SOCIETY: THE RESTAURANT ON ALAMDAR ROAD
The aromas of piping hot Qandhari naans, rich kofta curry, and heaped plates of biryani served with generous servings of freshly-cut vegetables as salad platters fill your olfactory senses the moment you enter the simply-set but spotless Hazara Restaurant in Quetta. But the comfort found here is not just in the food that is served. The most comforting is the ambience created by its staff, comprised entirely of women with a smile on their lips, even as they hide sad stories in their hearts.
The restaurant is operated and run almost entirely by Hazara women. It is a place where women can take ownership of their lives and engage in working opportunities in a safe environment. Here they can find a sense of self-sufficiency and feel empowered enough to pick up the pieces of their broken lives and shape a future for themselves.
The restaurant is the brainchild of Hamida Ali, a young Hazara social rights activist who turned a dream into a reality. A resident of the famous Alamdar Road in Quetta, she like many others in her community has lived under the shadow of suicide attacks and sectarian violence. Up until a few years ago, the situation was so egregious that she says people used to bury their loved ones every week. “We have seen many tragic incidents during the past decade,” she says, “with women and children being badly affected as most male members were martyred in bomb blasts and ‘target killing’.
Hamida Ali Hazara has provided Hazara women in Quetta an opportunity for entrepreneurship
“I didn’t want my community women to go around asking for work or to beg the government institutions to pay and support them,” she explains. “I wanted to create something where women could work with dignity.”
Two years ago, Hamida founded Hurmat-i-Niswa, a non-governmental organisation (NGO) based on ideas of women empowerment. Hamida wanted to create a platform “to help and promote women empowerment”, and the idea of the restaurant flowed from there.
The Shia Hazara community in Quetta has been the target of sectarian violence since 2003 and to date approximately 700 people have been martyred and thousands injured; about 2,500 families have been affected. “My family has been fortunate not to have been harmed with these attacks, but psychologically everyone living on Alamdar Road has been a victim,” says Hamida. “It all happened with the people living next door and you had to be their moral support in all situations.”