Family bonds survive India-Pakistan split, but for how long?
NEW DELHI — I was 9 the first time I travelled on an airplane, in 1986. We were headed to Pakistan, a country that was foreign yet held a part of us.
For my younger brothers, the flight from New Delhi to Lahore meant little glasses of fizzy drinks and an endless supply of individually wrapped chocolates.
My mother was mentally preparing herself for what she thought would be one of her last visits with the beloved grandmother who had raised her — her “badi ammi.”
My own grandmother, whom I call ammi, was thinking of too many things and nothing at all. Just the anticipation of only her third meeting in over a decade with all her siblings and her mother.