Collection of vintage postcards offers glimpse into history

Published December 30, 2024
F.S. Aijazuddin speaks at the event.—Shakil Adil / White Star
F.S. Aijazuddin speaks at the event.—Shakil Adil / White Star

KARACHI: It felt like being transported nearly a century back in time as a collection of postcard images of various landmarks of Pakistan, taken from 1890 to 1947, was projected onto a big screen at Khaliqdina Hall here on Sunday evening.

The event was organised to mark the launch of Forgotten Images: Postcards of Pre-Pakistan, 1890-1947, a collection of antique postcards by Fakir Syed Aijazuddin, a distinguished art-historian, academic, and business executive.

The collection is a coffee table book that paints a vibrant picture of the country’s architectural and cultural landmarks through postcards that provide a rare glimpse into the world that existed before the country’s independence.

Addressing the audience while describing the slides from the book, Mr Aijazuddin said the book is the latest addition to the investigation into the growing genre of deltiology, which is a hobby of collecting postcards.

Forgotten Images: Postcards of Pre-Pakistan, 1890-1947 launched

Explaining the history and significance of postcards, he said they played an important role in the 19th and 20th century, especially as a means of sharing experiences and things that were of interest to the senders and their addressees. For the postcards of pre-partition Pakistan collected in the book, he said those were mostly sent by people to their friends and relatives living abroad.

“And for the general public, the postcard was initially a cost-cutting device. But perhaps the greatest benefit of the postcards was the saving in time they allowed. Before the telephone, it was the quickest, most readily available means of communication, of conveying a quick message,” he explained.

“Though pictorial postcards are now history, their historicity remains. Although replaced, they provide us and future generations of Pakistanis an invaluable record of buildings, landscapes, events and people of a pre-Pakistan era, the crucible from which we came. And to modern collectors, the charm of these postcards are not so much the handwritten, personal messages they conveyed but the images they carried on their reverse,” he said.

He said the sale and purchase of postcards has a sizable market and that he had been collecting the postcards of this book for the past many years.

Mr Aijazuddin then described the book and its chapters. It includes postcards from all provinces and major cities of Pakistan. From Karachi, it has photographs of the historical buildings of the city, sea port and ships, and major roads and markets like Empress Market, the Hindu Gymkhana and Frere Hall to name only a few. From Sindh interior, there are pictures from Hyderabad, Sukkur, Khairpur and Mohenjo Daro, etc.

Then comes Punjab with images of landmarks from Lahore, Multan, Bahawalpur, Rawalpindi and Murree among other cities. Then comes Khyber Pakhtunkhwa and its cities, mainly Peshawar. That is followed by Balochistan with focus on Quetta’s pictures.

The event was organised as part of the Reading Room Series at Khaliqdina Hall. It was moderated by Saima Zaidi, who also spoke about the historical significance and architect of the hall and its library.

Published in Dawn, December 30th, 2024

Opinion

Editorial

Fiscal concerns
Updated 06 Dec, 2025

Fiscal concerns

Talks on the 11th Award have opened at a politically charged moment amid attempts by the centre to undo the constitutional protection given to the existing provincial share under the NFC Award.
Hero worship
06 Dec, 2025

Hero worship

IT seems that, like public representatives, our national heroes will also be selected for us. The Senate deputy...
KU institute
06 Dec, 2025

KU institute

THE Sindh government’s decision to separate the Institute for Chemical and Biological Sciences from Karachi...
US asylum freeze
Updated 05 Dec, 2025

US asylum freeze

IT is clear that the Trump administration is using last week’s shooting incident, in which two National Guard...
Colours of Basant
05 Dec, 2025

Colours of Basant

THE mood in Lahore is unmistakably festive as the city prepares for Basant’s colourful kites to once again dot the...
Karachi’s death holes
05 Dec, 2025

Karachi’s death holes

THE lidless manholes in Karachi lay bare the failure of the city administration to provide even the bare necessities...