Excellent article on Karachi Hindus...

This is what they say of Deepak Peerwani, a fashion designer and son of a popular politician.

"As with many Hindus here, ‘Inshallah’ slips out of his mouth easily as a prelude to anything and he eats beef, never pork. A travel agent once booked him into a Lahore hotel as an Indian. “I was pissed off. I struck out the word Indian and wrote Pakistani.” Six years ago when he wanted to open a store on an upmarket Karachi street, his friends asked him not to flaunt his name outside. But he was soon forced by market pressure to put his brand up in massive type—Deepak Perwani. “There’s been no trouble, not a single incident outside my shop.”

Here is another interesting quote attributed to the older brother of Danish Kaneria…:slight_smile:
"Mrs Kaneria talks fondly about the temples of India, often referring to the country as “apna desh”. Vikrant is surer of where he belongs. He echoes a popular belief among the elite here that life for the educated is much better in Pakistan than in India. “And there is no discrimination at all,” he says. “The fact that my brother is playing for Pakistan proves that.”

And this from Kishinchand Parwani, he ALSO TALKS ABOUT WHY PAK HINDUS WERE MIGRATING TO INDIA UP TO THE 80’S.
"Kishinchand Parwani, a member of the National Assembly (equivalent to the Indian Member of Parliament) from 1988 to 1997, recalls that right up to the late '80s a steady stream of Hindus would migrate to India. “That was because of home-sickness but they soon realised that in India nobody was going to hug and welcome them just because they were Hindus from Pakistan. Hindus are safe in Pakistan but there is this fear that if anything like Babri Masjid happens, we will have to bear the brunt again. That was the only time Hindus here felt threatened.”

Re: Excellent article on Karachi Hindus...

HINDUS IN PAKISTAN
Jai Kali Karachi Wali
They have their gods, their weddings, their businesses. These Hindus just happen to be living in Pakistan.

MANU JOSEPH

Bani is a Gujarati lady with moist red teeth and a wicked gleam in her eye. When she's in a good mood, the ancient temple sweeper with no confirmed human master will admit to being "between sixteen and eighty years old."

She sits at the gate of the Lakshmi Narayan temple, a small impoverished shrine that stands at one end of a creek in Karachi's prime real estate. Four young girls walk to the gate. The sheer beauty of two is completely wasted on Bani, who stops the girls with a wave and asks them to leave: "Muslims aren't allowed in."

"We just want to walk around and look," one of the girls, Rumi, says.

"Then go to the zoo," retorts Bani.

To the conventional secular urban sophisticate, this may sound like the dangerous portent of violent religious conflict. But there is no malice here. The entire exchange on this breezy Karachi evening is just about a marking of territory.

The Muslim girls are far from hurt. They plead between giggles. "We just want to pray." Hirakumari, a few months pregnant and related in some complicated way to Bani, tells them, "Go pray to your god. You eat cows, make fun of our gods, ask if our gods don't feel cold, being naked..."

But she then turns and whispers with a smile, "They are actually lovely people, these Muslims. They will feed us for the rest of our lives, if it comes to that. Pakistan is the only place I call home but how can we let Muslims inside (the temple)?"

A volunteer allowing entry only to Hindus in the temple

A similar scene plays out at a crowded Shiva temple in Karachi's posh Clifton neighbourhood. It's Monday night, the busiest spell in the temple's week. Jayanti Ratna stands with a stick at the gate and screams 'Jai Shiv Shankar'. When someone doesn't respond he stops the trespasser with, "Muslims and Christians are not allowed."

Does it feel strange for a Hindu man in Pakistan to stand by a busy pavement and block local Muslims? "Not at all. I was born here. I belong here. I will exercise my right to serve my faith."

Today Pakistan's Hindus number somewhere between 2.5 million (a somewhat suspect official estimate) and 5 million (according to popular Hindu politician Kishinchand Parwani). Over 95 per cent of them live in the province of Sindh; most are poor farmers and labourers from the scheduled castes.

Deepak Perwani with his parents

Many of the worshippers at Karachi's temples are somewhat better off, and the calm affluence of Karachi's wealthier Hindus is worlds apart. Thirty-year-old Deepak Perwani, his hair dyed red, and a Ganesha tattooed on his right arm, is one of Pakistan's top fashion designers. His quick Indo-Pak analysis: "There is one major difference. Indians can't cut a salwar to save their lives and Pakistanis can't cut a churidar!"

As with many Hindus here, 'Inshallah' slips out of his mouth easily as a prelude to anything and he eats beef, never pork. A travel agent once booked him into a Lahore hotel as an Indian. "I was pissed off. I struck out the word Indian and wrote Pakistani." Six years ago when he wanted to open a store on an upmarket Karachi street, his friends asked him not to flaunt his name outside. But he was soon forced by market pressure to put his brand up in massive type—Deepak Perwani. "There's been no trouble, not a single incident outside my shop."

Perwani is celebrated and patronised by the rich and mighty of Pakistan, even honoured as the country's cultural ambassador to China. But he has just one "small problem" being in Pakistan.

"Mathematical chance isn't on the side of a Sindhi Hindu looking for a suitable arranged match within the small community. The girl has to be imported," Perwani says, "since I am doing too well here to be exported." His mother Renu will parade him in Bombay, Dubai and Hong Kong, but as she says with motherly concern, "People in India or Dubai don't want their daughters to live in Pakistan. It's a mindset."

Renu's endearing motherly look turns somewhat severe when she considers the options for her son, "I would never accept a Muslim girl in my house. All my friends are Muslims and I know they are very beautiful people, cultured and nice. But a daughter-in-law is a different matter." In any case, her son can't marry a Muslim; Islamic law prohibits a Muslim marrying a Hindu. "I'd have to convert," says Deepak. "And I would never do that."

Danish Kaneria, cricketer and Hindu, his parents and wife Dharmita

In between the rich Sindhis and the poor Hindu farmers of rural Sindh is the middle-class setting of Danish Kaneria's home. The leg-spinner is only the second Hindu to play cricket for Pakistan. His new wife Dharmita is also part of the same Gujarati community. "We met at a festival," Dharmita says, almost shyly. Danish's elder brother Vikrant is engaged to Dharmita's sister, who will also live in the four-bedroom flat soon.

A Hindu devotee feeding a calf in the Swami Narayan temple in Karachi

Mrs Kaneria talks fondly about the temples of India, often referring to the country as "apna desh". Vikrant is surer of where he belongs. He echoes a popular belief among the elite here that life for the educated is much better in Pakistan than in India. "And there is no discrimination at all," he says. "The fact that my brother is playing for Pakistan proves that."

Kishinchand Parwani, a member of the National Assembly (equivalent to the Indian Member of Parliament) from 1988 to 1997, recalls that right up to the late '80s a steady stream of Hindus would migrate to India. "That was because of home-sickness but they soon realised that in India nobody was going to hug and welcome them just because they were Hindus from Pakistan. Hindus are safe in Pakistan but there is this fear that if anything like Babri Masjid happens, we will have to bear the brunt again. That was the only time Hindus here felt threatened."

Film distributor Satish Anand (actress Juhi Chawala's uncle) has released over 450 Pakistani films

A day after the demolition of the Babri Masjid, his staff told Satish Anand not to attend office. Anand, who is film actress Juhi Chawla's uncle and a Punjabi Hindu settled in Karachi, runs Eveready Films, which has distributed over 450 Pakistani films and a few Hindi films like Awara and Barsat. "It was the only time I felt like I was in someone else's country," he says. "After that things have been peaceful."

Yet beyond Karachi, low-caste Hindus in Sindh's small villages face a different reality. "The number of reported cases of violence against Hindus resulted in a distinct worsening in their plight over the year," says a report of the Human Rights Commission of Pakistan (HRCP). "On September 17, 2003, in broad daylight six armed persons attempted to rape three Hindu women. According to local Hindus, this was the seventeenth incident in the area in 2003."

Still, HRCP's Nadia Haroon will make a distinction between crime against Hindus and communal violence. "The attack on Hindu women is part of crime against rural women in general in Pakistan. Hindus are rarely targeted because they are Hindus but since the justice system is so slow and in some cases biased against minorities, criminals here feel that they can get away with such attacks on Hindus."

A worker at the Hindu crematorium outside Karachi with the ashes waiting to be collected by relatives in India

On the outskirts of Karachi, near a graveyard, the Afghan taxi driver turns philosophical under the intense afternoon heat."When it all ends, Hindus and Muslims go to the same place." Here, by a Muslim graveyard is a Hindu crematorium. It has a library, though there are no books, only the ashes of Hindus who have passed on. The relatives await the visas that will let them immerse their ashes in the Ganga. In India.

Re: Excellent article on Karachi Hindus…

Nice, heartwarming article, good to see that contrary to foreign propoganda the people of my Pakistan are tolerant of minority religions. :beaming-with-pride: :jhanda:

Re: Excellent article on Karachi Hindus...

Mr.Ketrapal is Pakistan's one of the highest tax payers,who is an oil exporter and a hindu also :)

Re: Excellent article on Karachi Hindus...

Rana Bhagwandas is the acting chief justice of Pakistan.
Raja Tri Dev Roy, ex MNA and writer is a highly regarded personality.
Countless more names. from the current parliament as well.

Re: Excellent article on Karachi Hindus...

Hopefully, Karachi will progress and shore even more tolerance to all.

Re: Excellent article on Karachi Hindus...

Im going to cite this article whenever Indians talk crap from now on:)
Good on Karachites..

Re: Excellent article on Karachi Hindus...

but why hindus and christians want to live in Pakistanis when a secular country is rt next to them.. they shud follow the example of Yousuf Youhana and convert to Islam sooner or later... I think we shud also try to westerners to respect Islam when they visit our country and have their women folk wear burqa when they roam in Karachi or Lahore.

Re: Excellent article on Karachi Hindus...

In none of my five visit's to Karachi,including one of January of this year,I have seen any `bindi' sporting Hindu woman. :(

Re: Excellent article on Karachi Hindus...

Sardar singh,a descendant of Ummerkot ruling dynasty,is the Naib Nizam of Ummerkott .iT'S IN EASTERN SINDH.

Re: Excellent article on Karachi Hindus…

Maybe because its their home?!

Re: Excellent article on Karachi Hindus...

There are some 2 million Hindu's in Sindh, where they are amongst the richest and powerful landlords, and exercise considerable influence in provincial governments, whatever party is in power.

Re: Excellent article on Karachi Hindus...

Basant kumar who is a businessman and used to own the royal rodale in karachi.

Naveen perwani a famous snooker player represented pakistan and easily in the top five.

M S lal spokesman CBR

The garment industry of upper sindh especially cities like Jacobabad is dominated by hindu traders and also rice mill owners.

I think hindu are in a better state than christians in pakistan.Only the goanese christians are well to do.

Re: Excellent article on Karachi Hindus...

Hindus also have a good legspinner in karachi.

Re: Excellent article on Karachi Hindus…

Yeah and nowadays he is not bowling his googly the typical legbreakgoogly which goes the other way

Danish prabhushankar kaneria features in this article

Re: Excellent article on Karachi Hindus...

inshallah he will be mohammad danish soon - inzi

Re: Excellent article on Karachi Hindus...

A very interesting article indeed, good on Karachiites for showing such tolerance

Re: Excellent article on Karachi Hindus...

Good article, Great to read this..
Just increase more and more of such people and soon the preceptions will change.. to positive..
Don't let Vimal Patak happen, Don't let 17 girls abducted...
People come here because they have perceptions, such article do change that perception to some extent, keep such articles coming...
As for somebody saying that he will use this article against anything said against Pakistan, Sirjee one bucket doesn't fill the sea..
Good heartwarming article......... Please share more of such..
Keep people like Mulz/tmx away, or these stories will just be in shorter supply as wel go ahead ............

Re: Excellent article on Karachi Hindus...

No surprise that mulz and tmx305, two great punjabi "warriors" made the stupidest comments. It's their nature.

Re: Excellent article on Karachi Hindus…

What does being Punjabi have anything to do with this? Must you exhibit such racism?