Travel: The treasures of Sindh
Despite spending a lifetime in Karachi, I often felt that I don’t know much about my very own province. With each passing year, tales of robberies and kidnapping in Sindh were not exactly encouraging and only added to the lack of tourism material. Hence, good intentions and a desire to see more of Sindh were just not enough. Having no idea about tourist-worthy sights in Sindh, road conditions or travel time was quite bewildering.
So when the Indus Resource Centre offered a five-day tour of Sindh, I pounced at the opportunity. In the end, I was so glad that I did! The five days spent in rural Sindh brought to light our heritage; simultaneously it taught me humility and made me proud of our culture, and demonstrated the meaning of true hospitality.
The highlight of the first day was the wall at Ranikot, a wonder in itself. In the middle of nowhere, a high wall, like the wall of China, runs for nearly 30 miles and encloses nothing but barren land. Who built these ramparts and when, is a mystery waiting to be solved. Nevertheless, the stark beauty of the land punctuated by man’s endeavour in the form of a massive wall simply takes your breath away.
It took just a five-day road trip to the interior to fall in love with the culture and heritage of Sindh
Next was the Shrine of Hazrat Shahbaz Qalandar in Sehwan. Most towns and villages in Sindh are built around shrines which form the centre of the settlements with the main bazaars radiating from them. Covered in a variety of blue tiles, the shrine of Hazrat Shahbaz Qalandar is topped with an impressive dome. The beautiful verandas and courtyards teem with insistent beggars and touts who touch and pester the visitors, which is a tad annoying.
The next day, we headed to Arore, the capital of Sindh in ancient times. There we saw the remnants of a mosque built by Mohammed bin Qasim. Though nothing much remains, the fragments hint at the greatness of the mosque. The area is distinctive in its terrain. It is a mix of barren, sandy stretches of desert and green fields of wheat and lucerne wherever a source of water is available. In the Rohri hills sector of the desert, there are high outcroppings of sedimentary rocks, weirdly shaped like mushrooms, due to wind erosion. Some are topped by tiny shrines. It is believed that if a supplicant undertakes the arduous climb to the top, his prayers are answered.