SPECTACLE: THE FAST AND THE FURIOUS
It’s a Friday afternoon in Gul Bela, a suburban village on main Charsadda Road, Peshawar and people are gathering to witness the weekly dog race. The race track is situated on the riverside and hundreds of people from Gul Bela and surrounding villages have already taken their places around the race track. They shout and clap to encourage the dogs. The din created by the excited spectators is deafening. Everybody is in the moment, enjoying the spectacle, forgetting all their worries and problems for a while.
“We gather here after offering Friday prayers,” says Subhan Ali, a dog owner. “We bring our dogs for the race. Our only aim is to provide entertainment for people while our dogs get an opportunity to run and show their abilities.”
The dog race is undoubtedly a rare entertainment spectacle. There are no dog fights, just a race. A thrilling, gripping gallop to the finish line.
A weekly dog racing event provides public entertainment
A thin but strong steel wire is installed on a 600-800-feet pre-set track, on which a toy rabbit, made out of fabric and fill, is dragged with the help of a hand-operated machine made locally. The dogs are allowed to run after the toy rabbit, and the dog that catches the rabbit is declared the winner. At the end of the track, a shelter is set up to hide the rabbit.