Once a haven for reform, then neglect: Hyderabad’s Besant Hall rises again

Exterior view of the Besant Hall in Hyderabad, Pakistan on August 19, 2025. (AN Photo)
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Updated 21 August 2025
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Once a haven for reform, then neglect: Hyderabad’s Besant Hall rises again

  • Built in 1917 and inaugurated by Annie Besant, the colonial-era landmark was once a hub for reformist debate and the Home Rule Movement
  • After decades of decline and abandonment, the hall has been restored by Sindh’s Endowment Fund Trust and now hosts libraries and cultural events

HYDERABAD, Pakistan: On a busy street in Pakistan’s southern city of Hyderabad, the red-brick façade of Besant Hall now stands with quiet dignity, its symmetry and arches evoking a bygone era.

For much of the last century, the colonial-era landmark embodied the city’s intellectual and political energy. But in recent decades, the building fell into despair, its walls cracked, doors eaten by termites and halls used as a den by addicts.

Named after British socialist and theosophist Annie Besant, the hall was inaugurated by her in 1917 during the height of the Indian independence movement. For decades it remained a space for reformist gatherings, but its fortunes declined after the partition of the Subcontinent in 1947. By the 1980s, it was reduced to a marriage hall before being abandoned entirely.

In 2019, the Endowment Fund Trust (EFT) of the Sindh provincial government stepped in, launching an ambitious restoration project. The task was painstaking: red bricks were brought from Lahore to replicate its original look, layers of lime and cement that had dulled its character were replaced, and termite-infested windows rebuilt. Archivists salvaged fragile materials, some so badly infested they caused skin reactions in handlers.

Today, Besant Hall has been returned to life. Its rooms once again ring with the voices of students, scholars, and artists. The restored structure now houses the Jehangir Siddiqui Children’s Library and the Syed Abdullah Shah Scholar Library, and regularly hosts book readings, exhibitions, and cultural programs.

“This building, Besant Hall, was given to Annie Besant on lease in 1901 by Col. Alcot,” said Sobhia Ali, the director who now oversees the revived cultural center. She did not provide Alcot’s full name, but records show a Col. Henry Steel Olcott, co-founder of the Theosophical Society, of which Besant was a member. He died in 1907.

“When we received the building in 2019, it was full of cracks and in a very poor state… It had become a haven for drug addicts. We wiped everything out, restored it, not only restored the architecture but also its cultural and traditional value.”

The building, with its Roman-inspired entrance and Tudor-style windows, is one of Hyderabad’s most significant surviving colonial relics, and a lasting reminder of the woman it was named after.

SOCIALIST, THEOSOPHIST, WOMEN RIGHT’S ACTIVIST

Besant’s influence in South Asia was profound.

A British socialist, theosophist, and women’s rights activist, she became the first woman to preside over the Indian National Congress in 1917 and was a leading figure in the Home Rule Movement. The campaign sought self-governance for India, inspired by similar struggles in Ireland and other British colonies.

According to historian Dr. Kaleemullah Lashari, theosophy — an occult movement originating in the 19th century with roots that can be traced to ancient Gnosticism and Neoplatonism — took root in the Subcontinent by the early 1900s, after Helena Blavatsky and Henry Steel Olcott founded the Theosophical Society in 1875. Besant’s arrival in 1893 gave the movement new vigor.

“Many of its offices were established in various cities, with people showing great cooperation. In Karachi, our Theosophical Hall, located in front of Radio Pakistan, is quite well-known,” Lashari said. “Similarly, it also started in Hyderabad, where there was already a movement related to women. Our Hindu women in Hyderabad were very active, socially engaged.”

Author and historian Dr. Zaffar Junejo, whose book Hyderabad and Beyond was published earlier this year, said the hall’s history is entwined with the city’s colonial rise.

“The defeat of Sindh’s Talpur Mirs in 1843 sealed its future within the British Empire. By the 1920s, wealthy Sindhi Hindu merchants, known as Sindhworkies, had transformed Hyderabad into a commercial hub,” Junejo said.

“It is no wonder that [Indian polymath] Rabindranath Tagore called Hyderabad the most fashionable city in all of India.”

Besant Hall, alongside Homestead Hall, also became a vital stage for reformist debate. Its significance deepened when Besant herself launched the Home Rule Movement from its platform. The space was also remarkable for its inclusivity: Muslim leaders such as G.M. Syed and Hyder Baksh Jatoi joined Hindu intellectuals in theosophical sessions, making it a rare non-denominational forum.

“One could say that Besant Hall became an ideal place for educational, social, cultural and political activities,” Junejo said.

But the hall did not survive unscathed through the decades. In the 1990s, ethnic violence between Sindhis and Urdu-speaking migrants reduced its library and reading hall to ashes. Later, land mafias attempted to seize the property.

The EFT’s 2019 intervention, under a 10-year agreement with the Hyderabad district government and the Theosophical Society, marked a turning point.

Today, the hall’s legacy has been reclaimed. Children study in its libraries, community groups gather for cultural events, and Hyderabadis once again see the red-brick landmark as a living part of their city’s story.

“We have not only restored its architecture but also revived the tradition and the original purpose for which Annie Besant had this building constructed: intellectual gatherings, academic and cultural activities and cultural reforms,” Ali said.


Pakistan PM leaves for Saudi Arabia on brief visit as Middle East crisis rages on

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Pakistan PM leaves for Saudi Arabia on brief visit as Middle East crisis rages on

  • The visit comes at a time of increased volatility in the region, following US-Israeli strikes on Iran and Tehran’s counterattacks
  • Sharif and Crown Prince Mohammed will discuss the ongoing tensions, regional security and bilateral relations, Sharif’s office says

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif on Thursday departed for Saudi Arabia on a brief, hours-long visit, his office said, amid an ongoing conflict in the Middle East.

The visit comes at a time of increased volatility in the region, following Unites States-Israeli strikes on Iran and Tehran’s counterattacks on US bases in several Gulf countries as well as commercial and oil infrastructure, raising the spectre of a wider war.

Sharif, expected to discuss regional security and diplomatic coordination with Saudi leaders, is visiting the Kingdom on the invitation of Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, according to the prime minister’s office.

“Sharif will meet His Highness Prince Mohammed bin Salman,” the former’s office said.

“The meeting between the two leaders will discuss the ongoing tensions in the region, the regional security situation and the bilateral relations between the two countries.”

The development came a day after Bloomberg, citing comments from Sharif’s spokesperson, reported that Pakistan is ready to support Saudi Arabia “no matter what” as tensions escalate across the Middle East following Iranian strikes on Gulf states.

Mosharraf Zaidi told Bloomberg TV Islamabad would come to Riyadh’s aid whenever required, emphasizing the longstanding security partnership between the two countries, which was further strengthened by a mutual defense pact signed in September last year.

There was “no question we might, we will” come to Saudi Arabia’s aid “no matter what and no matter when,” Zaidi said.

“Both countries, even before the defense agreement, have always operated on the principle of being there for the other,” he added.

Pakistan and Saudi Arabia have historically maintained close military and strategic ties, and the new agreement elevated their security cooperation at a time of heightened regional instability.

Zaidi said Pakistan was also working diplomatically to prevent the conflict from expanding further across the region.