Stepping back in time: A heritage walk through Karachi’s architectural splendor

The collage of images created on May 8, 2023, shows Frere Hall and Library (first right), Sarnagati Building (top right) and Karachi Mercantile Cooperative Bank Building (bottom left) in Karachi, Pakistan. (Heritage Walk Karachi/Facebook)
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Updated 08 May 2023
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Stepping back in time: A heritage walk through Karachi’s architectural splendor

  • A community-based organization in the city takes citizens on five-kilometer walk on Sunday to highlight its cultural heritage
  • The buildings covered during the walk show Karachi’s cultural diversity where people of different faiths coexisted peacefully

KARACHI: Every Sunday, Shaheen Nauman, a seasoned and enthusiastic guide, leads a group of people down the bustling pavements of Karachi to help them explore the rich architectural magnificence of the city. She stops as soon as they approach a heritage building and begins to share its detailed history with them.

Nauman’s ambition is not just to highlight Karachi’s rich and forgotten history but also foreground the cultural diversity which traditionally remained its hallmark.

Organized by the Pakistan Chowk Community Center, a platform encouraging people to engage with history and arts, the heritage walk began in 2018 to preserve Karachi’s cultural inheritance. The objective of the activity was to create an open space for the public to deepen their knowledge of the city.

“The heritage walk is a discourse, or you can say, a conversation that we started to protect and preserve the heritage of Karachi,” 67-year-old Nauman told Arab News on Sunday before taking a group of citizens with her to show them nearby areas.




The picture posted on May 4, 2023, shows people looking at the old Bank of India building in Karachi, Pakistan. (Heritage Walk/Facebook)

She dispelled the impression that Karachi was only home to colonial buildings, emphasizing that it had a diverse architectural landscape.

Focusing on the Pakistan Chowk area, which used to be a vibrant community space in the past, Nauman said Karachi was always known for its multicultural character where people belonging to different faiths coexisted and contributed to its development.

As the walk continued, she stopped by buildings that required upkeep while sharing their stories. She pointed toward the Menghraj Dwarkadas Nagpal Building, which once served as a hostel for Hindu boys, where statues of deities got damaged while the occupants were trying to put sewerage lines through the murals.




The picture posted on February 8, 2023, shows sewerage lines passing through the murals plastered in Menghraj Dwarkadas Nagpal Building in Karachi, Pakistan. (Heritage Walk/Facebook)

The community center also intends to preserve the severely damaged Kanji building, constructed by a Hindu merchant somewhere in the 19th century, whose façade is the only thing that continues to stand. Nauman passionately speaks about its beautiful stained-glass windows, with vibrant colors of red, green, yellow, and blue, which instantly capture the attention of a passerby even from a distance.

Sehar Shaikh, a banker who came to participate in the walk, maintained the government should play an active role in protecting Karachi’s heritage.

“I think the government should be doing something about this because everywhere in the world heritage buildings are protected,” she said. “We are trying to protect history for our future generations.”

Aleena Rizwan, a student, however, argued that the responsibility for that primarily rested with people, not the government.

“For any culture to carry on, it is very essential for the people living in that country to love [it],” she said. “As long as they don’t want to keep it in order, don’t work for it, the government cannot do anything.”

Undeterred by scorching heat, Nauman was passionate led the tour. She said she had been brought up in Karachi and wanted to do something for the city where she was raised.

“I started doing the walks in February 2018,” she said. “Rain or sunshine, whatever it is, I am here.”


Pakistan to send over 10,000 workers to Italy over three years after securing employment quota

Updated 27 December 2025
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Pakistan to send over 10,000 workers to Italy over three years after securing employment quota

  • Government says Italy will admit 3,500 workers annually under seasonal and non-seasonal labor schemes
  • It calls the deal a 'milestone' as Italy becomes the first European country to allocate job quota for Pakistan

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan has secured a quota of 10,500 jobs from Italy over the next three years, an official statement said on Saturday, opening legal employment pathways for Pakistani workers in Europe under Italy’s seasonal and non-seasonal labor programs.

Under the arrangement, 3,500 Pakistani workers will be employed in Italy each year, including 1,500 seasonal workers hired for time-bound roles, and 2,000 non-seasonal workers for longer-term employment across sectors.

The Ministry of Overseas Pakistanis and Human Resource Development said Italy is the first European country to allocate a dedicated labor quota to Pakistan, describing the move as a milestone in Pakistan’s efforts to expand overseas employment opportunities beyond traditional labor markets in the Middle East.

“After prolonged efforts, doors to employment for the Pakistani workforce in Italy are about to open,” Federal Minister for Overseas Pakistanis Chaudhry Salik Hussain said, calling the quota allocation a “historic milestone.”

The jobs will be available across multiple sectors, including shipbreaking, hospitality, healthcare and agriculture, with opportunities for skilled and semi-skilled workers in professions such as welding, technical trades, food services, housekeeping, nursing, medical technology and farming.

The agreement comes as Pakistan seeks to diversify overseas employment destinations for its workforce and increase remittance inflows, which remain a key source of foreign exchange for the country’s economy.

The ministry said a second meeting of the Pakistan-Italy Joint Working Group on labor cooperation is scheduled to be held in Islamabad in February 2026, where implementation and future cooperation are expected to be discussed.