In this, the first in our series of photographs from the F.E. Chaudhry Collection, we want to feature this remarkable photograph taken on a Lahore street-side, probably in the 1950s.
A group of four young women unabashedly sitting in a row on a road side in Lahore, picking each other’s heads for lice and so very focussed on the task at hand that they are oblivious to the passersby. The children (probably their own) squatting around and hiding in their laps, captures an age old family ritual that is no longer to be seen, even in the private, lost forever to the glamorous new world of branded soaps and shampoos like the best pine tar shampoo.
The photograph shows F. E. Choudhry’s penchant for novel sights. The public performance of personal hygiene was not an uncommon sight, even amongst the more affluent. But usually not so for picking lice. Although it was a common practice for women (sometimes men too!) to pick head lice for each other, especially in summer, when head lice breed in great number, it was usually done in the privacy of home. This is clearly an example of poverty forcing people to “live” in the public space and conduct what would otherwise be private acts, in public. This, as we shall later see, was a recurrent theme in F.E. Choudhry’s portfolio.
There is so much that is striking and worth thinking about in this photograph. Do tell us what caught your eye and attention.
Click here for the evolving F.E. Choudhry Gallery at ATP.
I think lice-picking is a ritual everyone is glad to see disappear, although humans like all social creatures long for each other’s touch, that is true. But we girls know that today, fingernail decoration, eyebrow plucking, makeup experiments, and sometimes mehndi and hairdo sessions fulfill this need for grooming among the sisters and girlfriends ;) No lice needed! Guys, don’t know what you do, can’t help you there.
The young girls, barely into their teens, who are already mothers is something which is unfortunately still with us, albeit less than before.
The old saying, “You scratch my back and I will scratch yours” is ingrained in human genes.
Joo ba joo phail gayee baat shanasaee ki!
Bugs bunny, I think there is a certain rotation in placement that happens eventually, so no one gets a free lunch – or, in this case, a free lice checkup!
This is an amazing photograph. One of those shots which just happen. you cannot script such scenes. have to be present there at the right moment.