From Germany to India: Chai and contradictions in Pakistan
This is the travel blog of backpackers Rochssare Neromand-Soma (28) and Morten Hübbe (30) who met at the same university in Germany, where they both studied Literature and Media. They finished school in 2011 and started travelling immediately.
Their journey started with a trip to South America. They planned it as a six-month visit but ended up falling in love with the warm people and the breathtaking beauty of the region. It all started with hitchhiking (which is really common in Argentina and Chile) and enjoyed it so much that they kept travelling until they had discovered the entire continent.
They ended up staying back for over two years, and had by then, hitchhiked more than 50.000 kilometers, mostly with truck drivers.
On the way, they met a Frenchman who told them about his hitchhiking adventures in Europe. He went from Paris to Istanbul all in just four days. This impressed the couple enough to decide to hitchhike all the way from Germany to India.
Today, they are in Pakistan. And look forward to travel throughout the country before proceeding to their last destination.
Read Part-I here. You can also follow them on Facebook and Instagram.
Karachi, the mega-metropolis
Coming from Quetta, we arrived in Karachi after a long and dusty train ride. Before we even reached the Cantt station, we had already seen the poverty; people living in tents next to the rails, all but surrounded by garbage, the dust and dirt. At the colonial-era station, goats roamed about outside as we had our breakfast in a fancy bistro café.
Our first impression: Karachi contains all social classes. And nothing seems to be impossible here. The city is a real mega metropolis, and together with the district next to the Arabic Sea, it hosts more inhabitants than the whole of Australia.
Karachi's global image is supposedly not very good – it is regularly mentioned in all rankings of the most dangerous cities in the world. They say there is no other city in the world where more people get murdered. But all this, we got to know when we had already left the city.
The time we spent in Karachi was phenomenal. We met pleasant people and interested observers everywhere we went. We had good fun with friends on the beaches of Hawksbay, watched wonderful decorated camels at Clifton; hung out with musicians, producers, journalists; and every new day, learned a little bit more about Pakistan.