LAHORE: Major Geoffrey Langlands, a former British colonial officer who stayed in Pakistan after his military service ended and became one of the country’s best-loved teachers, was laid to rest on Monday in the eastern city of Lahore. He died on January 2, aged 101.
Langlands’ last rites were performed on the grounds of Aitchison College, Pakistan’s most prestigious boarding school where the doughty teacher, commonly known as ‘The Major’, had spent 25 years as a tutor and later a headmaster. The funeral cortège then passed through the grounds of the school and made its way to Gora Kabristan, one of the oldest Christian cemeteries in Lahore, where Langlands was buried.
Langlands taught mathematics and English for over six decades and was known both for guiding children from some of Pakistan’s most elite families to the highest pinnacles of success in government and business but also for dedicating his life to educating students from some of the country’s most remote, poor and lawless regions like North Waziristan and Chitral. His former students include Pakistan’s current prime minister and cricketing legend Imran Khan.
The funeral was attended by Lahore’s top military commander, Lt General Majid Ehsan, and hundreds of current Aitchison students as well as former pupils of Langlands’, including Pervaiz Elahi, the current speaker of the provincial Punjab Assembly, and Pervez Khattak, the minister for defense.
Langlands was born in Yorkshire, England, in 1917 and was a science and mathematics teacher in London in his early years before enlisting in the British Army in 1939 when World War II began. In 1944, he was posted to Bangalore and during the violent partition of India after the end of British colonial rule in 1947, Langlands survived an attack by Muslim gunmen while on a train with Hindu refugees.
He then spent six years as an instructor in the Pakistani Army in the first few years of the country’s inception and then in 1958 accepted a job teaching maths at Aitchison College.
In 1979, Langlands become the principal of a military school in Razmak, in Pakistan’s North Waziristan tribal region, where he lived for almost the next whole decade. During this time, he was famously held hostage by tribesman for six days in 1988 in a bid to overturn an unfavorable election result. It did not work.
For the next quarter-century, Langlands lived and worked in the mountainous district of Chitral where he ran a school bearing his name and whose many students have bagged top slots at universities in bigger cities in Pakistan as well as the United States and the United Kingdom. In Chitral, he paid himself a paltry salary and traveled on public buses. In 1991, Diana, Princess of Wales, paid him a visit.
Langlands never married and spent his last years in an apartment on the grounds of Aitchison College. He is known to have had the same breakfast of oatmeal, a poached egg and two cups of tea until he breathed his last week. In an obituary on January 6, the BBC described Langlands as a teacher whose demise had sent “an entire country into mourning.”
“He stood out,” Prime Minister Imran Khan had said of Langlands in an interview in 2012. “He had this mixture of being firm yet compassionate.”
Major Langlands, Pakistan’s English teacher, buried in Lahore
Major Langlands, Pakistan’s English teacher, buried in Lahore
- Ex-British officer, Pakistan’s best-loved educator buried at Gora Kabristan
- Funeral prayers offered at Aitchison College where he was formerly the headmaster
Ukraine’s Zelensky says allies to provide new energy and military aid within 10 days
KYIV: Ukraine has agreed new energy and military support packages with European allies ahead of the fourth anniversary of Russia’s full-scale invasion on February 24, President Volodymyr Zelensky said on Sunday.
Kyiv is aiming to rally support among partners as it struggles to fend off Russian battlefield advances and air attacks on its energy system while under US pressure to negotiate peace.
“In Munich, we agreed with the leaders of the Berlin Format on specific packages of energy and military aid for Ukraine by February 24,” Zelensky wrote on X.
Zelensky said on Friday after a meeting of the so-called Berlin Format of about a dozen European leaders in Munich that he had hoped for new support, including air-defense missiles.
“I am grateful to our partners for their readiness to help, and we count on all deliveries arriving promptly,” he added.
Russian attacks on major cities such as Kyiv have battered Ukraine’s energy infrastructure, plunging millions of residents into power outages of varying periods in freezing cold weather.
Zelensky added that Russia had launched around 1,300 attack drones, 1,200 guided aerial bombs and dozens of ballistic missiles at Ukraine over the past week alone.
Kyiv is aiming to rally support among partners as it struggles to fend off Russian battlefield advances and air attacks on its energy system while under US pressure to negotiate peace.
“In Munich, we agreed with the leaders of the Berlin Format on specific packages of energy and military aid for Ukraine by February 24,” Zelensky wrote on X.
Zelensky said on Friday after a meeting of the so-called Berlin Format of about a dozen European leaders in Munich that he had hoped for new support, including air-defense missiles.
“I am grateful to our partners for their readiness to help, and we count on all deliveries arriving promptly,” he added.
Russian attacks on major cities such as Kyiv have battered Ukraine’s energy infrastructure, plunging millions of residents into power outages of varying periods in freezing cold weather.
Zelensky added that Russia had launched around 1,300 attack drones, 1,200 guided aerial bombs and dozens of ballistic missiles at Ukraine over the past week alone.
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