Karachi’s Sufi shrines — sanctuaries for the soul?

Karachi’s Sufi shrines — sanctuaries for the soul?

“The Kaaba and Makkah are at a far distance, but a common man can walk to his nearest shrine to witness God.”

A dishevelled-looking man with a betel-streaked beard sat near the edge of a footpath in the upscale neighbourhood of Clifton, Karachi, as several luxurious cars drove past him. He lifted a half-burnt cigarette to his lips with one hand while the other scratched the greasy mess of henna-dyed tangles on his head.

Several others sat near him — a weary-looking woman with three sleeping children, young boys with unkempt hair, wrinkled men staring at their feet and an infant crying in his mother’s lap. The crowd watched each passerby ominously as they crossed the road to the shrine of Abdullah Shah Ghazi, one of the most revered Sufi saints of the city — if not the country.

Abdul Ahad*, 26, drove his bright red convertible to the shrine and almost immediately, a dozen children chased his vehicle to the parking lot, swarming around him and asking him to buy a talisman — an object considered to have protective powers — from their stall.

Several people had set up stalls on the ramp leading to the entrance of the mazaar, selling toys, thread, taweez (amulets) and large stone rings. A boy wearing a Pashtun cap agreed to safeguard Ahad’s bag for the small price of buying him tea. Due to security reasons, male visitors are not allowed to bring bags inside the shrine.

Printed on bright reds and green, the intricate golden calligraphy on the
chadar is available outside every shrine in Karachi. Devotees pay their respect to the saints by laying it on their grave, or by layering a sheet of perfumed rose petals. — Photo by author

Ahad wore a kurta with ripped jeans and a pair of bright neon football shoes. He had completed his higher education at a university in the UK, which explained his anglicised Urdu accent.

Ahad lives nearby and regularly visits the mazaar. Although he joked during our conversation, which so far had been light-hearted, his outlook became solemn when I asked him the reason behind his visit. After several attempts to skirt around the question, he revealed that he is unable to marry the girl he loves because his family has issues with the community she belongs to.

“My mother used to revere Abdullah Shah Ghazi. When I was a child, she always asked me to accompany her to his shrine on Thursdays but I used to be afraid of graves,” he smiled. After his mother’s death, Ahad started visiting the shrine regularly. Every Thursday, he prays to the saint for one thing — his beloved.

attracts up to 500,000 visitors during the celebration of his Urs (death anniversary).

A couple sits opposite a faith healer in a shrine. They sit near the burial site of the saint so they can be blessed with his aura. — Photo by author

During the reign of Gen Ayub Khan, the Auqaf and Religious Affairs Department was established to bring some of the many shrines in Pakistan under the care and sponsorship of the state. According to the department’s records, Sindh has a total of 80 registered shrines. This excludes the intricate network of unregistered shrines built in the smaller hamlets of the province.

While the practice of visiting shrines is most eminent in the rural areas of Sindh, there are 28 registered shrines in the bustling metropolis of Karachi.

Reportedly, there are many shrines in Karachi that do not fall under the government. There is a strong custom of visiting shrines among a significant number of residents in the city. On Thursdays, Karachites are well aware of the chokehold traffic in areas such as Saddar which hosts shrines of lesser-known saints, due to the vast influx of their devotees.

To understand the culture of visiting shrines in Karachi, I traversed a number of Sufi dargahs and spoke to some regular devotees to ascertain what drives them to these places.

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