Karachi, thou shalt be the
glory of the east! Would that I could come
again to see you in your grandeur!' Sir Charles
Napier, first British governor of Sindh, 1843.
Napier was the first to
see the possibilities of developing Karachi into
a port and commercial center. The city as it is
today would have pleased him; Karachi is the
largest and the most populous city in Pakistan;
the commercial and industrial hub of the
country. Until the British conquest of Sindh in
1843, Karachi or Kolachi-jo-Kun (Whirlpool of
Kolachi), as it was then known, was a small
isolated fishing village clustered on the three
islands of Manora, Bhit and Baba, in what is now
Karachi Harbor. By 1947 Karachi still had a
population of only 400,000; it was not until
after Partition, and the influx of millions of
Muslim refugees from India, that the population
grew dramatically. Karachi, then, became the
first capital of the new Pakistan, until
Islamabad replaced it in 1963. Karachi is the
center of education and other cultural and
social activities. A great number of prestigious
educational institutions are functioning here.
It is an ultra-modern city, with most modern
cinemas, recreational clubs, hotels and
restaurants.
There
are beautiful beaches at Sandspit, and Hawke's
Bay. These places are excellent picnic resorts
with their tranquil surroundings and provide an
atmosphere to rest and relax. The opportunities
for yachting, water-skiing and cruising are also
available there. The presence of huge and tall
buildings has given it a grandeur and majestic
appearance.
Karachi has an
international airport, a port and two railway
stations (Karachi City and Karachi Cantonment),
and is connected by the Super Highway and other
roads to the rest of the country.
The airport is ten
kilometers (six miles) from the city center,
which can be reached by taxi, airport coach and
the public bus.
Karachi's three main
attractions are its bazaars, architecture, and
coastline.
Architecture
Karachi is an unusual
mixture of imaginative skyscrapers and solid
19th-century Victorian-Gothic buildings.
Three-lined boulevards and narrow dusty alleys
make it a city of surprising contrasts. There
are architectural reminders of the former
British Imperial presence's. The tomb of
Muhammad Ali Jinnah , the Quaid-e-Azam or
'Father of the Nation', is Karachi's most
impressive monument, Jinnah led the movement for
a separate Muslim state and at Partition in 1947
became governor-general of Pakistan. He died of
tuberculosis one year later.
Even more impressive is
the remarkable white-marbled Masjid-e-Tooba , or
the Defense Housing Society Mosque; Karachi's
largest mosque. Its single dome is claimed to be
the largest of its kind in the world. Those
interested in colonial history and church
architecture might enjoy a visit to Holy Trinity
Cathedral . There are a number of other
19-century churches in Karachi, including St.
Andrew's Church and St Patrick's Cathedral. The
National Museum of Pakistan is off Dr.
Zia-ud-din Ahmed Road. The enthusiast of British
social history and architecture will enjoy
visiting the Sindh Club on Abdullah Haroon Road.
The club was founded in the mid-19th century
exclusively for British civil servants and did
not accept Indian or Pakistani members until the
early 1950s.
The
gothic styled Frere Hall, a social and cultural
center under the British colonialism, is now a
public library.
Other sights included the
Zoroastrian Towers of Silence , hills where the
dead are traditionally exposed to vultures. The
Sindh High Court , on Court Road, is a
19th-century red sandstone building. Opposite it
is the late 19th-century Sindh Assembly Building
, typically colonial in style.
A
drive west on I.I. Chundrigar Road takes you
past the vast Cotton Exchange Building,
followed by the new Habib Bank Plaza, an
elegant round building and the second
tallest in Karachi. Further along on the
left is the 19th-century Greek porticoed
State Bank of Pakistan, and beside it the
new State Bank Building Beaches and Harbors
The sea is the most
romantic of Karachi's attractions, especially
if you sail out into the harbor at sunset to
catch and eat crabs in the moonlight, or anchor
at Oyster Rocks for a picnic under the stars.
You can also stroll along the beaches to watch
the giant sea turtles lay their eggs in he sand.
By day you can swim and bodysurf on Karachi's
many beaches or ride on the gaily-decorated
camels.
The oldest and the beach
that attracts the largest public is the Clifton
Beach . The main beaches of Karachi are a vast
stretch one can reach by taking a connecting
bridge from Maulvi Tamizuddin Khan Road onwards.
The first stop is a fork, one going to Hawke's
Bay , that is 25 kilometers (15 miles) from the
center of Karachi, with beach huts for rent,
complete with cooking facilities, bathrooms and
changing spaces and roaring surf. The other fork
leads to Sandspit, a nine-kilometer (six-mile)
long sandbank that protects the Keamari Harbor
from the open sea. From Sandspit a continuous
line of beaches stretches west for hundreds of
kilometers along the coast of Sindh and
Baluchistan to Iran. Sandspit now connects
Manora Island , once the island home of the
original fishing community of Karachi, to the
mainland.
Paradise
Point, a gorgeous landscape with craggy cliffs
has a long row of habitable huts and some ruins.
The French Beach is the most exclusive of
Karachi's beaches and is ideal for surfing.
Arora's Cove and Baleji , two more spectacular
and exclusive beaches, are minutes away from
French Beach. Bhit and Baba Islands , in the
shelter of the Keamari Harbour, take one back to
the era of the original fishermen community,
involved in little changed methods of work and
living. The West Wharf Fish Harbor , at the end
of West Wharf Road, bustles with fishermen and
boat builders busy with their work. The mouths
of the Indus empty into the Arabian Sea
southeast of Karachi through channels that
wander round thousands of mangrove-covered
islands with fecund mangrove swamps. Here
fishermen from nearby villages, or from
temporary camps on the more remote islands, work
in every creek, using all means imaginable to
land their catch.
Pakistan Tourism Development Corporation
Pakistan Travel Directory
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