His words resided in the hearts of the common people.
“Be-insafi jo bunyad
The nabud aen barbad
Aa Tarikh jo hi anjam
Jiye Sindh, Jiye Sindh”
The reader will enjoy more if this musical ‘Jiye Sindh, Jiye Sindh’ is published here in Sindhi and is, indeed, understood in Sindhi.
But here is the English translation, in any case, for whatever it is worth:
“On you Sindh a thousand salutes
May you be happy like a garden and spring
Forever!
May you remain enchanted in peace!
Long live Sindh, long live Sindh
Every human being is our brother
This is our faith
This is our Islam
Long live Sindh, long live Sindh
Intrigue and jealousy be barbed
‘Affection and love, long live!’
This is our message
Long live Sindh, long live Sindh
Long live Sindh, long live Sindh
Let Sindh drink the bowl of love
Let the high and low drink this bowl
Long live Sindh, long live Sindh
Long live Sindh, long live Sindh
Long live sweet life (lovable being) everywhere
Let love spring from our mango and rose-apple
Long live Sindh, long live Sindh”
This great leader was put in jail eight times from 1951 to 1969. Hyder Bux Jatoi is remembered with respect not only in Pakistan but the entire progressive world. When the great Chinese leader Zhou Enlai came to Pakistan, he went to see the Ghulam Muhammad Barrage. At this occasion, he also expressed a wish to meet Comrade Hyder Bux Jatoi. So the meeting of Jatoi with Zhou Enlai was arranged.
Zhou Enlai warmly embraced the Sindhi peasants’ leader and pinned the badge of China’s revolutionary leader Mao Zedong on Jatoi’s chest.
It was a misfortune of the Hari Tehreek that some opportunist and rash people came into the ranks of its leadership. So we see that Qazi Faiz Muhammad left to foment revolution in the Awami League and Ghulam Muhammad Leghari went into the National Awami Party to search for socialism. In this manner, the Hari Tehreek began to fade in the seventh decade. In 1965 comrade Abdul Qadir passed away and in 1970 Comrade Hyder Bux Jatoi left for his eternal abode.
Consider this extract from the weekly Awami Jamhuriyat issue dated the 13th of June, 1970, to get a sense of the man’s commitment and the respect he was held in by fellow revolutionaries:
“The deceased had been ill for a long time. When the invitation for the Toba Tek Singh Kisan Conference was given to him on his deathbed, he felt sorrow more than happiness at the gathering of the peasants of the whole of West Pakistan; because he was unable to participate in this historic gathering due to his illness and weakness. This helplessness made him cry incessantly. His message which was read at the Kisan Conference spoke for his heartfelt emotions at the time. He was a sincere worker of that class of Pakistan without ending whose backwardness the construction of a free, prosperous and democratic Pakistan is impossible. In Sindh the deceased made several attempts to organize the hari movement with the cooperation of other comrades. He properly understood the problems of the haris and their causes and confronted miseries bravely for their solution, bore the tortures of jails, suffered calamities at the hands of self-proclaimed Sindhi leaders, who kept appearing in front wearing the dress of nationalism in order to use the haris within their own feudal rivalries. The death of Mr Hyder Bux Jatoi is a tragic mishap for the peasant movement of Pakistan, especially the peasant movement of Sindh. The peasants of Sindh have lost their priceless and sincere son.”
Hyder Bux Jatoi not only witnessed Pakistan being destroyed by landlords and skirt-carriers of US imperialism, but also struggled strongly against them; in labour-filled prisons, hunger strikes, in rallies and processions and in writings.
Here is a beautiful extract from his writing:
“You fill up the jails
You control the youth
You extinguish the candlestands
You blow up those who understand
Bring in the takers of bribes
Who will put together bungalows and palaces
The skies are embarrassed
You recite the national anthems
That Long Live Pakistan”
The people of Sindh associated Hyder Chowk (in Hyderabad) with the publishing house and residence of Hyder Bux Jatoi; and the people of the whole region remember him as Baba-e-Sindh (Father of Sindh).
Ghaus Bakhsh Bizenjo, the equivalent Baba-e-Baluchistan (Father of Baluchistan) used to refer to Jatoi in very weighty terms – and his was a weighty tongue. In the same manner, Khair Bakhsh Marri referred to him with respect. Nawab Akbar Khan Bugti also talked about him with great reverence. The great Punjabi communist leader C. R. Aslam kept referring to the public human services of Hyder Bux Jatoi.
The people’s poet Habib Jalib acknowledged Jatoi as his leader and giver of political consciousness. Not for nothing had he penned a poem on Jatoi:
“Hyder Bux Jatoi re bhayya Hyder Bux Jatoi
There is no other who sympathizes with the hari
Hyder Bux Jatoi re bhayya Hyder Bux Jatoi
One landlord alone, robs the wealth of us in our thousands
He dresses well, roams in a car, his pleasures like brigands
We cry with hunger and his house replete with fairs
We cannot even get a blanket, a shawl he himself wears
Hyder Bux Jatoi re bhayya Hyder Bux Jatoi”
Fittingly, May 21 also marks the annual World Day for Cultural Diversity. One of the goals which UNESCO sought to foster when it first sanctioned this day was to promote human rights and fundamental freedoms, something which Jatoi fought for all his life vis-à-vis Sindh and in the context of its peasantry.
Mao Zedong enjoys a special place in the minds and hearts of thinkers and activists belonging to the developing world, non-white races, oppressed nations and struggling classes, especially in primarily agricultural countries like Pakistan. Mao’s works have helped us better understand and critique both imperialism and feudalism. In his essay The Chinese Revolution and the Chinese Communist Party written in December 1939 after he had cemented his undisputed leadership of the Chinese Communist Party following the legendary Long March, he writes,
“The ruthless economic exploitation and political oppression of the peasants by the landlord class forced them into numerous uprisings against its rule.... It was the class struggles of the peasants, the peasant uprisings and peasant wars that constituted the real motive force of historical development in Chinese feudal society.”
Then in On the People’s Democratic Dictatorship written June 1949, a decade later and exactly four months before founding the first communist republic in Asia, Mao notes,
“The serious problem is the education of the peasantry. The peasant economy is scattered, and the socialization of agriculture, judging by the Soviet Union’s experience, will require a long time and painstaking work. Without socialization of agriculture, there can be no complete, consolidated socialism.”
Mao’s words came back to me while I was working on this piece on Hyder Bux Jatoi.
Like Mao, Jatoi betrayed his own class and left his cushy job to take up the cause of the peasants. Like Mao, he was a poet committed to his land, language, people and culture, and lived for 69 years with great dignity. His dignity was drawn from the land he loved.
But unlike Mao, he passed away still waiting for the dream of a socialist, sovereign and prosperous land to materialise. With Jatoi’s untimely death, Sindh’s peasants were prematurely orphaned.