to migration outside of the village to mainly the UK and other locations totals over 4000. The village currently is only inhabited by a handful of ‘genuine’ Bachlakrians whereas the other inhabitants are ‘outsiders’ just looking after the properties and interests of the Bachlakrians. Unhappily, the longer term future of the village remains in even greater doubt. In late 2012 after the completion of the raising of the Mangla Dam after its original inception in the late 60s, the water level will rise to a level that will submerge the set of fields on three sides of four around the village for a few weeks during the monsoon season. It will have implications for connectivity, given that it has taken a long time to bring basic services to it, such as mobile telecommunications, electricity and the battery-powered feeds that kick-in when the main supply is cut for up to eight hours every day, and a swirling road to the bottom of the now electricity-powered well serving the entire village. Unless some of the elder generation re-migrate back to live in their ancestral homes the village will continue to remain a ghost of its former self and be occupied by non family members as is the case in some homes today.