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TRT World presents a new documentary “A Place Called Pakistan”

  1. Crocodile festival in Manghopir,

    The crocodile festival which has been held for decades in Manghopir Karachi


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    Manghopir neighborhood, just outside the city of Karachi, the Sheedi community held the decades-old crocodile festival (or Sheedi Mela).

    The festival is held during the Pir Mangho Urs which is one of the most important events in the cultural calendar of the Sheedi Community – a community of African-Descended Pakistanis.

    It is held every year usually during the summers for three to four days with the exact dates being decided by the elders of the community.

    The festival is famous for the role of crocodiles who reside near the shrine of Mangho Pir and are believed to have a spiritual connection with the Pir. The festival attracts people from different ethnicities who come to make their pledges at the shrine.



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    The elders of the community call out the chief of the crocodiles ‘Mor Sahib’ who is 127 years old and is 12 feet long. Once it’s out, the caretaker feeds it with sweets and meat and adorn it with flowers, and fragrances. When the crocodile eats the meat and raises its neck above the ground, the attendees believe their ritual has been accepted.

    The pond next to the shrine houses more than 150 crocodiles which are all sacred to the African-Pakistani community. The pond currently measures about 400 feet long and 200 feet wide and is nourished by underground streams. According to the locals, it isn’t enough to house the crocodiles living inside which are usually six to seven feet in length.

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Do those slaves being brought to Pakistan are all males ?? If that is the case they do have good ability to attract Pakistani women to be their wives :D

I can say if that is the case so what @Homajon said about Pakistani is not true.

No, there were both men and women. Slave trade in Balochistan and Sindh was established by the arabs. Later Baloch and Sindhi Dynasties kept it going.
Slaves were either recruited as soldiers or serfs.

Some Baloch men had kids with these african women thus we have what we call afro Baloch community. While slave men and women also married and thus we have sheedi community.
 
The six part series is a rare look at the extremely diverse and complex country that is Pakistan.

When we started filming ‘A Place Called Pakistan’, I don’t think we realised that we were about to witness a whole world in a single country. I had been living in Pakistan for a few months, observing and learning, but it was only while filming ‘A Place Called Pakistan’ that the crew and I were plunged into one of the greatest challenges of travel filmmaking: how to summarise an entire country into a six-episode series?

The further along we went, crossing the country from North to South, reaching all of its borders, meeting people of diverse cultures and religions, the more we realised that there’s so much more to Pakistan than what you might find reported in most mass media.

The first surprise was Karachi: the former capital, and currently the largest city in the country with over 20 million inhabitants. As you will see in episode 1, it is so much more than that. This city has countless stories and one of the most independent, resilient creative communities of any city I have visited. My favourite moments from the Karachi shoot were hanging out with a local hip hop crew, and participating in a spontaneous boxing match at an all-girls’ boxing club.

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Filmmaker Eva Zu Beck's adventure starts in Karachi, where she meets fashion designers, female boxers and young rappers transforming their city. While travelling across Pakistan, she also meets other inspiring people like the fighter jet pilot, Zainab. (TRTWorld)


From Karachi, we headed north towards the undisputed cultural capital of Pakistan: Lahore. Although it is now a busy modern city, it still exudes the charm of bygone eras, with ornate mosques and palaces dating back to the Mughal times. After a whirlwind tour of the city, we got to listen to the inspiring story of one of the world’s last remaining players of the intricate instrument, the sarangi, who did not let his disability prevent him from achieving his musical dreams. To finish off our tour, we hitched a ride with Pakistan’s famous ‘Motorcycle Girl’, Zenith Irfan, and rode up to the Indian border for an unforgettable flag lowering ceremony.

In episodes 3 and 4, we got to travel to Baluchistan and Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, arriving at the Iranian and Afghan borders. These little-visited parts of the country are very much off the tourist trail, and we got rare access to some unforgettable experiences you wouldn’t witness anywhere else. Some of my top highlights include meeting a female fighter jet pilot, witnessing a tribal trial and getting to see the mountain pass that defeated even Alexander the Great. Here’s the thing about episodes 3 and 4: if a mountain tribe dancing with rifles does not do it for you, then I don’t know what will!

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Eva Zu Beck met young Pakistani rappers who make music videos with bare minimum resources and rap about social issues affecting their society. (TRTWorld)

And from there, we finally head up north to the area that is closest to my heart: the beautiful, mountainous Gilgit-Baltistan. It is a land known as ‘the Roof of the World’: it is where the world’s tallest mountain ranges meet, and where people living in extremely remote regions have developed their own cultures and languages. I was blown away by the kindness and hospitality of the people in this region - inviting me to a local wedding and handing me countless cups of milky chai - they really made me feel like part of their family. The last two episodes are probably my all-time favourites, and I hope they inspire you to think differently about Pakistan.

‘A Place Called Pakistan’ is a rare look at the extremely diverse and complex country that is Pakistan. While planning and filming the shoot, we tried to cover as much ground as possible in a travel series - but there is so much more. In fact, Pakistan is not just one single place: it is a collection of countless cultures, peoples, histories and stories, all woven under one astonishing roof.

- Eva Zu Beck

https://www.trtworld.com/perspectives/a-place-called-pakistan-39061
 
(AFRO-PAKISTANIS)

PAKISTAN

Many of the Africans brought into the Indian subcontinent entered through the ports of Baluchistan and Sindh, where they worked as dockworkers, horse-keepers, domestic servants, agricultural workers, nurses, palanquin carriers and apprentices to blacksmiths and carpenters. In 1851, the linguist Sir Richard Burton, who served in the British Army in Sindh, noted how up to 700 Bambasi, Habshi and Zangibari—all Africans—were imported annually into neighboring Baluchistan. Females were in greater demand and were priced at around 50 pounds, while children were bartered for grain, cloth and other goods. Much of the vocabulary used by the Afro-Sindhi descendants of these migrants is a modified Swahili. For instance, the word for shield in Swahili, ngao, is gao among the Afro-Sindhi; the word for moon (or one month) in Swahili, mwesi, is moesi in Afro-Sindhi.




A beautiful young Afro-Pakistani Sheedi
AP Photo/Shakil Adil


Pakistan has the most people of African descent in South Asia. It has been estimated that at least a quarter of the total population of the Makran coast is of African ancestry—that is, at least 250,000 people living on the southern coast of Pakistan, which overlaps with southeastern Iran, can claim East African descent. Beginning in 1650 Oman traded more heavily with the Lamu archipelago on the Swahili coast and transported Africans to the Makran coast. As a result, today many Pakistani of African descent are referred to as Makrani, whether or not they live there. On the coast they are also variously referred to as dada, sheedi and syah (all meaning black), or alternatively, gulam (slave) or naukar (servant). The children of Sindhi Muslim men and sidiyani (female Africans) are called gaddo—as in half-caste. The population geneticist Lluis Quintana-Murci of the Pasteur Institute in Paris found that more than 40 percent of the maternal gene pool of the Makrani is of African origin.



Porters at a Wedding Procession
image Collection, Mid-Manhattan Library, The New York Public Library.

In the 18th century, Africans from the East Coast and Madagascar were transported to the Makran coast in Pakistan, and to Gujarat (India). Some were then sent to serve Indian and European elites in the north and east as far away as Bengal.




Afro-pakistani Sheedi Men
ImagePhotographer: © Masood Ahmed, Karachi, Pakistan

"Mombasa Street" and "Sheedi Village" in Karachi speak to the African presence in modern-day Pakistan. The predominantly Muslim Afro-Pakistani community in Karachi continues to celebrate the Manghopir festival, in honor of the Sufi saint Mangho Haji Syed Sakhi Sultan. Outside the main shrine in Karachi, there is a pond with crocodiles that are served specially prepared food. The crocodiles, which were venerated by Hindus before the advent of Islam and are also regarded with esteem by Africans, have become an integral part of the shrine. Although the Sheedis no longer understand all the words of the songs they sing, they pass along this tradition to succeeding generations.



Afro-Pakistani Sheedi Women
ImageAP Photo/Shakil Adil

Maritime activities on the Pakistani Makran coast influenced the music of Afro-Baluchis, many of whom were seafarers who maintained contacts with eastern and northeastern Africa through the middle of the 20th century. There are distinct similarities between the Afro-Pakistani drumming and singing performances called laywa in the Makran and those called lewa in coastal Oman—songs consisting of Swahili words and references to both East Africa and the sea.




Afro-Pakistani Sheedi Culture
ImageAP Photo/Fareed Khan


Every year Sheedis gather at the shrine of the Sufi saint Mangho Haji Syed Sakhi Sultan at Manghopir, a suburb of Karachi, for their most important religious festival. Yaqub Qambrani, a former president of the All Sindh Al Habash Jama’at, a Sheedi organization, stresses, “It was difficult for the community to hold on to its traditions and culture due to slavery and the wadera shahi (feudalism) that was en vogue. We weren’t the only ones that were oppressed. Countless people were oppressed. But because of our physical appearance we were the ones that stuck out. That’s why we were particularly picked on. It is largely the same today, but it is less obvious.”





Afro-Pakistani Sheedi Boy in Sindh
ImagePhotographer: © Masood Ahmed, Karachi, Pakistan



The Sheedi community is predominantly poor and has a small educated class, mostly in the interior of Sindh. "We have just awoken," says one community organizer; "I feel things will get better for the next generation."

The black race has proven to be the one that could be found in every part of the world and seems to always find a way of adapting to it. So from now when you watch a media images of dark skinned colored Arabs from the Middle East or Asia know that they also trace their ancestry to the African continent.

http://exhibitions.nypl.org/africansindianocean/essay-south-asia.php
 

Vlogger Eva Zu Beck goes to the farthest corners of Pakistan; She reaches four international borders with India, Iran, Afghanistan and China. From Lahore, the magnificent capital of the Mughal Empire, to the Khyber Pass on the border with Afghanistan, to the magnificent Karakorum Highway, the places that have not been traveled before are unveiled in ” A Place Called Pakistan “.

Follow Eva as she visits Lahore, the ancient capital of the magnificent Mughal empire and hitches a ride to the Wagah border with Zenith Irfan, the first female motorcyclist to ride across Pakistan.
 
I would like to see your fvcking stats about share of viewers worldwide and where did you get them.

Why some people get triggered when state TV make documantary about a brother nation. These documantaries gets Turkish dubbing later and airing at TRT Documantary in Turkish language. It's a nice way to show Pakistani lifestyle, imo.

TRT is part of news channel package in Canada. So I guess it does have viewership beyond some countries.
 

Eva goes to Islamabad and meets with an extraordinary female fighter pilot. She hitches a 6 hour helicopter ride to the Iranian border and heads to Quetta where she meets some remarkable teenagers practicing the art of Parkour. Catch Episode 3 of A Place Called Pakistan, exclusively on TRT World.
 
(AFRO-PAKISTANIS)

PAKISTAN

Many of the Africans brought into the Indian subcontinent entered through the ports of Baluchistan and Sindh, where they worked as dockworkers, horse-keepers, domestic servants, agricultural workers, nurses, palanquin carriers and apprentices to blacksmiths and carpenters. In 1851, the linguist Sir Richard Burton, who served in the British Army in Sindh, noted how up to 700 Bambasi, Habshi and Zangibari—all Africans—were imported annually into neighboring Baluchistan. Females were in greater demand and were priced at around 50 pounds, while children were bartered for grain, cloth and other goods. Much of the vocabulary used by the Afro-Sindhi descendants of these migrants is a modified Swahili. For instance, the word for shield in Swahili, ngao, is gao among the Afro-Sindhi; the word for moon (or one month) in Swahili, mwesi, is moesi in Afro-Sindhi.




A beautiful young Afro-Pakistani Sheedi
AP Photo/Shakil Adil


Pakistan has the most people of African descent in South Asia. It has been estimated that at least a quarter of the total population of the Makran coast is of African ancestry—that is, at least 250,000 people living on the southern coast of Pakistan, which overlaps with southeastern Iran, can claim East African descent. Beginning in 1650 Oman traded more heavily with the Lamu archipelago on the Swahili coast and transported Africans to the Makran coast. As a result, today many Pakistani of African descent are referred to as Makrani, whether or not they live there. On the coast they are also variously referred to as dada, sheedi and syah (all meaning black), or alternatively, gulam (slave) or naukar (servant). The children of Sindhi Muslim men and sidiyani (female Africans) are called gaddo—as in half-caste. The population geneticist Lluis Quintana-Murci of the Pasteur Institute in Paris found that more than 40 percent of the maternal gene pool of the Makrani is of African origin.



Porters at a Wedding Procession
image Collection, Mid-Manhattan Library, The New York Public Library.

In the 18th century, Africans from the East Coast and Madagascar were transported to the Makran coast in Pakistan, and to Gujarat (India). Some were then sent to serve Indian and European elites in the north and east as far away as Bengal.




Afro-pakistani Sheedi Men
ImagePhotographer: © Masood Ahmed, Karachi, Pakistan

"Mombasa Street" and "Sheedi Village" in Karachi speak to the African presence in modern-day Pakistan. The predominantly Muslim Afro-Pakistani community in Karachi continues to celebrate the Manghopir festival, in honor of the Sufi saint Mangho Haji Syed Sakhi Sultan. Outside the main shrine in Karachi, there is a pond with crocodiles that are served specially prepared food. The crocodiles, which were venerated by Hindus before the advent of Islam and are also regarded with esteem by Africans, have become an integral part of the shrine. Although the Sheedis no longer understand all the words of the songs they sing, they pass along this tradition to succeeding generations.



Afro-Pakistani Sheedi Women
ImageAP Photo/Shakil Adil

Maritime activities on the Pakistani Makran coast influenced the music of Afro-Baluchis, many of whom were seafarers who maintained contacts with eastern and northeastern Africa through the middle of the 20th century. There are distinct similarities between the Afro-Pakistani drumming and singing performances called laywa in the Makran and those called lewa in coastal Oman—songs consisting of Swahili words and references to both East Africa and the sea.




Afro-Pakistani Sheedi Culture
ImageAP Photo/Fareed Khan


Every year Sheedis gather at the shrine of the Sufi saint Mangho Haji Syed Sakhi Sultan at Manghopir, a suburb of Karachi, for their most important religious festival. Yaqub Qambrani, a former president of the All Sindh Al Habash Jama’at, a Sheedi organization, stresses, “It was difficult for the community to hold on to its traditions and culture due to slavery and the wadera shahi (feudalism) that was en vogue. We weren’t the only ones that were oppressed. Countless people were oppressed. But because of our physical appearance we were the ones that stuck out. That’s why we were particularly picked on. It is largely the same today, but it is less obvious.”





Afro-Pakistani Sheedi Boy in Sindh
ImagePhotographer: © Masood Ahmed, Karachi, Pakistan



The Sheedi community is predominantly poor and has a small educated class, mostly in the interior of Sindh. "We have just awoken," says one community organizer; "I feel things will get better for the next generation."

The black race has proven to be the one that could be found in every part of the world and seems to always find a way of adapting to it. So from now when you watch a media images of dark skinned colored Arabs from the Middle East or Asia know that they also trace their ancestry to the African continent.

http://exhibitions.nypl.org/africansindianocean/essay-south-asia.php
@hamojan
 
Have my doubts about this young lady...
 
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