‘Made me feel truly alive’: Pakistani globetrotting biker shares tale of his monthlong travel through India

In this photo, taken on May 31, 2023, Pakistani vlogger Abrar Hassan gestures at the Wagah border in Lahore after touring India on his bike. (Photo courtesy: Facebook/wildlensbyAbrar)
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Updated 04 July 2023
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‘Made me feel truly alive’: Pakistani globetrotting biker shares tale of his monthlong travel through India

  • Abrar Hassan explored 17 major Indian cities covering 7,000km on his motorbike in March this year
  • Hassan received love and hospitality from Indian people who turned out to be avid viewers of his vlogs

ISLAMABAD: Germany-based Pakistani biker and vlogger Abrar Hassan’s fascination with India began while growing up in his hometown, Nankana Sahib, in Pakistan’s Punjab province roughly 100 kilometers away from the Indian border, which is regularly frequented by Sikhs based in the neighboring India for being one of their most revered religious sites.

For the past seven decades, India-Pakistan cross-border visits have been limited by tensions and conflict. After years of traveling around the world, Hassan’s curiosity finally took him to neighboring India in March this year, where he spent a month covering 7,000 kilometers and discovering the South Asian culinary and architectural heritage.

His videos showing his journey through India’s Kochi, Kerala, Tamil Nadu, Goa, Mumbai, Ahmedabad, Jaipur, Jodhpur, Ajmer, Agra, Delhi, Chandigarh, Amritsar and other cities have garnered millions of views on YouTube, showcasing the love and warmth of people across the border despite tensed relations between the two nuclear-armed neighbors.

In an exclusive interview with Arab News, Hassan said he had many fears before undertaking the trip to India on March 2, but the apprehensions were overcome by the warmth of the people across the border and the richness of the Indian street food.

“Every time I stepped foot in a new city in India, I felt an overwhelming sense of excitement and joy and the energy of the place,” he said. “And the warmth of the people made me feel truly alive and connected to the world.”

The 35-year-old globetrotter, who acquired a bachelor’s degree in aerospace engineering in Pakistan’s capital Islamabad, moved to Germany in 2008 for higher studies. His passion for traveling grew while working in the auto motive sector in Frankfurt when he would take time off from his job to visit new places.

Hassan has backpacked through 80 countries across the world, with at least 15 of them on his motorbike, over the past decade. In 2019, he quit his job in Germany to take up vlogging full-time, which is now his passion and livelihood both.

“I [would] always say why not India because if you are living in Europe and you see every other traveler who is traveling through either through his motorcycle or cycle or even his car, they always tend to go toward Central Asia, Pakistan and India,” Hassan explained at Arab News’ office in Islamabad.

He recalled how his bike broke down in the neighboring country and led to a heartwarming response from the locals, who promptly arranged a mechanic and extended him an invitation to savor biryani — a hugely popular rice dish in India and Pakistan.

“They took my bike to the mechanic, bought all the accessories that we needed and then they invited me for biryani,” Hassan said.

“In Delhi there [was] one paralyzed guy who waited three hours to meet me and he told me that he cannot travel but now he just watches my videos and he feels like he is traveling,” the Pakistani globetrotter said.

In India, Hassan said, he witnessed a kind of “mutual love” and a “lot of respect” for the people living on both sides of the border. He also discovered a diverse range of regional delicacies, from the familiar cuisines of Maharashtra to the intriguing specialties of Gujarat, on the month-long journey.

“I have seen lot of food from Maharashtra like ‘misal pav’ or ‘vada pav,’ you always hear it in the movies,” he said. “In Gujarat, they have very funny names like ‘thepla,’ ‘phapda’ and they have ‘jalebi’ in the morning, in the breakfast, which I never had in Pakistan.”

The Indian people have huge appreciation for Pakistani culture that is reflected in their admiration for Pakistani drama serials, dresses and the desire to visit this side of the border, Hassan said, pointing to the irony of the two people being close in proximity yet distant in connection.

Ties between bitter rivals India and Pakistan stand frozen since August 5, 2019, when New Delhi revoked semi-autonomous status of the part of Kashmir it controls, dividing it into two federally administered territories. 

The Muslim-majority Himalayan region has been a bone of contention between Pakistan and India since their independence from the British rule in 1947. Both neighbors rule parts of the Himalayan territory, but claim it in full and have fought two of their four wars over the disputed region.

“They (Indians) often say, ‘we love Pakistani culture,’ especially they love the Pakistani shows, the dramas, the dresses of Pakistan,” he said, adding that he often came across signboards in Indian markets that read “Pakistani dresses are available here.”

“So, I think, we are very unlucky that we are too near, but we are too far.”

Hussain plans on visiting India again, but this time the country’s northern areas.

“I always plan to do the trip in the north, to go [Indian-administered] Kashmir, Leh, Ladakh, Himachal, Spiti,” he said. “So, I am preparing for it if I got visa.”


Mini op-ed: Recognising a shift in how people relate to wellness, self-care

Updated 05 March 2026
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Mini op-ed: Recognising a shift in how people relate to wellness, self-care

DUBAI: I have spent nearly a decade working in the beauty industry in Saudi Arabia and the UAE, and Ramadan always has a way of prompting change; in habits, in priorities, and in the routines people have been carrying without question. Speaking from my own corner of the industry, one of these habits is often hair removal.

Saudi Arabia’s beauty and personal care market was valued at about $7.56 billion in 2025 and is set to grow to an estimated $8.03 billion in 2026. Within that growth, personal care encompassing the daily (sometimes unglamorous) routines hold the largest share. But market size alone does not tell the full story. A study conducted at King Abdulaziz University Hospital, Jeddah, found that three quarters of Saudi women experienced complications from temporary hair removal methods, including skin irritation, in-grown hairs and hyperpigmentation. A separate 2025 study published in the Majmaah Journal of Health Sciences found that laser hair removal was both the most considered and most commonly undergone cosmetic procedure among Saudi respondents, yet dissatisfaction with cosmetic procedure outcomes was reported by nearly half of all participants. The numbers point to a gap not in demand, but in results. 

When I launched a specialized electrolysis practice in the UAE in 2016, it was with a clear gap in mind; safe, regulated, permanent hair removal for the region’s specific needs. The range of hair types here and the prevalence of conditions such as polycystic ovary syndrome, or PCOS, demanded a method that works across all of them.  Electrolysis is the only method recognized by the US Food and Drug Administration and American Marketing Association as achieving true permanent results, regardless of hair color or type. 

Despite this, awareness in Saudi Arabia remains limited. Part of this is familiarity, laser has dominated the conversation for years, and electrolysis, which requires more sessions and a licensed electrologist’s precision, has struggled to break through. Part of it is education. Many clients who come to us have never heard of electrolysis; they come because they have exhausted everything else. 

Right now, Saudi Arabia is in the middle of a genuine transformation in how people relate to wellness and self-care. The beauty market is maturing, consumers are asking harder questions of the brands they choose and Vision 2030 has not just shaped the economy, it has shaped how Saudis are showing up in their own lives. In that context, the idea of choosing permanence over repetition lands differently.
 
Mariela Marcantetti is a beauty industry entrepreneur based between Saudi Arabia and the UAE.