LAHORE: A Pakistani miniature artist who holds the Guinness World Record for creating the smallest vacuum cleaner said growing up in poverty had inspired him to get ahead and pursue fame and wealth.
Ahsan Qayyum, who belongs to Gujranwala district in northern Punjab, is known for sculpting tiny pieces of art out of lead pencils and graphite.
Born into a poor family, the 28-year-old artist said though his parents could not afford to send his sister to high school and thus married her off, they invested their meagre resources in his education at a local school with the hope that he would change the family’s fortunes one day.
“When you are broke, you have the urge to accomplish something special in life,” Qayyum told Arab News in an interview this week, describing his inspirations. “My circumstances compelled me to find new avenues where I could gain recognition and generate income.”
He said creating miniatures in his spare time gave him peace and helped him fight his “identity crisis.”
Last year, in March, Qayyum found a purpose when he discovered that an Indian miniature artist had made the world’s smallest vacuum cleaner.
“I resolved to break the record and made an official attempt after four months by building a device that was only 1.9 centimeters long,” he said. “To my dismay, the Indian artist created an even tinier variant of his creation that measured 1.76 centimeters.”
Qayyum refused to give up and asked his record manager to allow him another chance. This time he reduced the size of his vacuum cleaner to 1.46 centimeters and resubmitted the evidence. The Indian artist also made another attempt and presented an even smaller machine.
“I was mentally prepared to pursue the competition and ultimately set a new world record by further reducing the size of the gadget to 1.3 centimeters. It was powered by electricity and worked perfectly,” Qayyum said.
The device he has created is essentially a small, hollowed out pencil fitted with a miniaturized piece of machinery that can lift dust through suction using negative internal pressure.
This is not Qayyum’s first record: In 2019, he made his first Guinness World Record by carving the graphite of a lead pencil into 75 small pieces of chain.
“We need to be mentally committed to a project,” Qayyum said. “The biggest mistake we make is to think that something is impossible. The first thing you have to do is decide and then continue to reinforce that decision over and over again.”
This perseverance also saved him during the most difficult phase of his life, Qayyum said, when his mother passed away in 2011, his father lost his job and the artist had to quit his education to start earning a living.
“That’s when I came to Lahore where one of my relatives got me a job at a shoe factory,” he said. “The 12-hour shift in a closed-door, humid environment continued to remind me that I wanted to do something different and quit the monotonous work.”
While he could not resume his education, Qayyum kept pursuing his passion for artistic work and today works as a graphic designer with a major publishing company in Lahore and is “content” with the last eight years of his life.
“To achieve a goal,” Qayyum said, “you must first believe in its likelihood. I was keen to make small objects and continued to nurture my passion, which ultimately got me to this point.”
Pakistani creator of world's smallest vacuum cleaner says poverty pushed him to seek fame
https://arab.news/ncye9
Pakistani creator of world's smallest vacuum cleaner says poverty pushed him to seek fame
- Ahsan Qayyum hollowed out a small piece of pencil to make a functional vacuum cleaner measuring 1.3 centimeters
- In 2019, he made his first Guinness World Record by carving graphite of a lead pencil into 75 small pieces of chain
Indonesian president to visit Pakistan next week to strengthen defense, investment ties
- President Prabovo Subianto to arrive with high-level delegation of ministers in Pakistan on Dec. 8-9
- Several agreements to be signed during President Subianto’s visit, says Pakistan’s foreign ministry
ISLAMABAD: Indonesian President Prabowo Subianto will visit Pakistan on Dec. 8-9 to explore avenues to enhance bilateral cooperation with Islamabad in trade, defense, investment, health, education and other sectors, Pakistan’s foreign ministry said on Sunday.
Pakistan enjoys cordial ties with Indonesia, with diplomatic relations between the two countries established in 1950. The volume of bilateral trade between Pakistan and Indonesia surged to $2.6 billion in 2020, as per official data.
Subianto, who will be accompanied by a high-level delegation comprising key ministers and senior officials, will mark his maiden visit to Pakistan. The last Indonesian president to visit Pakistan was in 2018 when Joko Widodo arrived in the country.
“The two sides will discuss a wide-ranging agenda aimed at further strengthening Pakistan-Indonesia relations and exploring new avenues of cooperation, including trade, investment, defense, health, IT, climate, education and culture, as well as enhancing collaboration at regional and global levels,” the Pakistani foreign ministry said.
“Several Memoranda of Understanding (MoUs) are expected to be signed during the visit.”
During his visit, Subianto will hold delegation-level talks with Pakistan’s prime minister and meet the country’s president and chief of defense forces.
“The visit of President Prabowo will provide an important opportunity to deepen bilateral ties and expand mutually beneficial cooperation, contributing to the continued growth and diversification of the partnership between the two countries,” the foreign ministry said.
Indonesia is also home to a few hundred Pakistani expatriates, many of whom are engaged in businesses such as restaurants, hand-knotted carpets, precious stones, textile items, and herbal medicines.










