commandos of the
Special Services Group (SSG).
Sunday, November 11, 2012
Saturday, November 10, 2012
Folk Architectural Style at Lok Virsa Islamabad
Folk Architectural
Style at Lok Virsa Islamabad
A monument made up of salt bricks at the world's second-largest salt mine in Khewra. Khewra Salt Mines are a major tourist attraction in Pakistan, drawing up to 250,000 visitors a year
A jockey holds on during traditional bull racing in Mari village on March 11. Dozens of bulls took part in a racing day in front of ten thousand spectators.
Pakistani Hindu women celebrate the Holi festival in Karachi on March 7. Holi, the festival of colors, is observed at the end of winter on the last full moon day of the lunar month.
A man fixes wooden grips on knives at a workshop in Quetta, Jan. 26.
A round up of
events this week:
Maham. Versace
launches its perfume, Yellow Diamond, in Karachi. PHOTO COURTESY CATALYST PR
Sunday, November 4, 2012
Kalash, Pakistan, 1981
Kalash, Pakistan, 1981
A winter's fire stokes old talks among the men folk. Their low chairs with seats of woven rawhide distinguish Kalash from neighbors, who prefer sitting on the ground. A grandson dozes in a shaft of sunlight from the doorway of this sole room of a house that as many as a dozen Kalash call home.
National Geographic Magazine. Vol. 160, No. 4, October 1981, pgs. 458-473, Pakistan's Kalash: People of Fire and Fervor
A winter's fire stokes old talks among the men folk. Their low chairs with seats of woven rawhide distinguish Kalash from neighbors, who prefer sitting on the ground. A grandson dozes in a shaft of sunlight from the doorway of this sole room of a house that as many as a dozen Kalash call home.
National Geographic Magazine. Vol. 160, No. 4, October 1981, pgs. 458-473, Pakistan's Kalash: People of Fire and Fervor
© Steve McCurry / Magnum Photos
Saturday, November 3, 2012
Pen-friends across the Pak-India border
Pen-friends across the
Pak-India border
CAP, Routes2Roots launched 'Exchange for Change' involving 2,400 children from Delhi, Mumbai, Lahore, Karachi.

Ali Askari, a student of Grade 9 at Links School, holds a postcard he is sending to India through the program. PHOTO: CITIZENS ARCHIVE OF PAKISTAN
Students in Pakistan holding letters which they will send across the border. PHOTO: CITIZENS ARCHIVE OF PAKISTAN
Students in India express joy over the exchange program. PHOTO: CITIZENS ARCHIVE OF PAKISTAN
Students at The City School, PAF Chapter, writing letters to be sent to India. PHOTO: CITIZENS ARCHIVE OF PAKISTAN
Postcard which arrived from India sent by a student named Shantanu. PHOTO: CITIZENS ARCHIVE OF PAKISTAN
Front and rear shots of a postcard sent by Misbah Shaaib from Pakistan. Shaaib is a grade 9 student at Links School. PHOTO: CITIZENS ARCHIVE OF PAKISTAN
A
round-up of events this week:
CAP, Routes2Roots launched 'Exchange for Change' involving 2,400 children from Delhi, Mumbai, Lahore, Karachi.

Ali Askari, a student of Grade 9 at Links School, holds a postcard he is sending to India through the program. PHOTO: CITIZENS ARCHIVE OF PAKISTAN
Students in Pakistan holding letters which they will send across the border. PHOTO: CITIZENS ARCHIVE OF PAKISTAN
Students in India express joy over the exchange program. PHOTO: CITIZENS ARCHIVE OF PAKISTAN
Students at The City School, PAF Chapter, writing letters to be sent to India. PHOTO: CITIZENS ARCHIVE OF PAKISTAN
Postcard which arrived from India sent by a student named Shantanu. PHOTO: CITIZENS ARCHIVE OF PAKISTAN
Front and rear shots of a postcard sent by Misbah Shaaib from Pakistan. Shaaib is a grade 9 student at Links School. PHOTO: CITIZENS ARCHIVE OF PAKISTAN
Labels:
across the border,
Delhi,
India,
Karachi,
Lahore,
Mumbai,
PAF,
Pen friends,
postcard,
RABZON,
Routes2Roots,
Students
Saturday, October 20, 2012
Girls want education too!
The
Pakistani girl Malala shot in the head by the Taliban terroists for wanting an education stood
up today in a remarkable comeback from her near fatal wounds.
Jisay allah rakhay usay kon chakhay (whoever God wants to save, no one can harm her/him.)
Girls want education too!
The Express Tribune
According to a recent UNESCO report, Pakistan has the 2nd largest number of out-of-school girls. PHOTO: AFPA girl Lyba is photographed sitting with other students, while learning how to recite the Holy Quran, at the Jamia Binoria Al-Alamia Seminary Islamic Study School in Karachi. PHOTO: REUTERS
Teacher Noorzia Khan, 16, writes letters from Kalasha alphabet on blackboard during a lesson at Kalasha Dur school and community centre in Brun village located in Bumboret Kalash valley. PHOTO: REUTERS
Six-year-old Mozama leads a class in a lesson at the Rabia Beulkhi School for girls in Quetta's Hazaratown. PHOTO: REUTERS
Internally displaced girls fleeing a military offensive in the Swat valley hold classes inside a tent at an UNHCR camp in the outskirts of Peshawar. PHOTO: REUTERS
Girls attend a lesson outside a damaged classroom at Government Girls Primary School No 3 which was bombed by suspected militants in Swabi located in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province, November 15, 2011. PHOTO: REUTERS
Girls learn how to
use computers in a school in Swat. PHOTO: FAZAL KHALIQ/ EXPRESS
Sunday, October 14, 2012
Nation prays for Malala Yousafzai
Nation prays for Malala Yousafzai
Taliban’s cowardly attack on child activist
Malala
Yousafzai has spark country wide anger. Across Pakistan
prayers, demonstration and rallies were held to show support for Malala.
Pakistani students pray for the early recovery of child activist Malala Yousafzai at a school in Mingora on October 11, 2012.
Peshawar, students of Frontier College pray for Malala Yousafzai.
Pakistani civil society activists carry placards with a photograph of the gunshot victim Malala Yousafzai as they shout ant-Taliban slogans during a protest rally against the assassination attempt on Malala Yousafzai, in Islamabad on October 10, 2012
Pakistani civil society activists carry candles to pay tribute to gunshot victim Malala Yousafzai and protest against her assassination attempt, in Lahore on October 10, 2012.
Pakistani civil society activists and journalists carry candles and photographs of gunshot victim Malala Yousafzai during a protest against the assassination attempt on Malala Yousafzai, in Islamabad on October 11, 2012
Pakistani pray for the early recovery of child activist Malala Yousafzai, who was shot in the head in a Taliban assassination attempt, during a Friday prayers in Quetta on October 12, 2012.
Pakistani demonstrators carry candles during a protest against the assassination attempt on Malala Yousafzai, in Karachi on October 11, 2012.
Saturday, September 15, 2012
Pakistan Air Force cadets march at the mausoleum of the country's founder, Mohammad Ali Jinnah in Karachi on September 6, 2012, to mark the country s Defence Day.
Pakistan Air Force cadets march at the mausoleum of
the country's founder, Mohammad Ali Jinnah in Karachi on September 6, 2012, to
mark the country s Defence Day. PHOTO: AFP
Sind Club, the oldest in Karachi, opened its doors in 1871 as an exclusively European gentlemen's club. After Pakistan gained independence in 1947, the club was opened to Pakistani elites. The club featured a billiards room, tennis court, squash court, walking track, sauna, and even a bakery. Once a year, women were invited to the Sind Club for its annual ball.
Nightclubs in Karachi -- among them the Playboy, Excelsior, and Oasis -- were a big draw in the 1960s and 1970s, and most of them were much less exclusive than the gentlemen's club at Sind. Dancing and booze kept club-goers entertained. But in 1977, alcohol was banned and all nightclubs were ordered to shut down.
Karachi family poses for a photo. The woman, sporting short hair, a sleeveless dress, and sunglasses, appears to be taking fashion cues from American first lady Jacqueline Kennedy, who visited Karachi herself in the 1960s.
Frere Hall, a British Raj-era building built in 1865, was the site of public town hall meetings until Pakistan gained independence in 1947. It later became a hub for Karachi's social and cultural activities, housing many of the city's concerts and theatrical performances. Jazz shows became very popular in 1970s Karachi, and local pop artists enjoyed broad audiences.
Noori Top is located on the border between Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa and Kashmir. PHOTO: NOSTALGIC'S PHOTOGRAPHY
A road from the east of Jalkhad goes to Noori top which is approximately 2 to 2½ hours distance. PHOTO: NOSTALGIC'S PHOTOGRAPHY
Sind Club, the oldest in Karachi, opened its doors in 1871 as an exclusively European gentlemen's club. After Pakistan gained independence in 1947, the club was opened to Pakistani elites. The club featured a billiards room, tennis court, squash court, walking track, sauna, and even a bakery. Once a year, women were invited to the Sind Club for its annual ball.
Nightclubs in Karachi -- among them the Playboy, Excelsior, and Oasis -- were a big draw in the 1960s and 1970s, and most of them were much less exclusive than the gentlemen's club at Sind. Dancing and booze kept club-goers entertained. But in 1977, alcohol was banned and all nightclubs were ordered to shut down.
Karachi family poses for a photo. The woman, sporting short hair, a sleeveless dress, and sunglasses, appears to be taking fashion cues from American first lady Jacqueline Kennedy, who visited Karachi herself in the 1960s.
Frere Hall, a British Raj-era building built in 1865, was the site of public town hall meetings until Pakistan gained independence in 1947. It later became a hub for Karachi's social and cultural activities, housing many of the city's concerts and theatrical performances. Jazz shows became very popular in 1970s Karachi, and local pop artists enjoyed broad audiences.
Noori Top is located on the border between Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa and Kashmir. PHOTO: NOSTALGIC'S PHOTOGRAPHY
A road from the east of Jalkhad goes to Noori top which is approximately 2 to 2½ hours distance. PHOTO: NOSTALGIC'S PHOTOGRAPHY
Kalash smile
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