Bibi Doe




The Telegraph has an interesting article on Bibi Doe, the Englishwoman that lives in the NWFP, running a medical dispensary.

I had first met Maureen Lines in Chitral in 1994. She had just founded the 'Kalash Guides' to soften the impact of tourism in the valleys. Travellers were encouraged to use the local guides she had trained rather than outsiders from the hotels of Chitral. Lines had had enough of seeing 'Jeeps tear up people's fields' and busloads of tourists surrounding Kalash women as they bathed in the river. The scheme also meant that Kalash families rather than Punjabi carpetbaggers gained some economic benefit from tourism, and ensured that visitors didn't get lost on the mountain trails. I stayed in a guest room of one of the guides in Birir - a fascinating but cold and flea-ridden experiment in medieval living. The guide scheme worked until 9/11 and the Afghan war, which dried up the tourist flood.

Today, Lines is as remarkable, thoughtful and energetic as when I last saw her. She is also tough, cantankerous, slightly deaf and marvellous company. Her no-nonsense approach seems to have neutralised the usual disadvantages of being a woman in one of the most sexually oppressive places in Asia. The North-West Frontier of Pakistan is the most conservative part of a conservative country. In the picturesque bazaars of Chitral town, you are unlikely ever to see a woman. Here, it is said that a woman goes out in public twice in her life: once to leave her father's house for her husband's, the next time to be buried. The contrast with the Kalash valleys could hardly be greater. The first thing you notice in Birir and its sister valleys is the sound and sight of women - ubiquitous, assertive and wearing traditional dress.

There are no hotels in the citadel villages of Birir so Lines invited me to stay with her Kalash family in a room next to their one-storey house, set against the hillside, with its rickety veranda looking down on a grove of trees surrounding a little cemetery. The flat-roofed houses are made of stone, wood and mud to withstand the region's earthquakes. Extended families of 20 or more live together in each house, in a single dark room with an earthen floor.

In the house of Lines's adoptive family, we huddle against the cold around the wood-burning metal stove. We are sitting on low stools made of walnut and animal hide. Lines had brought rice - too expensive for most Kalash - to make a feast, with cooked vegetables and flat bread and a salad of onions and tomatoes. We drank the rough homemade red wine, which tastes a bit like vodka and grape juice. As we ate, Lines chatted in Kalash to Sainusar, Tak-Dira's daughter, in her midforties, and various other family members; a small bulb above us emitted a feeble glow. There is some electricity in the valley - from two small hydro-electric plants. Some of the men went off elsewhere to smoke hashish, a habit introduced by hippie backpackers. But everyone was in bed soon after nightfall.

advertisementThe next morning, we visited one of Lines's dispensaries in lower Birir. Unlike the government dispensary further up the valley, it is well stocked. One of the problems faced by the Kalash, like so many other remote people in the subcontinent, is that government facilities tend to exist only on paper or to suffer from extreme absenteeism. For instance, there is a government doctor assigned to the Kalash valleys, but he is rarely, if ever, there.

Lines's dispensary is a bare concrete room with a couple of shelves of medications and a ledger. It is maintained by Hassan and Shah Hussein, two voluble young Muslim men from a nearby village. One is a Kalash convert, the other is from one of the families who have moved here from the Punjab and elsewhere in Pakistan.

One of the strange things about morning in Birir is the amplified sound of the muezzin's call to prayer. Though the Pakistani federal government 'genuinely supports freedom of religion', as Lines said, and has long been serious about protecting the Kalash culture, the provincial government is now controlled by the Muslim Fundamentalist party, the MMA, which has strong links to the Taliban across the border, and which disapproves of the infidel presence in their midst.

According to Minocher 'Minoo' Bhandara, a Pakistani MP and former minister for minorities, Muslim families here insist that the families of Kalash brides or grooms also convert, so they don't have to suffer the humiliation of Kafir in-laws. 'A lot of money is exchanged, I believe,' he said. 'They don't convert for any religious or ideological reason - there has to be a financial incentive.'

I spent a further week with Lines in Birir as she visited her various projects in the three valleys: an irrigation project here, a dispensary there, latrine projects everywhere. Though it was cold and she hated the way her knees and back limited her mobility ('I'm worried I won't be able to go up to the high pastures in the spring,' she grumbled), she was ebullient after a successful fundraising dinner in Islamabad and positive meetings with the Kalash Co-ordinating Committee.

Stopping deforestation by what Lines calls 'the timber mafia' takes up an increasing amount of her time. There are very few forests left in Pakistan and there is enough demand to render the antideforestation laws virtually meaningless. Donkeys and overloaded Jeeps carry heavy loads of sweet-smelling cedar and deodar out of the valleys every night. As the forests disappear, flash floods become more and more common. 'The majority of the people' are behind her, Lines said. 'But the big guys in Birir - corrupt Kalash and corrupt Muslims - they don't give a damn. They've got enough money accumulated, they can go some place else after the land has been ruined. The other problem is corruption in the forest service. We had a good guy here but the bearded ones [the Taliban] had him transferred and the wood is now pouring out again.'

Two things ensure that Lines can punch above her weight. She has access to the Pakistani media and a network of supporters in Pakistan and abroad. Among those allies is the railways chief Shakil Durrani, who was the district commissioner in Chitral when Lines first moved to Pakistan, and then the chief secretary of the whole North-West Frontier Province. He found the Kalash fascinating and 'wanted to do my bit to ensure that they remain, not as zoo people but a vibrant living people'. Like many other sympathetic observers, Durrani believes that the Kalash are 'their own worst enemies' with their lawsuits, squabbling disunity and what he calls 'their casual attitude to many things in life, especially money.' Durrani still does what he can to help and is on the board of Keps. At one point, he asked Diana, Princess of Wales, to become a patron of the Kalash. 'She agreed in principle to lend her name,' he told me, though she died before the project came to fruition.

A couple of days into our stay, all work - though not Lines's - came to a halt. An old man had died. The funeral would last for three days, during which time people would walk from all of the valleys to pay their respects. Funerals are expensive for the Kalash, partly because work ceases, but mostly because the bereaved family is expected to sacrifice goats and cows to feed the guests. It is one of the only times that the Kalash eat meat; animals are too valuable to slaughter except on such occasions.

During the funeral, a group of Kalash women formed a semicircle around the corpse - which lay on a bier, covered in gold cloth - and linked arms. They danced around the body while others chanted. You could tell the women from the bereaved family because they were the only women with bare heads (a Kalash woman takes off her headdress only when in mourning). In between the dances, the male elders told the life story of the deceased in a kind of chant. It was an extraordinary spectacle.

After the funeral, I accompanied Lines to Bumburet, the largest and most beautiful of the Kalash valleys, with snow-clad peaks visible at both top and bottom. But there are grubby hotels here and shops and NGO offices, and even satellite dishes on some of the houses. Even with tourism so weak, there are more foreigners here than in the other valleys. When we stopped for tea and some flat bread and goat's cheese, I met an Italian anthropology professor dressed in full shalwar kameez and Chitrali cap, his eyes made up with eyeliner.

Here, a wealthy Greek NGO is building a huge cedar-wood mansion they have called the Kalash House, which will include a museum, school and conference centre. I met Athanasios, the head of the NGO, briefly as he drove out of the valley in his SUV. He has shaggy hair and dark glasses and looks a bit like a 1970s rock star. Lines said that the mansion is 'a monument to his egotism'. At one point, she told me, Athanasios gave what he called a 'scholarship' - in fact a cash gift of 30,000 rupees - to every Kalash family with a child of school age. 'A cash gift. It was the most corrupting thing. Many of the families used the money to buy land.'

She talked a great deal about the 'corruption' of the Kalash. Sometimes she meant it in the literal sense. One of the wealthier Kalash families became so by stealing and selling statues in the valleys. She is greatly concerned by the replacement of the barter system, and the loss of traditional skills, such as shoemaking (the women now wear plastic shoes from Chitral that hurt their feet). Even the education offered here is not entirely a boon, in her opinion. 'Some of the boys speak a few words of English, put on Western clothes and think "Man, I'm cool". They have enough education not to want to work in the fields but not enough to get a job in the world outside.' Education has also undermined the gerontocratic social system of the valleys: young people with a smattering of literacy despise their illiterate parents and long to join the exciting outside world.

Not everyone agrees with Lines that the Kalash culture should be protected from the outside world with its technology and subversive pop culture. Minoo Bhandara, one of Lines's longtime supporters, is adamant that she is wrong about development in the valleys. As he told me in his office in Islamabad, 'She doesn't want hotels. She wants tough roads so people tough it out. She doesn't want too many tourists to contaminate the Kalash. But they are like other ordinary folks: if you ask them what they want most in the world they would say, "a cell phone and a television". The rest of the world has them, why not them?'

But Lines believes that sanitation and education should come before electricity and improved roads. 'They need some knowledge and awareness first. I saw the same thing in Pathan culture when I first came to Pakistan,' she said. 'I was taken to a small village in the tribal areas and they had a refrigerator in the sitting-room but no sanitation, no drinking water, no toilet. They did have electricity.'

Lines is horrified by the money that has been wasted by big aid agencies here. I got some sense of that on the way back to Chitral. We passed several lengths of huge ugly piping, part of a failed water project by the Aga Khan charity AKRSP. It cost nine million rupees (£75,000), but was never finished. Another AKRSP project involved building a road, but 'they put it on the wrong side of the river and it washed away. I've seen so much money wasted here, money which could have helped the people in so many good ways.'

When Lines started her UK charity, a lawyer friend told her to read a biography of Dian Fossey, the murdered American ethologist. 'He told me, "If what you do is not successful you will have no problem, but if you achieve things your life will be miserable." It's an observation that has come true.' Despite her successes - there is hope that Unesco will declare the valleys a heritage site - Lines fears that Kalash culture may disappear entirely within a decade.

Prince Siraj Ulmulk, the owner of the Hindu Kush Heights, a hotel overlooking the Chitral river valley, told me, 'We're so lucky someone like Maureen is giving her time to us. We could never understand why someone would leave a lovely place like England to do this. It's a hell of a lot of work for one person to take on. I just hope she keeps on doing what she's doing.'

'I carry on because of the women,' Lines said. 'People ask, "What made you give up your life to do this?" What is it I've given up? I'm doing exactly what I want to do and the whole way of life here has given me so much. I've had a very rich life.'

Further information: hindukushconservation.com The journey to Birir takes you along one of the most terrifying jeep tracks imaginable. Its 18 hairpin kilometres from the main road to Chitral take an hour and a half, even in good weather. It winds so sharply and narrowly that you can't see more than a hundred yards ahead; only extremely skilful and sober drivers can handle the challenge of its crumbling steepness, and every year many people are killed as jeeps overloaded with timber or passengers or both slide off the edge.

When you finally emerge from the granite canyon into the valley, as it opens to reveal houses, temples and fields clinging to the hillsides, it is an experience not unlike coming upon a fabulous long-hidden ruin in an Indiana Jones epic. The air is clear, filled with the scent of newly cut cedar. The rivers sparkle.

The greenery of the fields, meadows and orchards seems impossibly fresh.

Bihir and its two neighbouring valleys, in this craggy corner of Pakistan's North West Frontier province, nestled below the soaring white walls of the Hindu Kush range, are the last hold-outs of a living ancient culture. They are the remaining strongholds of the Kalasha - the 'wearers of black'.

The Kalasha are the surviving Kafirs of Kafiristan, the legendary 'land of the infidels' made famous by Rudyard Kipling (and then film director John Huston in The Man Who Would Be King. For centuries, Kafiristan stretched across both Afghanistan and Pakistan; today all that remains is a hill tribe of merely 3,500 souls, the only pagans to be found for thousands of miles in any direction.

Many of the Kalasha claim descent from the armies of Alexander the Great and indeed, their faces look strikingly similar to those you would encounter in Split or Montenegro. They make wine, revere animals, and believe in mountaintop fairies. To observe their lives is to be transported far from today's North West Frontier with its increasingly militant, misogynistic brand of Islam to a world that Homer's contemporaries might have recognised. Polytheists who divide the world into male and female realms, the Kalasha claim they were once a literate culture but their books were burned long ago by savage tribes. Their religion harks back to ancient fertility cults. Every year, they practice the rite known as 'budalak'. A teenage boy is selected to go alone into the high forests for almost a year. When he returns on a feast day, he may sleep with any and as many Kalash women as he chooses.

They have long been so isolated and seemed so strange to nearby peoples that they are believed by many to hibernate like animals. But the rugged remoteness that once protected this fascinating culture is disappearing fast, as better roads are built, and Muslim homesteaders from Punjab and elsewhere in Pakistan outnumber the Kalasha in their once inaccessible valleys. The settlers have brought with them mosques, missionaries and a money economy that has landed in deep debt families more familiar with the barter system.

Increasingly exposed to the electric world of mobile phones, videos and even satellite TV, the Kalash young yearn for the glamour of life beyond their valleys.

Having survived for centuries against fearful odds, the Kalash culture, with its links to long lost civilizations, is today under threat from militant Islam, rapid deforestation, technology and a lethal combination of gullibility and greed among the Kalasha themselves. Indeed, it would probably be gone already were it not for the efforts of an eccentric 69-year old Englishwoman known locally as 'Bibi Doe'.

It was she who built the first latrines here and brought the first stoves - with help from the British High Commission - so that the women no longer suffer eye and lung diseases from open fires inside the houses. She opened dispensaries where locals can get aspirin and antibiotics that stop the children dying from fever.

For two decades she has raised money for inoculations, fresh water pipes and even bridges. She has driven sick people to the hospital in Chitral or even distant Peshawar, where her little NGO paid the bills.

Other foreign helpers and NGOs who have come to the Kalash valleys may give away more money, but when there is a real problem - floods washing away the fields and houses, local boys who have fallen into bad company and been arrested in the big city - the people come to Bibi Doe for help. And she always gives it. At one point she went all the way to Kabul to rescue a local boy who had volunteered for Jihad and been captured by coalition soldiers.

It is hard to believe that that a 69-year-old woman with arthritic knees and a bad back could make the journey from her home in Peshawar to Chitral so often - 12 times last October alone - ferrying carloads of medicines up to the valleys and bringing sick people down to the hospital. But Bibi Doe regularly puts up with dangers and physical discomforts that would fell a woman half her age. In 1990 she almost drowned when her Land Cruiser was hit by a flash flood while crossing a river. It's why she never wears a seat belt.

For Bibi Doe, death threats are a fact of life. Over A quarter-century, she has battled corrupt officials, the frontier timber mafia, Kalash distillers of lethal moonshine liquor, bigoted mullahs, pimps, jihadist militants, insensitive tourists, unscrupulous entrepreneurs, giant aid agencies, foreign academics and do-gooders she considers exploitative.

If you ever read that I've died in accident,' she says as we load up her Land Cruiser before leaving for Birir, 'you'd better come back and investigate what really happened.'

She is named after her favourite Kalash dog - an orphaned pup she adopted in 1986 after its mother was taken by a wolf. The children of the valleys heard her shouting out, 'Bibi Doe! Bibi Doe!'

as she tramped up and down the trails with a backpack full of medicines. It became their name for her, and then everyone's name for her, even her own local adoptive family. When she raised money for the repair of a 1927 suspension bridge across the Chitral river, on which the commerce of the valleys depends, she ensured that plaque on the bridge read: 'Repaired 2006 by Bibi Doe'.

All of her projects are small scale enterprises based on requests from the local people, a careful assessment of their impact on the environment and the culture, and on her deep knowledge of the valleys. In general, she provides the materials and expertise in engineering and the recipients are supposed to provide labour.

She doesn't want to deepen the dependency culture fostered by some of the NGOs here. As a result she has won the trust of a Pakistani government that is suprisingly keen to protect the Kalash.

It is difficult to get anything finished in the valleys, and almost everyone she deals with - contractors, government officials, labourers, expects a cut. ('I'm surrounded by dacoits,' she says.) She is proud to say that she has never knowingly paid a bribe in all her years here ('I'm always on my guard'). She also brings to the task an expertise rare in the aid business - years ago, in a different life, she was a contractor herself. In the 1960s, she achieved minor celebrity in New York as the city's first female decorator. 'It was before women's lib and they'd never heard of a woman painting and plastering,' she says.

Before she was adopted by a Kalash family in Bihir in 1981, Bibi Doe was known as Maureen Lines, and her life before she came to live in Bihir was no less extraordinary than it is today. Born in North London to a middle-class family, Lines has over the years been a tourist official in Greece, a taxi driver, a waitress, a domestic in Manhattan and Beirut, a petrol pump attendant, and an author of Gothic novels. She has also written several books about her travels in Afghanistan and the Northwest Frontier. Certainly, she never planned to become any kind of aid worker. 'Never in my wildest dreams did I think I'd be involved in development.'

Unlike similarly redoubtable women travellers in the Muslim world in 19th and early 20th century, she doesn't come from an aristocratic background.

Nor does she treat travel and living abroad as an opportunity for dressing up 'like the natives'. She prefers to wear a simple shirt and trousers to a shalwar kammez and headscarf. She would never wear the traditional Kalash beaded headdresses and cinched-in black dresses. Her white hair is cut short and neat. She has worn a burqa, when travelling over the passes to and from Afghanistan in the company of Mujahedin fighters, but found it 'horrible, dehumanising'.

Talking to her in her little room in Birir, the fire blazing and a gas lamp hissing in the background, she explains that her first memories are of huddling in a Morrison shelter as bombs of the Blitz rained down. An only child (her father worked in radar) her companions growing up were dogs, books and fantasy. She left school at 16 and went to study shorthand and speech at Harrow Tech with hopes of becoming an actress or a journalist. Both dreams dissolved when her mother left her father. Soon afterwards, Lines ran away and found a job as a waitress at one of the new espresso bars in central London. She then headed to Paris, to sell the Herald Tribune like Jean Seberg in Godard's Au Bout du Souffle. In 1961, she emigrated to America. 'It was one of those impulses. I've lived my life on impulses. I was standing at a bus-stop in the rain, I'd had a fight with my lover and I was out of work when I saw a sign in Knightsbridge advertising for "domestics in America". Six months later I was on a ship to New York.'

The underpaid job didn't last long and Lines went to work in a coffee shop in Greenwich Village. It was the early 60s and the beatnik years were in full spate. For a decade she worked just to pay for partying and studying.

First she went to the New School to study journalism and poetry, and then switched to New York University to do international affairs and Arabic. There, she discovered her love of travel and of the Muslim and Arab worlds. In 1964 - before the advent of overland holidays and the hippie trail to India - she hitchhiked from Istanbul to Damascus. 'Everyone said I was fool and that I'd be murdered or raped. But I never had a problem as a woman,' she recalls.

She had moved back to England when her travels took her to Pakistan and the Kalash valleys for the first time. It was the culmination of a voyage taking in Cairo, Khartoum and Bahrain. She and Pakistan got on well immediately.

'Within 24 hours I was on the radio giving my impressions of the country,' she laughs. 'It's been like that ever since.'

She remembers her first contact with a Kalash woman. Lines was trying to find a route across a fast flowing stream when a tall, dignified kalash woman showed her a place to cross. Unusually the woman was veiled. On her way across the smooth stones Lines slipped. To her surprise the woman was right behind her and caught her arm. The veil slipped and Lines saw that her face was disfigured by a mass of 'pink and black scabs'. A few days later Lines went into Chitral and bought some medicines and brought them back to treat the woman.

A year later, Lines returned to the valleys and managed to secure a permit to stay for a month. It was then that she met her Tak-Dara, who adopted Lines and became her 'Kalash mother'. But her visit began awkwardly when she blundered into the grounds of a Bashali or women's house - where the Kalash women must live when menstruating or pregnant. Because she left the building without changing her clothes, a valuable goat had to be sacrificed.] It was during this second stay that Lines resolved to go back to America and get a medical qualification so she could help the Kalash.

Back in New York she trained as a paramedic, though illness delayed her return to the valleys for four years. Once established she became a kind of barefoot doctor in hiking boots walking from one village to another, a backpack full of medicine, a dog or two at her side. 'I did 10 to 12 miles a day. I had a ball.' Whenever she could, she 'would literally hijack passing doctors' for medicines.

In 1990, she started her pit latrine and stove projects - both of which grew naturally out of her medical work. The first money she raised came from bake sales and the like at her late mother's home in Princes Risborough in Buckinghamshire. Soon, she began to receive money from governments and embassies. She found herself spending more and more time in Islamabad talking to diplomats and Pakistani officials, and getting more involved with environmental threats to the Kalash, like uncontrolled tourism and deforestation.

Three years later, she started her Pakistani NGO - the Kalash Environmental Protection Society - and then, in 1993, the British charity that supports it, the Hindu Kush Conservation Association. She became a citizen of Pakistan after her one of her 'enemies' in officialdom almost managed to get her deported a few years ago. 'This young man married me and that's how I got my ID card, she says. 'He's somewhere in England, now, I don't know where. It's a real soap opera.'

I first met Maureen Lines in Chitral in 1994. She had just founded the 'Kalash Guides' to soften the impact of tourism in the valleys. Travellers were encouraged to use the local guides she had trained rather than outsiders from the hotels of Chitral. Lines had had enough of seeing 'jeeps tear up people's fields' and busloads of tourists surrounding Kalash women as they bathed in the river. The scheme also meant that Kalash families rather than Punjabi carpetbaggers gained some economic benefit from tourism, and ensured that visitors didn't get lost on the mountain trails. I stayed in a guest room of one of the guides in Birir - a fascinating but cold and flea ridden experiment in medieval living. The guide scheme worked until 9/11 and the Afghan war, which dried up the tourist flood.

Today, Lines is as remarkable, thoughtful, and --- energetic as when I last saw her - she is also tough, cantankerous, slightly deaf and marvellous company. Her no-nonsense approach seems to have neutralised the usual disadvantages of being a woman in one of the most sexually oppressive places in Asia. The North West Frontier of Pakistan is the most conservative part of a conservative country. In the picturesque Bazaars of Chitral town, you are unlikely ever to see a womaN. Here, an adult female goes out in public twice in her life: once to leave her father's house for her husband's, the next time to be buried.

The contrast with the Kalash valleys could hardly be greater. The first thing you notice in Birir or its sister valleys is the sound and sight of women - ubiquitous, assertive and wearing traditional dress.

There are no hotels in the citadel villages of Birir so Lines invites me to stay with her Kalash family in a room next to their one story house set against the hillside, with its rickety veranda looking down on a grove of trees surrounding a little cemetery.

(Until very recently the Kalash always put their dead into open coffins above ground; these days they often bury corpses to prevent grave robbery. All the carved wooden equestrian figures that once decorated their cemeteries have been stolen or sold.) The flat roofed Kalash houses are made of stone, wood and mud, and withstand the region's earthquakes much better than modern concrete buildings.

Extended families of 20 or more live in the houses, with each married couple and their children occupying a single dark room with an earthen floor.

In the house of Lines' adoptive family, we huddle against the cold around the wood-burning metal stove. We are sitting on low stools made of walnut and animal hide - the Kalash are one of the few peoples of the subcontinent who don't sit on the floor. As we eat and Maureen chats away in Kalash to Sainusar, a woman in her forties, (and the daughter of Lines' blood sister) and various other family members, a small bulb above us emits a feeble glow. There is some electricity in the valley - from two small hydroelectric plants - but it is weak and is one reason why, as Lines explains, the technology craved by the young cause such problems here: 'There isn't enough current to run both a TV and light for the rest of the family.'

Lines has brought rice - too expensive for most Kalash - making for a feast, with cooked vegetables and flat bread and a salad of onions and tomatoes. We drink the rough homemade red wine, which tastes a bit like vodka and grape juice, but it does the trick.

Some of the men go off elsewhere to smoke hashish, a habit introduced by hippie backpackers. But everyone is in bed soon after nightfall.

Later that night as I stumble through the half-frozen mud from the latrine it seems all the more amazing to me that Lines - who is personally fastidious to the point of suffering from a mild phobia about dirt - has made her home among these people, who for all their charm do not value cleanliness highly.

Her life here is a Spartan one, unlike that of so many aid workers here and around the world. 'I couldn't live in area like this and live in luxury, even if I could afford it,' she says. 'If you are going to work for the people you have to live the same way.'

The next morning, we visit one of Maureen's dispensaries in lower Birir. Unlike the government dispensary further up the valley, it is well stocked.

One of the problems faced by the Kalash valley, like so many other remote places of the subcontinent, is that government facilities tend to exist only on paper or to suffer from extreme absenteeism. For instance, there is a government doctor assigned to the Kalash valleys, but he somehow collects his salary without having to endure months in a remote place among strange and primitive people.

The dispensary is just a bare concrete room with a couple of shelves of medications and a ledger. It is maintained by Hassan and Shah Hussein, two voluble young Muslim men from a nearby village. One is a Kalash convert, the other is from one of the families who have moved here from the Punjab and elsewhere in Pakistan. Maureen has found that Muslims of the valleys are much more likely to turn up to work. The Kalash for all their charm and humour are apparently not an entrepreneurial or hardworking people.

One of the strange things about morning in Birir is the amplified sound of the muezzin's call to prayer. As Lines says, 'If I'm in the Middle East or even Peshawar and I hear the Azzam, I like it; if I'm in the Kalash valleys it grates like chalk on a blackboard.' Indeed Islam sometimes feels like a colonial presence here, with mosques built in all the Kalash villages. Though the Pakistani federal government 'genuinely supports freedom of religion', as Lines says, and has long been serious about protecting the Kalash culture, the provincial government is now controlled by the Muslim Fundamentalist party, the MMA, which has strong links to the Taliban across the border. 'The Bearded Ones', as more secular minded Pakistani's call them, disapprove of the infidel presence in their midst.

According to Minoo Bhandara, a Pakistani MP and former minister for minorities, Muslim families here insist that the families of Kalash brides or grooms also convert, so they don't have to suffer the humiliation of kafir in-laws.

'A lot of money is exchanged, I believe,' he explains. "They don't convert for any religious or ideological reason - there has got to be a financial incentive.'

Though the Kalash population has increased from 2,500 ten years ago to 3,500 today, thanks to improvements in child mortality (a development for which Lines is in part responsible), the conversion rate means that they remain in danger of extinction.

I spend a further week with Lines in Birir as she visits her various projects in the three valleys: an irrigation project here, a dispensary there, latrine projects everywhere. Though it's cold and she hates the way her knees and back limit her mobility ('I'm worried I won't be able to go up to the high pastures in the Spring,' she grumbles) she is ebullient after a successful fundraising dinner in Islamabad and positive meetings with the Kalash Coordinating Committee. The Australians, Brits and Finns are her best supporters.

Stopping deforestation by the 'timber mafia' takes up an increasing amount of her time. There are very few forests left in Pakistan and there's enough demand to render the anti-deforestation laws virtually meaningless. Donkeys and overloaded jeeps carry heavy loads of sweet smelling cedar and deodar out of the valleys every night. As the forests disappear, flash floods become more and more common. 'The majority of the people' are behind her, Lines says. 'But the big guys in Birir, corrupt Kalash and corrupt Muslims, they don't give a damn.

They've got enough money accumulated, they can go some place else after the land has been ruined. The other problem is corruption in the forest service. We had a good guy here but the bearded ones had him transferred and the wood is now pouring out again.'

Two things ensure that Lines can punch above her weight. She has access to the Pakistani media and a network of supporters in Pakistan and abroad. Some of them are unlikely figures, like the police special branch officers who stood by her when her political enemies tried to get her arrested and deported three years ago.

Among those allies is Railways chief Shakil Durrani, who was district commissioner in Chitral when Maureen first came, and then chief secretary of the whole North West Frontier Province. He found the Kalash fascinating and 'wanted to do my bit to ensure that they remain, not as zoo people but a vibrant living people'. Like many other sympathetic observers, Durrani believes that the Kalash are 'their own worst enemies' with their lawsuits, squabbling disunity, and what he calls 'their casual attitude to many things in life, especially money.'

DURRANI still does what can to help and is on the board of KEPS. At one point, he asked Diana, Princess of Wales, to become a patron of the Kalasha. 'She agreed in principle to lend her name,' he says, though she died before the project came to fruition.

A couple of days into our stay in Birir, all work - though not Lines' - comes to a halt. An old man has died. The funeral will last for three days during which time people will walk from all of the valleys to pay their respects.

Funerals are expensive for the Kalash - partly because all work ceases but mostly because the bereaved family is expected to sacrifice goats and cows to feed all the guests. It's one of the only times that the Kalash eat meat - animals are too valuable to slaughter except on such occasions. In any case the Kalash have an almost Buddhist reverence for living things.

Aside from snakes and scorpions, the one species that the Kalash abhor is the chicken. Their oral tradition holds that the Kalasha will disappear if chickens are brought into their valleys. Sad to say, their Muslim neighbours have done just that.

The highlight of the funeral comes when a group of Kalash women form a semi circle around the corpse - which LIES on a bier, covered in gold cloth, for the entire period of the ceremony - and link arms. Then they dance around the body while other women chant. You can tell the women from the bereaved family because they are the only females with bare heads (a Kalash woman only takes off her headdress when in mourning). In between the dances, the male elders take turns telling the life story of the deceased in a kind of chant. It is a truly extraordinary spectacle.

After the funeral, I accompany Lines to Bumburet. It is the largest and most beautiful of the Kalash valleys, with snow-clad peaks visible at both top and bottom. But there are grubby hotels here and shops and NGO offices, and even satellite dishes on some of the houses. Even with tourism so weak, there are more foreigners here than in the other valleys. When we stop for tea and some flat bread and goat's cheese - Lines has hyperglycemia - I meet an Italian anthropology professor dressed in full shalwar kameez and chitrali cap, his eyes made-up with eyeliner.

Here, a wealthy Greek NGO is building a huge cedar wood mansion they have called the Kalash House which will include a museum, school and conference centre. I meet Athanasios, head of the Greek NGO briefly as he drives out of the valley in his SUV. He has shaggy hair and dark glasses and looks a bit like a Seventies' rock star. Lines says the mansion is a monument to his egotism. At one point, she tells me, Athanasios gave what he called a 'scholarship', in fact a cash gift of 30,000 rupees, to every kalash family with a child of school age. 'A cash gift. It was the most corrupting thing,' she shouts over the noise of the Land Cruiser as it bounces down the jeep track. 'Many families used the money to buy land.' Increasingly the Kalasha see all western outsiders as a source of easy money.

She talks a great deal about the 'corruption' of the Kalash. Sometimes she means it in the literal sense. One of the wealthier Kalash families became so by stealing and selling statues in the valleys. She is greatly concerned by the replacement of the barter system, and the loss of traditional skills, like shoemaking (the women now wear plastic shoes from Chittral that hurt their feet.) Even the education offered here is not entirely a boon in her opinion. 'Some of the boys speak a few words of English, put on western clothes and think "Man, I'm cool". They have enough education not to want to work in the fields but not enough to get a job in the world outside. The girls want easy money and so they become prostitutes.' Education has also undermined the gerontocratic social system of the valleys: young people with a smattering of literacy despise their illiterate parents and long to join the exciting world outside.

Not everyone agrees with Lines that the Kalash culture should be protected from the outside world with it's technology and subversive pop culture.

Minoo Bandhara, a Pakistani MP and one of Lines' longtime supporters, is adamant that she is wrong about development in the valleys, though he too thinks the Greek mansion in Bumburet is 'horrendous'. As he tells me in his office in Islamabad, 'She doesn't want hotels. She wants tough roads so people tough it out.

She doesn't want too many tourists to contaminate the Kalash. But they are like other ordinary folks: if you ask them what they want most in the world they would say, "a cell phone and a television". The rest of the world has it, why not them?'

Unlike some of the aid agencies here, Lines believes that sanitation and education should come before electricity and improved roads. 'They need some knowledge and awareness first. I saw the same thing in Pathan culture when I first came to Pakistan,' she says. 'I was taken to a small village in the tribal areas and they had a refigerator in the sitting room but no sanitation, no drinking water, no toilet. But they did have electricity.'

Lines is horrified by the money that has been wasted by big aid agencies here, and by the corruption that accompanies so many projects. When the Canadian government was interested in building a school in Bumburet in the 1990s she advised them to rent a building for the school instead. 'I knew where the money would go,' she says.

I get some sense of what she means on the way back to Chitral when we pass several lengths of huge ugly piping. It is a failed water project by the Agha Khan charity AKSP. It cost nine million rupees (£75,000), but was never finished. Another AKSP project involved building a road, but 'they put it on the wrong side of the river and it washed away. I've seen so much money wasted here, money which could have helped the people in so many good ways.'

When Lines first started her UK charity, a lawyer friend told her to read a biography of Dian Fossey, the murdered American ethologist. 'He told me: "If what you do is not successful you will have no problem, but if you achieve things your life will be miserable." It's an observation that has come true.'

The frustrations are huge, and growing. Some of the Kalash that Lines trained to be guides ended up as criminals or exploiting their own people. Despite her successes - there is hope that Unesco may declare the valleys a heritage site - Lines fears that Kalash culture may disappear entirely within a decade.

The owner of the Hindu Kush Heights, a hotel overlooking the Chitral river valley, Prince Siraj al Mulk, tells me: 'We're so lucky someone like Maureen is giving her time to us. We could never understand why someone would leave a lovely place like England to do this. It's a hell of a lot of work for one person to take on. I just hope she keeps on doing what she's doing.'

'I carry on because of the women,' Lines sighs. 'People ask what made you give up your life to do this. What is it I've given up? I'm doing exactly what I want to do and the whole way of life here has given me so much. I've had a very rich life here.' She looks out over the valley, then steps over the lintel into her little house where Sinusai is smiling at her and smoothing out dough on the top of the once shiny stove.

For more details about the Hindu Kush Conservation Association and the Kalash Environmental Protection Society see www.hindukushconservation.com

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