Reproduction of a famous image of Pakistan’s truck art in the 1970s. It shows film actor Ejaz and actress Firdous in a scene based on a romantic folklore.
With the kind of impetus which it had enjoyed in the 1970s, truck art became a lot more complex, elaborate and ubiquitous in the 1980s.
In fact, it also produced its first ever super-star. His name was Kafeel Bhai Ghotki.
Ghotki Taluka is a dusty town in the northern most districts of the Sindh province. The majority of the people settled here are indigenous Sindhis, but the town also boasts of having a sizeable Mohajir (Urdu-speakers), Baloch, Pakhtun and Punjabi settler population.
Just like the overall Ghotki District, Ghotki Taluka too, is largely an industrial town, known for having a number of manufacturing and production plants and factories.
However, in the early and mid-1980s, Ghotki became famous for something that had absolutely nothing to do with factories.
Many Pakistanis began noticing the following text signed behind colourfully painted and decorated trucks and lorries: ‘Kafeel Bhai Ghotki Wally — Right Arm Left Arm Spin Bowler ’.
The frequency with which these words began to appear on trucks and lorries on the roads of Pakistan was such that many motorists became curious enough to actually stop and ask truck drivers, who on earth this Kafeel Bhai was (and what the heck was a right arm left arm spin bowler)?
The funny thing is that (initially) many drivers when asked didn’t even know that the mentioned text had been placed at the bottom of the multi-colored images and pictures painted behind their trucks.
When some regional Sindhi newspapers investigated the phenomenon, they discovered that Kafeel Bhai was a young cricket enthusiast and a gifted painter who came from a humble, working-class background in Ghotki.
In the late 1970s and early 1980s, he had fancied himself to be the only bowler in the world who was able to bowl devastating off-spin with his right arm and an equally devastating leg-spin with his left.
He did manage to get a place in a few club sides in Ghotki where he tried to prove his uniqueness on the city’s grubby cricket grounds. Though he actually could bowl from both his arms, the ball would hardly ever turn and he was usually taken to the cleaners by the batsmen.
Blaming his fate as a bowler on the flat pitches of Ghotki, he decided to try his luck on the cricket grounds of Sindh’s sprawling and cosmopolitan capital, Karachi.
In Karachi, he couldn’t even bag a place in a modest club side and he returned to Ghotki heartbroken and convinced that the Pakistan Cricket Board couldn’t understand his unique cricketing abilities.
In Ghotki, Kafeel Bhai began to spend his time hanging out at the small tea stalls and eateries near the petrol stations on the highway that ran past Ghotki.
These stalls and eateries were mostly frequented by truck drivers who were driving their trucks to and from Karachi (in the south) all the way to Peshawar (in the north), carrying industrial goods, wheat, sugarcane, etc.
Though many of these trucks had all kinds of images painted on them, Kafeel Bhai began to spot trucks that didn’t, and offered to paint them. He only asked the drivers to pay for the paints and brushes required for the job.
The drivers loved his work that mostly included painted images of flying falcons, famous Pakistani vocalist, Madam Noor Jehan, horses, and Lady Diana (!); but what they didn’t know was that Kafeel Bhai was signing off his work as ‘Kafeel Bhai Ghotki Wallay – right arm left arm spin bowler ’.