Going ethnic
KARACHI: Among the many voices of shopkeepers urging you to step into their shop in the ever-bustling Zainab Market, the woman with the cropped grey hair goes from shop to shop asking if they have the chirhhya. She stops at the relic jewellery counters inquiring about it and everyone tells her to go to Babu Bhai’s shop, number 50. Then she goes about asking every other shop if they happen to be shop no. 50 or if she is looking at Babu Bhai until her search comes to an end successfully.
The chirhhya is a ring with a little birdie, a mix between a parrot, pigeon and an eagle, perched on top and encrusted with semi-precious stones. But the woman is hoping to find a locket with the bird and Babu Bhai, the shopkeeper, offers to string a chain through the ring so that it can also be worn around the neck. “They only come in the form of rings,” he explains to her with a shrug, adding that the piece of jewellery has its origins in Kuchi jewellery from Afghanistan. The woman then asks for the price and is told Rs300, which she is not very pleased to hear and walks on.
But ‘Babu Bhai’s shop’ has on offer a treasure trove of vintage-inspired items of jewellery on which one would want to spend more time there to explore. The shop was opened 70 years ago, soon after Partition in 1947, by Babu Bhai’s father who now sits quietly on a stool in a corner and watches his son and grandsons, Bilal and Noman, run the business. “You can call us wholesalers, retailers and manufacturers, too,” says Bilal, the older of the two grandsons. “We have pieces not just from Afghanistan but Rajasthan in India and Nepal also,” he adds while bringing out a box full of German silver earrings from Nepal resembling the shape of tulip seashells.