Saffiah Apa with her son, designer Rizwan Beyg, at the Sampurna launch — Photo courtesy Maliha Rehman's Instagram
Renowned ghazal singer Tina Sani, a proud student of Apa’s, was also present on the occasion. “Just sitting with you, Apa, was more than music. It was more about life. It was more about finding inner peace,” said Tina, while sharing about how she would get irritated when a note or raga wasn’t working out for her. “Apa, then, would calm me down, help me make friends with the notes and tones. I owe so much of my music to Apa,” she said.
In her recorded message, Sabeen Rizvi, a young student, said that her musical journey with Apa was amazing. “To understand what it was like you must read the book,” she said.
Laraib Fatima, another student, said that Apa had a very different way of teaching music to her students. “Other teachers teach you with a harmonium but she does it with a tanpura,” she said. “She is not just a teacher, but a mentor and a friend. Like its author, the book is a great asset for all of us,” said Afsheen, another young student of Apa’s.
![ Saffiah Beyg signs copies of her book Sampurna — Photo courtesy Saffiah Beyg's Facebook 2
Noor Manviwala, another student, said that she came to Apa after learning how to play the guitar and piano herself. “Still, I had so much more to learn. And she helped me fill the gaps,” she said. Junaid Zuberi, who was a part of the television show by the same name, Sampurna, for over a decade from 2000 to 2011 with Saffia Apa, said that he was moved to tears the first time he heard her sing.
Dr Nighat, a friend of Apa’s, said that she wanted to see the television show Sampurna revived. “It is sad that it was discontinued,” she said. “Music is a way to calm the soul. It can change the environment.”
One of Apa’s young students, Mehreen Rizvi, then sang a small bandish (melodic composition) in Raag Yaman.
The evening ended with a minute’s silence in memory of the late Ustad Rais Khan on Saffia Apa’s request.
Originally published in Dawn, November 13th, 2017