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The Last Letter – A Forgotten Soldier’s Story

A lost letter from 1947 resurfaces after 70 years, revealing the untold fate of a missing soldier.

By SUFYAN SAIFULLAHPublished 11 months ago 3 min read

The year was 1947, a time of chaos and division. The Indian subcontinent was being torn apart as India and Pakistan were created. Cities burned, trains carried desperate refugees, and countless families were forced to abandon their homes overnight. In the midst of this turmoil, a young soldier, Rehmat Khan, found himself caught in the storm of history.

Rehmat was a simple man, born in a small village near Lahore. He had joined the British Indian Army before Partition, serving with pride. But as tensions grew, soldiers like him were forced to choose sides. He decided to serve the newly formed Pakistan, believing he was protecting his people.

On the night of August 13, 1947, just two days before Pakistan’s independence, Rehmat sat in his barracks, penning a letter to his family. He knew he might never return.

"My dear Ammi, Abba, and little Ayesha,

By the time you read this, the world around us will have changed. I do not know what fate holds for me, but I must go where duty calls. If this letter reaches you, know that I am alive and will find my way back. But if it is lost in the winds of time, understand that I have become a part of the soil.

Tell Ayesha that her brother will always watch over her, and tell Abba that his son fought with honor. May Allah protect you all.

Your son,

Rehmat Khan"

He folded the letter carefully, sealed it in an envelope, and gave it to a fellow soldier, asking him to send it if he did not return. That night, Rehmat and his unit were sent on a dangerous mission near the newly drawn border. Violence was rampant, and the lands were soaked in blood. Rehmat never came back.

His family waited for months, then years. They searched for him, hoping he had survived. But no word ever came. The letter, too, never arrived. Eventually, the family accepted that he was gone, another name lost in the tragedies of Partition.

70 Years Later – A Forgotten Discovery

In 2017, an old, abandoned house in Lahore was being renovated. The house had belonged to a postal worker during Partition, but after his sudden disappearance, it had been left untouched for decades. The new owners wanted to restore it, but as they cleared out the dust-covered furniture and broken cabinets, they stumbled upon something unexpected.

Inside a small wooden drawer, hidden beneath stacks of old, yellowed papers, was a single unopened letter. Its ink had faded, but the name on the front was still legible: "To the Khan Family".

The workers were intrigued. Who was this letter meant for? And why had it never been delivered?

Curious, they decided to track down the family. After weeks of searching through records and speaking with elderly locals, they found a distant relative of Rehmat Khan, an old woman named Ayesha Bibi, now in her late seventies.

When Ayesha received the letter, her hands trembled. She had been just a child when her brother disappeared, and all she remembered of him was his warm smile and the way he used to lift her onto his shoulders.

As she carefully opened the fragile paper and read his words, tears streamed down her face.

"He wanted us to know he loved us… that he never forgot us."

The family finally had closure, but the letter raised more questions. Why had it never been sent? What happened to the postal worker who had kept it hidden? And what had been Rehmat’s true fate?

Though many questions remained unanswered, one thing was clear—Rehmat’s voice, lost to history, had finally been heard. His last letter had returned home, even if he never did.

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