Sitting under a lignum tree to avoid the midday broiling sun, Saeed Baqri told the history of the Karachi War Cemetery.
A few meters away, a gardener was busy watering the small trees and plants alongside the shallow graves aligned in long rows. Another was engaged in picking up fallen leaves from neatly levelled grassy ground.
“Their name liveth for evermore” reads a wall at the cemetery’s entrance. A huge white cross stands in the middle of the grounds which bifurcates the rows. All the headstones are of equal size and white.
Unlike other architectural sites in the country's commercial capital which are fast losing their shine not only through the ravages of time but also due to the neglect of their supposed benefactors and greed of land grabbers, this historic place is well protected and well maintained.
Located in the city’s eastern district and surrounded by military installations, the cemetery houses over 600 graves of fallen soldiers, mostly from the United Kingdom, who fought in World War II.
Apart from the graves, the cemetery also contains three monuments to commemorate the more than 25,000 servicemen of the forces of united India who died during the war and 568 men who served the Allied forces in garrisons and died in different areas (now called Pakistan) during World War I.
The cemetery is maintained by the U.K.-based Commonwealth War Graves Commission (CWGC), which also takes care of scores of war cemeteries across the globe.
The first grave a visitor encounters is that of Major K.B. Dawson from the 3rd Gurkha Rifles Regiment, who died on Dec 13, 1943 at the age of 29.
The region, now known as Pakistan, did not bear the direct brunt of the war, but its indirect involvement was huge. It had been declared a non-operational zone.
“Thousands of injured soldiers were brought to Karachi during World War II, which housed one of the largest camp hospitals in undivided India,” Baqri, who heads the CWGC’s Pakistan, Asia Pacific and Africa section, told Anadolu Agency.