The News
PESHAWAR: Different non-governmental organisations (NGOs) have
demanded immediate halt to the construction of community halls
in the Kalash valleys in Chitral as they felt it would harm the
local culture.
Kalash Environmental Protection Society (KEPS), Frontier
Heritage Trust (FHT), Institute of Architects of Pakistan (IAP),
Civic Awareness Promotion Society (CAPS), Zareef Khan Foundation
(ZKF) and Sarhad Conservation Network (SCN) in a joint statement
urged the government to immediately stop the construction of new
community centres in the three valleys inhabited by the minority
Kalash community as the Kalash people resented the decision and
considered it harmful for their culture.
According to the SCN press release, the new secretary for
minorities, Khyber Pakhtun-khwa, had sanctioned three community
halls for women, one for each of the three Kalash valleys. But
the local community in Rumbur, Birir and Bamburet opposed the
centres. In Balanguru, they already have two Jestakhans
(community centres) damaged by certain elements four or five
years ago.
“In Birir, the one built by Chitral Area Development Programme
is, like all others, a concrete monstrosity which has iron bars
and no glass at the windows and is used by animals,” the
statement argued.
The KEPS statement said, “It is a pointless venture as the
people do not need community halls. They had their traditional
Jestakhans for meetings. The women who did the needlework were
those often looking after small children while older women were
working in the fields. With household chores, when were they
going to have time for community hall to do needlework? Women
have only time for these activities in the winter. And they do
it in comfort of their own homes. The ones built earlier are
lying vacant. One eventually was used as a school in Rumbur,
also one in Bamburet. The one in Birir was first used as a
godown. Now it stands derelict.”
The statement added, “The contractor in Birir was also the one
who built the concrete wall around the autumn dancing ground
destroying its cultural value. The C&W Department is involved in
the current project. If not stopped, the valleys would soon be
littered with anaesthetic Jestakhans and Bashali houses and
one-room schools,” it added.
It stressed that Kalash Advisory Board was urgently needed to
make decisions for development in the Kalash valleys.
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