Zaildar ★ Premium Quality

In the dusty archives of the Punjab Civil List, between the entries for Deputy Commissioners and the faded ink of the British Raj, lies a forgotten rank: Zaildar . The title feels heavy, a relic of an era when a man with a silver-tipped staff and a bloodline stretching back centuries could command more authority than a magistrate. To the urban Pakistani or Indian today, the word is archaic—a question in a crossword puzzle about “land revenue.” But in the bar (forested wastelands) and the pind (the village), the ghost of the Zaildar still walks.

In India, the system lingered longer, rebranded as Lambardar (line-holder), but stripped of its judicial powers. The Green Revolution gave economic power to the middle peasant, not the tribal chief. The Zaildar, once the voice of the biradari , was drowned out by the tractor and the fertilizer factory. Yet, drive into the interior of Pakistani Punjab—towards Okara, Sahiwal, or the doabs —and the Zaildar is not dead. He has mutated. zaildar

The British had neither the soldiers nor the clerks to govern every hamlet. So they invented the Zail . A Zail was a cluster of 10 to 40 villages, usually linked by kinship or tribe. Over this cluster, the British placed one man: the Zaildar. In the dusty archives of the Punjab Civil

And that is why we cannot bury him. We can only rename him. In India, the system lingered longer, rebranded as

But the role has rotted. The old Zaildar was a mediator; the modern Wadera is often a gun-runner. The old Zaildar knew the price of wheat; the new one knows the price of a police officer’s bribe. In a village near Faisalabad, I met Muhammad Akram, aged 82. His grandfather was a Zaildar under the British. He still keeps the staff, wrapped in a dirty cloth, in a trunk filled with mothballs.

Zaildar ★ Premium Quality

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