Soldiers and security checkpoints greet visitors to Hazara Town, one of two large guarded neighbourhoods in the capital of Balochistan, a province where religious and sectarian groups often target the Hazaras with bombs and guns.
Despite improved security in recent years, partly because most Hazaras have moved into the guarded enclaves, hardline militants keep up attacks, such as a blast in April that killed 24 people, among them were eight Hazaras.
"We are living under siege for more than 1-1.5 decades due to sectarian attacks," said Sardar Sahil, a Hazara lawyer and rights activist.
"Though all these check posts were established for our security, we feel we were ourselves also cut off from other communities."
Sahil carries a pistol whenever he leaves home and relies on his faith as a second layer of security. "I kiss my mother's hand and she kisses me too and says goodbye with her prayers and good wishes," Sahil told Reuters.
Hazaras, said to be descendants of the Mongols who swept out of central Asia to rule the subcontinent for many centuries, are easily distinguishable in Pakistan by their facial features. That has made them vulnerable to attacks by banned groups including the militant Islamic State, which has attacked them in both Pakistan and neighbouring Afghanistan, also home to many Hazaras.
Many community businesses that flourished in Quetta's bustling wholesale markets have shuttered and relocated to Hazara Town or Mari Abad, another Hazara neighbourhood, but the community is defiant. Some still venture out into Quetta in search of work, while others keep businesses running.
The Quetta community held its first Hazara Culture Day this week to celebrate and showcase its history, music and traditions.
A Hazara girl with traditional jewellery does embroidery at a cultural stall during the Hazara Culture Day. PHOTO: Reuters
The community strives to keep its protests peaceful, despite unrest stirred up by militants looking to pit people of different sects against each other, said Abdul Khaliq Hazara, chairman of the Hazara Democratic Party (HDP), which has two provincial assembly representatives.
The community is developing and growing, said martial arts specialist Nargis Hazara.
"Every one of us has a dream, a target and aim in our heart, to change the image of Hazaras in the world, and especially in Pakistan," added the 20-year-old who last year became Pakistan's first winner of an Asian Games medal in karate.
“Many Hazaras have joined the armed forces in Pakistan, where the community's past and future will stay rooted despite any violence,” said another martial arts expert, Mubarak Ali Shan.
"We want to serve Pakistan and despite suffering tragedies and incidents, our love for peace has not diminished," he added.
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