Mazar-e-Quaid, Karachi, Pakistan – March 2008
Originally uploaded by Siberian Winter
There were a number of changes at the airport I had noticed. Firstly smoking had been banned in the main lounge and a new non-smoking section was set up. Strange thing was everyone was obeying it. Another change I noticed was that in the toilets air dryers were installed for the hands and glass sinks in the shape of a salad bowl.
Flying to Karachi was exciting as below we could see the vast Punjab plains and then the rugged hills of Sindh before descending on Karachi. From above Karachi just looked and is a sprawling metropolis. I met a friend for Biryani which the people in Karachi made very well and then made my way to Keamari, a residential area in Karachi. Keamari was not the best of places to live in fact it was quite filthy. However, it was safer than most other areas of Karachi.
After resting, the next day I made my way to the Mazar of the Quaid-i-Azam, the father of the nation, Mr Muhammad Ali Jinnah. The mausoleum is the national mausoleum in the country and centred in the heart of the city. It is made of white marble with curved Moorish arches and copper grills resting on an elevated 54 metre square platform. The cool inner sanctum contains a four-tiered chandelier gifted by China.
Spotlights at night light up the mausoleum and can be seen for miles. Liaqat Ali Khan, the first Prime Minister of Pakistan and Fatima Jinnah, the Quaid’s sister are also buried here. It was an amazing structure indeed looking very pure. How it looked so clean must have been a miracle as Karachi’s pollution levels were higher than most areas.
And surprisingly enough the area was peaceful and clam even though it was in the very heart of one of the busiest cities in the world.
Next on the list was The National museum of Pakistan which had an absolutely fascinating and large collection of coins from different eras, sculptures, rare manuscripts of the Quran, items related to Pakistan’s cultural heritage, Islamic art, miniature paintings, an ethnographic gallery depicting different ethnicities within Pakistan and galleries displaying artefacts from Gandharan times, Mughal rule, British rule and even the Indus civilisation.



