
She embodies the spirit of the seas and the souls of the desert winds, viva Karachi!
Karachi's moments are in the celluloid of the mind; they are in the story of its people.
The face of the Regal Chowk glows from behind the heavy makeup of smoke, grime and dust gathered from the decadent, yet utilitarian vanity of decades. It tries to shine through and reflect on the stories it wrote over the years; the story of sunshine and happiness; the story of grey skies and heady days when the sky almost fell with rain and anarchy; the story of limited affluence and large-heartedness; the story of the inhabitants and the tale of the dream and the dreamer.
Yes, the Regal Chowk is privy to all that and more; and if you are lucky and stand in front of Thomas and Thomas and stare hard, the ghost of the Regal past (no pun intended) will let you fly on the magic carpet of its beautiful noise and make you experience the vitality and glamour of a simpler life inside the hustle and bustle of the first freedom the city experienced.
Viva Karachi!

I lived in Karachi without actually living in it.
I shunned it for the most part.
Thought of it as a passing fancy; took a bite, moved on. But you can’t really move on. Karachi is like part honey part manure disguised as honey. It lingers and leaves a taste. You can’t get away completely. It leaves a mark on the spirit.

Karachi lives in the heart of the mind somewhere. It comes out and defeats the present with the force of history. The soul of Karachi is elusive as it should be. Its inhabitants are morphed, yet each lives in seclusion from the present. Today is elusive too. This moment lives in that mind and is made up of memories of a past half-lived half crept and a nightmare of the future mired in the lived-crept lifetime! Thus, Karachi’s moments are in the celluloid of the mind. Dramatic, black and white; they are in the story of its people.

They say Karachi lost its cool somewhere between the fiasco of 1977 and the fires lit in the heart while it burned in 1995.
Yet, I see resilience in the spirit of Karachi.
When you go in search of the city that lit up the eyes once upon a time, you find citizens with fortitude waiting to tell their stories. You find them in the heartland of Saddar, around the spear of the Tower, along the coastline lined up with fishermen, old men sitting down with a gleam undefined and the young who inherited a part of its spirit from their forefathers, the teddies who are now vigorous white-collar and the hippies who now don sparkling and creased shirts. Then, there is the rubble which upon close inspection is crying out for the architecture that once stood erect with nuance and inflection. Karachi is there to be witnessed in its glory whether it’s through nostalgia or through the remnants of its character in people.
Viva Karachi!

Looking for an identity, either of one’s own self or of that spirit that moves the city by the sea, one can’t help but notice that there are three distinct groups of people (there may be more sub-sets in a way) who define an association with what it once was: those who lived it then as now, saw the highs, experienced the lows, lived the high life, swung about the culture, strutted their stuff; those who lived it vicariously through those who lived it, saw a glimpse of it before it was clamped down moodily; and those who believe in it believe it as a folklore, both real and unreal!
There are clear demarcations amongst these three. All three are vibrant, brilliant groups and all three are vigorous in their pursuits. The first group lived it; the third group in all probability will infuse the spirit that is Karachi with verve and brilliance in years to come. What happened to the group in between: the lost souls, wistful, moody part of the group of Aunty Entity’s children? I am a survivor from that group.
Viva Karachi!
Here’s to us then, who are left behind to find the spirit that lives within us all:
It is not the city of the vanquished
Nor the pride of the victors
You don’t settle down here
You are not of here but from here
You don’t put down roots here you simply pass by
She transforms every few seconds, decades to some, eons to others
She embodies the spirit of the seas and the souls of the desert winds:
She evolves
She dishevels
She concocts
She devolves
She devalues
She devours
She confounds
She is a sea-faring beast... asleep
On the edge of the oceans that are not hers
She listens not
She sees not
She interjects her potion of love
To defile and then beguile
Victoria was disarmed then disowned
Trams one day were just withdrawn
Locals and circulars were cut
Condemning there is NOT here
Bridges built and torn down
And then built again
Like “an end that begins and then begins again”
Natives upstaged, uprooted
Dinshaws, Cowasjees side-lined
Fisher folks discounted
Musicians floored, implored, flouted
Padres, fathers, mothers, teacher’s sea’ed off
Culture went south, newbies looked west
Sea upon sea of people hauled out and waved in
Apocalypse come and gone
Then and now...
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