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This community centre in Saddar aims to unite a neglected neighbourhood

This community centre in Saddar aims to unite a neglected neighbourhood

The Pakistan Chowk Community Centre has been set up as a space for locals to exchange thoughts and boost social cohesion
Updated 19 Aug, 2017

There’s a dire need to revive the arts in Karachi’s design-rich, historical Old Town, “the hub of printing presses” as heritage conservationist and architect Marvi Mazhar puts it.

The Karachi-based activist is the face of the newly inaugurated Pakistan Chowk Community Centre (PCCC), which she hopes will become a social space for locals to meet, exchange thoughts and strengthen the community.

The centre is housed on the first floor of the historic Sultani Mahal Building, located approximately 30 feet away from Pakistan Chowk.

A narrow staircase with bright butterscotch walls leads to the entrance opening into the baithak area, a space designated for holding workshops, literary discussions or town halls. A gallery with a view of the public square conjoins the sitting area, letting the sounds of the Old Town in the space.

The centre is an effort to boost social cohesion via arts and culture in a space available to all members of the community. It also aims to serve as a launching pad for many undiscovered artists and poets living in the area.

Guests bond over music at the community centre following the inauguration.
Guests bond over music at the community centre following the inauguration.

“Elsewhere in the world’s urban centres, a place so rich in history and expression would be celebrated. But look what it's like here,” Mazhar said, pointing at the dusty moldings of the Victorian buildings, their walls stained with urine and lined with rotting sludge.

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For a metropolis home to some of the finest universities in the country, Karachi is starving for art, literature and philosophy, she said.

The community centre's launch earlier this week was crowded, with guests like Stefan Winkler, Ambreen Thompson, Sharmeen Obaid-Chinoy and Asif Farrukhi in attendance.

While quoting French philosopher Le Febvre, Stefan Winkler, director of Goethe-Institut Pakistan, in his speech said initiatives like Pakistan Chowk Community Centre provide a social space for locals to gather and discuss ideas and exchange knowledge, emboldening them to take ownership of their neighbourhoods, and “ultimately their right to the city”.

Building on the thought, Ambreen Thompson, the executive director of I AM KARACHI, a movement behind the overhaul of some 2,000 walls across the city previously vandalised with hate-speech, said the violence and volatility of the city is such that “we have shrunk into silos”.

And in order to break away from those deeply entrenched divisions, a citizen-led “self-help” initiative is important, as crucial as a public-private partnership, Thompson added.

The local community takes ownership, she said, as she stressed on the need of citizen activism.

However, the idea isn't foreign to the community.

On the grassroots, residents have been working of their neighbourhoods. On Sundays, Pakistan Chowk becomes a site for artists and poets from the area who gather and provide a source of reflective entertainment to their neighbours.

Read more: Old city embraces art fair at Pakistan Chowk

"But we're unable to sustain the activities by ourselves now," Ahmed Anver, an artist born and bred in Pakistan Chowk said when asked about his sentiments toward the initiative.

"We welcome the initiative and want to see it thrive, but there's a lot more cohesion and cooperation required for it to go in the direction PCCC wants," he said as he critiqued the inaugural event on Wednesday where locals were sparsely seen.

"This gathering would have been twice as beautiful had more of our neighbours been a part of it," the artist said as he reflected on the divide between the aims of initiatives like this and the grassroots reality that continues to persist.

Another issue PCCC may have to contend with is how the public square is a space largely occupied by men, dominated by offices for businesses, its roads bustling with traffic with no crosswalks for pedestrians.

Women of the locality were mostly an audience to the event, seen standing in their balconies. What plans does PCCC have to address these concerns?

"See, when events like these take place anywhere, for example in a park in Defence, residents from their houses in the area don't come," Mazhar said. "You can see and tell from a distance that yes, even though an event is taking place in your neighbourhood, it is not something you would choose to attend."

It was indeed a shiny, high-profile inauguration, with people from the privileged class dominating the event.

That is the very problem that needs to be addressed if initiatives like these, that harp on building social cohesion via arts and culture, are to thrive.

Comments

Sajida Aug 18, 2017 08:12pm
All neighborhoods need community centers generally.
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Siva D Aug 18, 2017 08:13pm
All the best! Looks like a great and much-needed initiative.
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Al Aug 18, 2017 08:16pm
I used to stay in that area between 1973 to 1976 and I think the area has gone down in a big way which I observed when I last visited Pakistan in 2014/15. When physical structures are allowed to rot so that maybe multi-story buildings will replace them, how can the social side keep itself in those circumstances. It was an area where many minority owned buildings used to Grace the area and educated populace enjoyed life their which was on Pakistan chowk side a little less crowded and congested. Maybe doing something is better than nothing but from the appearance of things it looks likely that it is going to fail though I personally wish it differently.
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Carol Lee Murphy Aug 18, 2017 09:15pm
This is so important,and so needs to be nurtured, when cultural expression springs from the very souls of the people, its like speech, things important are being created, put out there, seen thought about. more, a place is created to ensure it is possible. creativity, this for me the highest human expression, because its done freely and usually with joy. what is happening here is a national treasure in the making. SO take care of it all.
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Aly alp-ERCElan Aug 18, 2017 10:34pm
The ceremony was surreal. I both liked it and was dismayed by it. Perhaps because it reflected my own fragmented and fractured citizenship.
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genie Aug 19, 2017 02:22am
All the people in every neighbourhood everywhere in the world need peoples' consultative committees. Peoples' consultative committees is the dire need of people everywhere in the world and can be organised only when people see the sense in organising such a self help organisation empowering people with organising their welfare and security.
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Rabia Aug 19, 2017 09:15am
This is such a great idea!
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