In 1842, Dr James Burnes, the provincial grandmaster of the Scottish Freemasons, issued orders for the formation of the Hope Lodge in ‘Kurrachee’.
Nearly 170 years later, the Scottish Freemason Hope Lodge has been “ruined” by its current occupiers, the Sindh wildlife department, claims its former caretaker, Jeevan. “I don’t have anything to do with the place now, but we remember what it used to be like. It is sad,” he says.
Jeevan paints a delightful image of life under the Raj and evenings at the Hope Lodge. Its well-heeled members – Englishmen, Muslims, Parsis, Hindus – began to arrive at around 6pm, rolling up in their Austins or Victoria buggies. Some strolling in as the sun began to set.
Food for the British members came from the Boat Club, and in later years, the Metropole Hotel, while the ‘native’ members would often eat food prepared by the caretaker’s family. “The English liked the baked stuff or custards and puddings,” recalls Jeevan’s wife as his family has served the Lodge since it was built in 1842. Her mother-in-law, Ganga Bai, also cooked for the Lodge.
“The floors have the same tiles you see in the high court,” points out Jeevan. “We used to keep it shining. In my father’s time, the goras would check for dust by sliding a finger down the floor! Everything would be polished. If even a bulb went out, I would tell the secretary sahib and he would instantly ask to have it replaced.”
The neighbourhood – now home to journalists streaming in and out of the Karachi Press Club where there are always a few dozen protestors camped outside – wasn’t always like this, Jeevan says. At 11 pm, the roads would be washed because of the excrement left by the horses driving the Victoria buggies, checked for any breeding mosquitoes and then cleaned again. On weekends, he would go with his father to Elphinstone Street “which only had a few shops”. “The peppermints and other sweets in their big jars… I would often just stare at how they looked.”
The Hope Lodge was among the few ‘clubs’ in Karachi. The YMCA, Jeevan recalls, was where foreigners often stayed. “Food, alcohol… it was a very busy place.” The other establishments were Sind Club and the Union Jack Club, now known as the Services Club. The lane where the Karachi Press Club is now located used to be called the RA (Royal Airforce) Line, where government employees lived. Fawara Chowk, he says, used to have a statue. “As the years passed, all the old things went.”
Jeevan’s father, Prabhu, migrated to Karachi in 1905. After 45 years of service at the Hope Lodge, he suffered an attack of paralysis and the members offered his job to his eldest son. Jeevan took over from his brother and served until the closure of the Hope Lodge. Through these decades of service, Jeevan says the management treated them with respect. “These British knew that they would only be here for a couple of years, and then someone else would come. But we would continue to stay here. They never once pointed a finger while talking to us. We had free use of the place. They would allow us to put up a tent and hold wedding ceremonies here.”
After the partition of the subcontinent, the number of foreign Freemasons dwindled, and there were only a dozen or so left by the time the organisation was banned in Pakistan.
On July 19, 1973, according to Jeevan, some government officials took away all the documentation belonging to the Freemasons. Their accounts were frozen a month later – and so Jeevan’s dues were never cleared - and the building fell into disuse.
There is little left to remember the Freemasons by. The boundary has been damaged, the tiles are dusty and the renovation work appears to be going on in fits and starts. A building was erected on what used to be a garden with jaamun (jambo fruit) trees and rose bushes, which was later razed. The garden plot is now used for parking.
Inside the lodge, the plaques erected at the time of the Hope Lodge’s creation and consecration still exist. One states that it was “nearly destroyed in the monsoon of 1851” and “erected in 1852”. Others contain list of members, including the few ‘natives’ who were permitted to join – such as MMR Shirazi, Mir Ayub Khan JM, AF Kalyaniwalla, WF Bhojwani, KP Advani, Jamshed NF Mehta. According to the Encyclopedia of Freemasonry, “Natives of India joined the Craft, and Rising Star Lodge at Bombay and Saint Andrew’s Lodge at Poona were set up West and East in 1844 for that purpose and soon followed by others. Some prominent natives of India have become Freemasons. Among these are the son of the Nabob of Arcot, Umdat-ul-Umara, Prince Keyralla, Khan of Mysore, Prince Shadad Khan, the former Ameer of Scinde, Maharajah Duleep, and Maharajah Rundeer Sing.”
The caretaker’s family – who served the Hope Lodge their entire lives – is currently in litigation over their quarters on the property. Jeevan is reluctant to share details of who the existing Freemasons are, but says they did step up and offer help when his legal issues began.
Published in The Express Tribune, April 28th, 2012.
COMMENTS (29)
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I was pleasantly surprised to read my uncle's name is is still there on the plaque"A F KALYANIWALA' His Grandson - also Adi is a retired Company Executive in Mumbai. Thanks for this Mail.
hey ... soo what u think about free masons they r in pakistan or not i think yes they are....!
@DaveR I'm a Muslim from Glasgow Scotland, I don't agree with that. Muslims don't favour that lodge. That's ridiculous.
So sorry to see the myths about freemasonry being perpetuated.
As other posters have said it is open to all men of good repute, of ALL religions. It is the bigots who can not respect others religions who decry freemasonry and spread rumours and lies masquerading as fact.
In Glasgow, Scotland, it is rumoured that Muslims favour the Montefiore Lodge (Jewish) because they are sure that the dietry requirements will be satisfied.
Freemasonry is about respect for oneself, for ones neighbour, regardless of race, religion, or politics.
In my opinion if everybody was a Freemason thw world would be a far better place
Don't mean to be pedantic but Charles Napier fought battle of Miani in Feb 1843, however Dr. Burnes issued orders for formation of Hope Lodge in Karachi in 1842? Just curious!!
Many Muslims are Freemasons the world over.
Wise men of Pakistan banned Freemasonry from their country, for reasons best known to them.
Masons do not follow any particular faith or religion, but have to have faith in the Supreme Being.
Muslims, Christians, Hindus, Parsis, Buddhists can become and are Freemasons.
hi.i will like to become a masons.
What? Freemasons was a proper registered organization in Pakistan? I had thought it had only existed in novels!
@Hibah,
Please watch Shadows. Available on youtube. You ll learn everything there is about Free Masonry. In a nut shell, Free masons worship Shaitan.
Freemasonry teaches satanism, there is no secret about it. Since satanism has be given a status of religion (church of satan and all), its followers in Pakistan would be considered a religious minority. About shutting down Freemasons Lodge Building, which is now the Sindh Wildlife Conservatory Department, I think, being Islamic Republic of Pakistan, satan worshipping and monuments related to it should be banned. However, I believe that since that place now houses a government department, they should repair it. Coincidently, I had visited Pakistan Institute of International Affairs once, the building next to the masonic lodge. Just then my friend who knew about it told me. I think there is nothing wrong with the place except that it needs renovation.
So who has caused more damage to Pakistan the last 3 decades? The Freemasons OR the Pakistani nation themselves? I am not defending the Freemasons or any other cult or organization....but trying to make the point that there are several far more vile organizations or groups operating in Pakistan that need to be looked at.
If imran khan form a govt i think he should change there building to colleges and universities and some wellfare centres.
@Ashar: I feel sorry for anyone who believes even a single word of hocus pocus conspiracist BS that is The Arrivals. A person should not renounce use of reason and critical thinking faculties.
In Pakistan free masons are way over rated thanks to the hate based audio and YouTube. I am not sure what their agenda is , or whether or not they control the world but I know which direction we are heading as sect divided Pakistan.
Freemasonry is banned in many Muslim nations including Pakistan but they are not banned in UK,USA and Canada.....they do have a presence in India too. I am against banning any clubs or organizations the way it happened in Pakistan and issuing Fatwas etc....Only Allah SWT knows if they were really involved in making any of the important decisions in Pakistan's history since Jeevan at the end wasn't ready to disclose identity of any of the current local members. Pundit Jawaharlal Nehru's father Pundit Motilal Nehru was also a member of Freemasonry and so was Winston Churchill.Based on controversy attached to the personality of Jawaharlal Nehru and his children,and Nehru-Gandhi dynasty one might wonder if there's something fishy or is there Freemasonry running in Indian politics too. Some people accuse Quaid-e-Azam Mohammad Ali Jinnah of being a freemason too. Moreover,some argue that(Late)Benazir Bhutto and Imran Khan also have got something to do with the famous club. There's something really interesting or fishy when one looks at the activities,history and legacy of the club.And apart from Muslim conspiracy theorists,many Western experts and historians have also pointed towards the strange history of Freemasons.
One can still find masons with their lodges if one tries hard enough. Also black magic is effective for them but most of the time simple bribery or murder can do the trick. Also we have Secret Order of Assassins too in Pakistan. Name call as much as you can, but few years ago masons denied their existence now we have corporate media sugar coating for us to digest easily.
@Tribune Reader: What about the documentry "The Arrivals" I advise the writer to see it who have done nothing but tried to fantacise the evil of freemasonry, who at thier beginning were known as knights templers and completely annihilated by the church under the then Pope's order. We have only banned them.
freemasons are responsible of israel creation shame on this organisation even american forfathers were too member of them.
. The College of Islamic Jurisprudence considers Freemasonry one of the most dangerously destructive organizations to Islam and to Muslims. Here is the FATWA : . http://www.themasonictrowel.com/Articles/Freemasonry/religionfiles/muslimviewoffreemasonry.htm . Fatwa regarding Freemasonry
Cheers .
Freemason Hall was also known as Jaadu Ghar in the local lingua, that explains all the spooky stories about the place. In passing, the author mentions a statue which adored Fauwaarah Chowk. Whoever, he was the Parsi gentleman in white marble, had his right hand resting on a book/sidetable and was looking towards Frere Hall. The chowk was then known as KhaRa Parsi (he must have been some important Karachiite).
One can guess who lobbied for the removal of that statue. Anyway, Naqvi & Siddiqi's Architectural Firm got the job of redesigning the traffic island sans the statue, which was renamed as Musical Fountain.
This feat of engineering, was a defective inaudible music playing when it did manage.
The project was replaced by the present one with the music having quietened, the place it is simply called Fauwaarah Chowk.
(Note: Hope it is not too much of a digression. The movie theatre, Rex Cinema when built was the most modern one in South Asia. Incidentally, it was designed by Naqvi & Siddiqi as well who also had an office there.)
@Muneeb: I do not know the reasons behind other countries banning masonic organizations, but this one shut down due to pressures from the religious right, they were accused of being Satanic worshipers around the time the lodge was forced to close. I am certain the members still meet, they do not need a fancy symbolic lodge in Karachi, they probably meet in corporate boas avard rooms, Sindh club meeting rooms or private residences of it's members. For those who are skeptical about the history of Freemasonary, a good watch would be this documentary Shadows, it is available on youtube.
Oh come on, blaming religion on each and every matter troubling Pakistan? This stuff is beyond religion, if it has a conflict, then it is with humanity. Half the world has this society banned; including half of Europe! What "religious far-right" was involved there? Try not to be so biased, at least try.
Another victim of the vile religious totalitarianism that is rampant in Pakistan.
ALLAH (SWT) knows how many Freemasons are present there in our Political System, Establishment, State Running Agencies and Securities Agencies. May ALLAH (SWT) protect our beloved Pakistan from their dirty business.
Ban,block,censor anything the religious lobby doesn't approve of. Life's much easier when you've got your head in the sand.Our entire country has been held hostage to the violent demands of a few cavemen.
Well, the conspiracy theorists love this kind of stuff. Their whole existence is revolves around fantasies in which sinister,foreign groups are trying to take over the world and the freemasons are a big hit with those whose favorite pastime is fearmongering and incitement of hate amongst the public. The freemason society should not have been banned, by surrendereing before the violence of the religious far-right the state showed its shameful weakness.