Pakistani provincial government says ready to buy ancestral homes of Bollywood legends

Bollywood legend Raj Kapoor's ancestral house in Peshawar, Khyber Pakhtunkhwa on Sept. 29, 2020. More than 100 years old, the haveli is now a ruin. (AN photo/File)
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Updated 07 July 2021
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Pakistani provincial government says ready to buy ancestral homes of Bollywood legends

  • Dilip Kumar and Raj Kapoor's houses in Peshawar, both more than 100 years old, have been declared a national heritage site
  • Peshawar district administration estimates the total value of the houses at Rs24 million ($150,000)

PESHAWAR: Authorities in northwestern Pakistan have approved a plan to buy the dilapidated ancestral homes of two Bollywood legends and turn them into museums, an official confirmed on Sunday.
The two houses in Peshawar, Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province, stand next to Qissa Khwani, the city's oldest and most famous road known as the "Street of Storytellers," and belonged to the families of Bollywood greats Raj Kapoor and Dilip Kumar who were born and raised there. They migrated to India before Pakistan was created from the British Raj in 1947.
“We are now in process to arrange the amount to acquire the buildings. We plan conservation and rehabilitation of the two buildings to turn them into museums to highlight the connection Bollywood has with Peshawar,” Dr. Abdul Samad, director of archeology and museums in the province, told Arab News.

The Peshawar district administration, he added, estimates the total value of the houses at Rs24 million ($150,000). The price of Kumar’s house has been estimated at Rs8 million, while of Kapoor’s at Rs15 million.




The facade of Raj Kapoor’s ancestral home in Peshawar, Khyber Pakhtunkhwa on Sept. 29, 2020. The provincial archaeology department has vowed to buy the mansion, restore it and convert into a museum. (AN photo/File)

The provincial archeology and museums directorate has declared the houses a national heritage site.
Samad said the administration was not directly in touch with the families of the Bollywood stars, but Kumar's wife was reportedly "happy" about the development and "contacting people here."
The current owners of the houses were planning to demolish them and build commercial centers in their place. The archeology department stopped the process under the Antiquity Act 2016 in late September, prompting Kumar, 97, who lives in Mumbai, to turn to Twitter and request those in Peshawar to share their photographs of the house.




Peshawar locals say the Kapoor haveli, with its majestic facade and jharokhas — overhanging enclosed balconies — was built between 1916 and 1918 by Raj Kapoor's grandfather, Dewan Basheswarnath Singh Kapoor. (AN photo/File)

Kapoor, who was born in Peshawar in 1924 passed away in New Delhi in 1988.
Sayed Abdullah Shah, a government servant who lives near Kapoor’s ancestral house, told Arab News that the building's condition was deteriorating, and it is high time it was renovated.
"This is a great heritage for locals and foreigners equally and the government starts to rebuild it into its old shape without further delay. We observe the building getting damaged by each passing day,” he said. "Its preservation will attract a large number of visitors."
The Kapoor haveli, with its majestic facade and jharokhas — overhanging enclosed balconies — was built between 1916 and 1918 by Kapoor's grandfather, Dewan Basheswarnath Singh Kapoor.
Amir Nawaz, an octogenarian goldsmith who resides in the congested Dhakki Munawar Shah area, next to Qissa Khwani, told Arab News in September that in the late 1980s, Kapoor’s younger brother, Shashi Kapoor, and son Rishi visited Peshawar and took with them some soil from the house which was then laid into the cornerstone of the family's house in India.


Excavations resume at Mohenjo-Daro to study early Harappan city wall

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Excavations resume at Mohenjo-Daro to study early Harappan city wall

  • A joint Pakistani-US team probes multi-phase wall dating to around 2800 BC
  • Research remains limited despite Mohenjo-Daro’s archaeological importance

ISLAMABAD: Archaeologists working at the ancient site of Mohenjo-Daro have resumed excavations aimed at better understanding the city’s early development, including the structure and chronology of a massive perimeter wall first identified more than seven decades ago, officials said on Saturday.

The latest excavation season, launched in late December, is part of a joint Pakistani-US research effort approved by the Technical Consultative Committee of the National Fund for Mohenjo-Daro, which met at the site this week to review conservation and research priorities. The work focuses on reassessing the city’s defensive architecture and early occupation layers through controlled excavation and carbon dating.

Jonathan Mark Kenoyer, a senior archaeologist involved in the project, told the committee that the excavation targets a section of the city wall originally uncovered by British archaeologist Mortimer Wheeler in 1950.

“This wall was over seven meters wide and built in multiple phases, reaching a height of approximately seven meters,” Kenoyer said, according to an official statement circulated after the meeting. “The lowest part of the wall appears to have been constructed during the early Harappan period, around 2800 BC.”

Organic material recovered from different excavation levels is being analyzed for carbon dating to establish a clearer timeline of the site’s development, the statement continued, adding that the findings would be published after detailed study.

The committee noted that despite Mohenjo-Daro’s status as one of the world’s earliest and largest urban centers, systematic research at the site has remained limited in recent decades. Its members agreed to expand archaeological studies and invited new research proposals to help formulate a long-term strategy for the site.

The committee also approved the continuation of conservation work on previously excavated material, including dry core drilling data, and reviewed progress on preserving a coin hoard discovered at the site in 2023, the results of which are expected to be published after conservation is completed.

Mohenjo-Daro, a UNESCO World Heritage site in Pakistan’s Sindh province, was a major center of the Indus Valley Civilization, which flourished more than 4,000 years ago.