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The Pakistan Times, Lahore, 7th
December 1958
By Marcelle Hitschmann
(Our Special U.N.
Correspondent)
“He lived to the last minute,” said his doctor. “He died with his boots
on,” said a United Nations official. Both these persons were very close
to Prof. Ahmad Shah Bokhari
His doctor had become his friend
and tried as much as possible to slow down Bokhari’s pace, but the Professor, as
we all affectionately called him here, -- just refused to declare himself an
invalid. Yet, he had been pretty ill in recent years. The first coronary
thrombosis occurred on August 19, 1953. Prof. Bokhari was so sensitive about it
that he even went to the hospital under the name of “Mr. Brown.”
The attack left him weak but this
did not prevent him from taking on the job of Under Secretary for Public
Information, which began even before the appointed date with his historic trip
to China with Mr. Hammarskjoeld.
LIVED INTENSELY
He lived intensely as if
nothing threatened him, but every now and then his heart would give way:
then he fainted, was put in an oxygen tent, went to bed, and soon after
got up and went on living as if nothing had happened.
But during the past year his health deteriorated much faster. Attacks
succeeded each other at progressively shorter intervals. Several things
contributed to this deterioration: First of course his intense love for
life – but also the campaign against him, something inevitable when a
man of such brilliance and wit occupies a high post in an international
organization. When the first five-year terms of the Hammarskjoeld
administration ended and his Assistants were supposed to resign, they
all stayed on, as is customary, for one year. This period was ending
next April and Prof. Bokhari was going to accept a Columbia University
post.
CONTROVERSY AND STRAIN
Last month he was
particularly upset by an Assembly Committee’s investigation of the
Information Department. Being extremely sensitive, he often saw it as
an implicit criticism of his tenure. In fact the fifth Committee had
been trying to reduce the budget of the Information Department for years
and this investigation was the culmination of several years’ attempt to
do this. When the fifth Committee debate occurred in November it ended
in a victory for those who opposed the recommendations of the so called
experts. The job of running that office was left to the secretariat.
Part of this victory was due to strong correspondents’ reaction against
recommendations to transform the Information Department into a mere
propaganda bureau, and strong objections by
Mr. Hammarskjoeld.
The outcome of the debate satisfied Prof. Bokhari but the strain of
controversy further precipitated the crisis.
Without this crisis, he might have lived on, may be six more months, may
be two years. And yet, the attack might have come as it did, even
without the recent crisis. When he faced the truth, from time to time,
he would ask his doctor: “When? Tell me when?”
DEEP LOVE FOR SHAKESPEARE
Since he got ill at the
correspondents’ lunch for Mr. Hammarskjoeld last April, the doctor had
succeeded in disciplining him a little: He stayed in bed after getting
an injection which lowered his pressure. But after getting one the day
before he died, and although he knew that going out might harm him, he
got up. The inevitable happened: He fainted and was brought home in an
oxygen tent. The doctors did the utmost. He rallied in the evening.
The doctor, who shared with Bokhari the deep love for Shakespeare, asked
him whether he would like to him to keep him company through the night.
But Prof. Bokhari said: “No.” The nurse was there anyway. The
doctor, before leaving, said jestingly “Good night, sweet prince”.
At 5.30 a.m. the nurse told the doctor that the patient was getting
worse. At 6.15 a.m. he was dead. He did not feel himself dying, he had
fainted so often.
All of the United Nations Committees, who met on Friday, paid tribute to
him and so did the plenary meeting of the Assembly. Agha Shahi’s voice
trembled when he answered the tributes in the first Committee. Prince
Aly Khan, in the plenary session, told the Assembly: “With his passing
the corridors of the United Nations will be a lonelier place.”
CRISP HUMOROUS FACADE
The United Nations
Information staff, who worked with him, loved him and are deeply
affected. Correspondents who had known him as a delegate, and
undoubtedly as the best Pakistan delegate there will be for many years,
realized how much intelligence there was under the crisp humorous
facade: They had seen him fight for North Africa’s freedom, against
apartheid, and cross swords with the sharpest diplomats, without ever
losing.
Under the witty surface there was a serious Bokhari who could drop the
mask whenever an emergency arose and plunge deeply into a fight. But he
would keep the mask on, as a protective device, as long as he could
afford it.
To your correspondent he had been always a friend and sometimes as
helpful as a father. Pakistan mourns him today and so do I.
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