KARACHI: “I look in that direction and my eyes see what my mind is still not getting used to. Suddenly I think, where is Baba? Then I remember,” smiles the toothless malang outside Hazrat Abdullah Shah Ghazi’s shrine in Clifton.
“I think even Baba won’t recognise his own home from the outside now,” the malang said laughingly, making the dozens of beads around his neck jiggle.
There is a small graveyard on the shrine grounds. A young man complained that he was prevented from visiting his grandmother’s grave there because of the heavy construction work and cranes looming above. “Perhaps it is for my own safety to stay away right now. That’s fine. But I hope they won’t also change the grave stones to match the surrounding architecture or ask us to exhume our dead and rebury them elsewhere on the demands of the people who would be moving to this soon-to-be very elite and high-class neighbourhood,” he said.
Qari Rafique Ahmed, who has a small footpath shop in a side lane of the shrine, said that he has been displaced for the duration of the renovation work but still he didn’t mind the change, because “change is always good”.
Firdaus Shah, selling mirrors, wall hangings, baskets, bracelets and lockets in the back lane said that he really liked the new front elevation of the shine because it reminded him of another such place. “I have seen pictures of Ghaus-i-Azam’s mausoleum in Baghdad. I think it is a copy of that,” he said.