'My heart is content:' Frail Pakistani shepherd roaming in Prophet’s Mosque goes viral

Abdul Qadir Bakhsh, an 82-year-old Pakistani shepherd whose video racked up over a million views as he visited Saudi Arabia to perform Umrah, speaks to Arab News in Hub, Pakistan on April 23, 2023. (AN photo)
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Updated 26 April 2023
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'My heart is content:' Frail Pakistani shepherd roaming in Prophet’s Mosque goes viral

  • Abdul Qadir Bakhsh, who doesn’t even own a phone, belongs to an impoverished town in Pakistan's southwestern Balochistan province
  • A short video of the elderly man, which has racked up over a million views, has moved Arab social media users and government figures

HUB, Balochistan: Barefoot and frail, with a long muslin cloth draped over his turban, an old Pakistani shepherd roaming the Prophet’s Mosque in Madinah became an unlikely social media sensation when a video of him went viral last week, prompting even Turki Alalshikh, adviser to the Saudi Crown Prince, to tweet about where to reach him.

But the 82-year-old Abdul Qadir Bakhsh who returned to his home in the village of Goth Hajji Rahim in Hub, Balochistan on Saturday after performing Umrah, doesn’t even own a phone. Steeped in poverty, Bakhsh had saved for 15 years to make the pilgrimage, and the first time he saw his viral video was during this Arab News interview inside his wall-less hut on Sunday. 

“I feel like all my worries have vanished. My heart is content. I am not even short of sustenance, I am happy. My wish to visit the shrine of the Holy Prophet (pbuh) and Makkah have been granted,” Bakhsh told Arab News.




Abdul Qadir Bakhsh, an 82-year-old Pakistani shepherd whose video racked up over a million views as he visited Saudi Arabia to perform Umrah, speaks to Arab News in Goth Hajji Rahim village in Hub, Pakistan on April 23, 2023. 

With failing eyesight, and holding a walking stick in his hands, Bakhsh is a heart-wrenching sight walking alone in the video which has been viewed over a million times already, often turning around as if lost and searching for somebody. Arab social media users were moved by his simple appearance, with some comparing his simplicity and humility to famous Islamic personalities.

Back home in his village, in a bare shanty structure made of tree trunks and grass, he sits on the floor while excited visitors come and go, congratulating the old shepherd for completing the pilgrimage – a beloved dream for so many in this part of the world. For years, Bakhsh sold many of his goats and saved up as much as he could to see his dream come true. 

His happiness, he said, knew no bounds when he saw Makkah for the first time. He reached the city without a guide, speaking only Balochi which made it hard to communicate for directions. But his prayers were answered he said, when he made it to the Holy Kaaba.

“I wandered around until I finally reached there,” he said.




Abdul Qadir Bukhsh (right) sits inside his hut as people come to greet him in his native village in Hub, Pakistan on April 23, 2023. (AN photo)

At the Prophet’s shrine, he wept: “I said, God, you have showed me the way and brought me here.” It was there that a still unknown person made and shared the video that immediately went viral.

Bakhsh then went back to Makkah to perform Umrah once again, and now that he’s back home, said he is already preparing to save and collect money for performing the Hajj one day-- his greatest wish.




This picture taken on April 23, 2023, shows the hut where Abdul Qadir Bakhsh lives in Goth Hajji Rahim village in Hub, Pakistan. (AN photo) 

“At the Kaaba, I prayed: ‘Allah, I don’t know this place, so you are my guide. I have no guide here. If I’m not healthy then this place is better for me; I’m not a learned person and I have weak eye sight. Guide me as you’re my only guide... guide me to your secrets,’” he said.




The picture taken on April 23, 2023, shows a signboard bearing the name of Goth Hajji Rahim village, where Abdul Qadir Bakhsh lives, in Hub, Pakistan. (AN photo) 

His prayers, he added with a glint in his eyes, were answered.


Pakistan PM praises stuntman ‘Sultan Golden’ for breaking record for fastest reverse car driving

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Pakistan PM praises stuntman ‘Sultan Golden’ for breaking record for fastest reverse car driving

  • Sultan Muhammad Khan drove one mile in reverse in just 57 seconds to set new world record, local media widely reported
  • Khan previously broke world record for longest motorbike ramp jump in 1987, managing a 249-feet long jump in Lahore

ISLAMABAD: Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif and President Asif Ali Zardari praised renowned stuntman Sultan Muhammad Khan, popularly known as “Sultan Golden,” for breaking the world record for fastest reverse driving a car on Saturday. 

As per local media reports, Khan achieved the feat in the capital of Pakistan’s southwestern Balochistan province Quetta, when he drove one mile in reserve in just 57 seconds. 

“Sultan Golden has made Pakistan proud across the world,” Sharif said in a statement released by his office. 

The Pakistani prime minister said his government is committed to providing all possible facilities in every field of sports. 

Zardari also heaped praise on the stuntman for setting the new world record. 

“He said the achievement reflects the skill, courage and dedication of Pakistanis, strengthening Pakistan’s positive image globally and wished him continued success,” the president’s official X account wrote. 

Khan has been performing stunts since the 1980s in Pakistan, a country where motorsports does not gain traction due to a lack of infrastructure and popularity of other sports such as cricket, football and squash. 

Khan, who hails from the southwestern city of Pasni, earned the nickname ‘Golden’ early on in his youth for his iconic curly golden hair. 

In March 1987, he entered his name in the Guinness Book of World Records when he performed the longest motorbike ramp jump in Lahore. Khan managed a 249-feet long jump, beating the previous record by two feet.