22/10/2012
Yesterday, two persons died:
1. Chacha P**istani (A patriot
P**istani living on Wahgah
Border).
2. Yash Chopra (A hindu zionist
film director).
Zionist media is giving coverage
to Yash Chopra but no coverage
for Chacha P**istani.
Well! We can give coverage to
Chacha P**istan via facebook,
twitter & SMS. Read this text up to
end and forward via all media you
own. Thanks.
LAHORE: Chacha P**istani, the
man who come rain or shine
would reach the Wagah Border
for the flag ceremony, passed
away at the age of 90 on Sunday.
If you have ever been to the
Wagah Border, you would have
seen Chacha P**istani dressed in
the P**istani flag and waving one
around too.
His real name was Mehar Din. He
was born in 1922 and was
unmarried.
While his brothers migrated to
P**istan at the time of its
creation, Chacha came here post
partition.
He had no home of his own and
lived with his nephews.
Chacha P**istani’s nephew said:
“Ever since we were born, we
have seen him go there [Wagah
Border] routinely.”
“He loved military rule and disliked
democratic governments,” the
nephew added.
Former president Parvaiz
Musharraf had sent him for
Umrah on a political quota.
He also revealed that his uncle had
no source of income and made a
living out of money people would
hand him at the border.
Living some 40km away, he
would hitch hike to Wagah every
day, getting out of one car and
getting into another – willing to
even walk to reach his
destination.
Chacha P**istani had also
received awards and certificates
from Rangers and other officials
visiting the border.
Devoted to P**istan and a true
patriot, Chacha P**istani went to
the border everyday adorned in
his kurta made out of a flag of
P**istan.
He had this eccentricity, his
nephew said, where he believed
the flag of P**istan should never
touch the ground. They said he
was almost scared of it
happening.
The cause of his death remains
vague as his family did not have
money to take him to a hospital.
All that is known is that he had
had a fever and cough since the
past few days.
Amazingly, no one from the
border wanted to know why the
man who religiously went there
every day had stopped coming.
Chacha’s hometown was a village
in Punjab called Chandrai where
he will be laid to rest today,
wrapped in his beloved green and
white flag...