COVER STORY

We all knew it would start up again—the shootings on a massive scale, the unnatural silence in the evenings, the siege mentality—but for the moment, for today, Karachi was getting back to its feet, as it had always been able to do, and that didn’t just mean getting back to work, but getting back to play: friendship, chai, cricket on the street, conversation.

By Muhammad Asif Nawaz
February 05, 2016

The K word...

“We all knew it would start up again—the shootings on a massive scale, the unnatural silence in the evenings, the siege mentality—but for the moment, for today, Karachi was getting back to its feet, as it had always been able to do, and that didn’t just mean getting back to work, but getting back to play: friendship, chai, cricket on the street, conversation. I couldn’t help feeling that, in the midst of everything that was happening, Karachi had decided to turn around and wink at me. And in that wink was serious intent: yes, the city said, I am a breeding ground for monsters, but don’t think that is the full measure of what I am.” - Kamila Shamsie, Kartography.

Academic discourse on Karachi, arguably about the most important city of Pakistan, is thriving like ever (as usual) to agonising degrees. Books, documentaries, op-eds; the city has been garnished aplenty with all (with most telling us there’s no hope for the city). But while strategic experts and cringe-worthy TV anchors dive head first into ‘objective’ reporting on the city’s affairs, they often neglect the spirit of the city. The usual sights, sounds and smells that form the defining feature of any city are just so convenient to brush off when it comes to Karachi. But, beneath the gloomy reporting and exaggerated doom, this city remains, quintessentially, just another mega city. And so it took me just a while to realise that when you’re in this city of 24 million, it’s rarely about the headline inspiring events than it is about the very basic street life. Mad, energising and lively. Here’s presenting you some impressions about Karachi, as seen through my small-town eyes…

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