The New York Times Archive (need to be subscriber to NYT to access the archives)
Malcom W. Browne
Excerpts
Seems like an appropriate parable for today's Pakistan and the lurkers here. At least this time, learn how to read and drive while the aid lasts. And don't give yourself airs, work yourself, don't hire a driver to do your work; and practice thrift.Camel Driver Befriended by Johnson Says His Troubles Now Are Just Kismet
Korangi, Pakistan - Bashir Ahmad, the camel driver who was swept up into a new world by Lyndon B Johnson a decade ago, contemplated the gift that changed his life completely, and for the worse.
The drifting sand and dust of the Sind desert had coated the gift with a khaki-colored film, and it stood unused in front of Mr. Ahmad's mud-brick house in this Karachi suburb.
But in 1961, when he received it at the Dallas State Fair, it was a shiny, new Ford pick-up truck, painted in the green and white colors of Pakistan's flag.
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He has become a subject of frequent conversations among officials and other Pakistanis, who now suddenly look upon him as a symbol fo the strained relations that have developed with the United States since the beginning of the army crackdown on the East Pakistan autonomy movement March 25.
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With his graying beard and loose, white clothing, he has the manner of a local patriarch. He has remained illiterate and he has never learned to drive.
After returning to Pakistan from the United States, Mr. Ahmad rented his truck to the United States Embassy, which paid him a regular income. This arrangement continued, with help from the embassy in a variety of forms, through the Presidency of Mr. Johnson. But it ended the day Mr. Johnson left the White House.
Since then, Mr. Ahmad has made his own way, and some American officials have expressed relief privately that he is no longer "Johnson's sacred cow."
"I had a driver working for me", Mr Ahmad said, "and we had a regular route from here to Thatta about 60 miles away."......But breakdowns became increasingly frequent. Then the worst blow fell - the advent of cheap diesel-powered bus transportation over the route he was working.
Asked why he had not prepared for hard times, he said: "It is my kismet. You cannot do anything unless it is the will of God. If God had willed me to save, I would have done so."
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Amid the flurry of recriminations here following the recent cuts in United States aid to Pakistan, Mr Ahmad has been cast as a symbol of inconstant American aid and friendship.
Asked how he personally feels about Americans, he said: "I am only concerned with America as a friend. I am concerned with friendshipo, not the actions of friends.
"But for me the Vietnam war is a bitter thing. It was because of that that my friend President Johnson had to leave the White House, even though Mr. Nixon still has not solved anything. And Mr. Nixon dropped me as if I had never existed. But that, too, was his kismet, and I do not blame him."