What's new

Crocodile festival was held in Manghopir, Karachi

ghazi52

PDF THINK TANK: ANALYST
Joined
Mar 21, 2007
Messages
101,832
Reaction score
106
Country
Pakistan
Location
United States
Crocodile festival was held in Manghopir,

The crocodile festival which has been held for decades returned to Manghopir after seven years of hiatus


28471144_2172137809493694_70889302803873792_o.jpg



After nearly seven years of hiatus due to security concerns in Manghopir neighborhood, just outside the city of Karachi, the Sheedi community held the decades-old crocodile festival (or Sheedi Mela).

The festival is held during the Pir Mangho Urs which is one of the most important events in the cultural calendar of the Sheedi Community – a community of African-Descended Pakistanis.

It is held every year usually during the summers for three to four days with the exact dates being decided by the elders of the community.

The festival is famous for the role of crocodiles who reside near the shrine of Mangho Pir and are believed to have a spiritual connection with the Pir. The festival attracts people from different ethnicities who come to make their pledges at the shrine.



28471799_2172137762827032_1273576984311496704_o.jpg






28471144_2172137809493694_70889302803873792_o.jpg





crocodile-festival-manghopir.jpg





28577717_2172137696160372_5089205657832259584_o.jpg





28660343_2172138012827007_1441424679901331456_o.jpg



The elders of the community call out the chief of the crocodiles ‘Mor Sahib’ who is 127 years old and is 12 feet long. Once it’s out, the caretaker feeds it with sweets and meat and adorn it with flowers, and fragrances. When the crocodile eats the meat and raises its neck above the ground, the attendees believe their ritual has been accepted.

The pond next to the shrine houses more than 150 crocodiles which are all sacred to the African-Pakistani community. The pond currently measures about 400 feet long and 200 feet wide and is nourished by underground streams. According to the locals, it isn’t enough to house the crocodiles living inside which are usually six to seven feet in length.
 
From legend to science: The crocodiles of Manghopir
Nadeem F. Paracha

56cff241eb6c7.jpg


A pilgrim at the Mangho Pir shrine. —AFP

Manghopir is one of the oldest areas of Karachi. Situated in the north of this bustling, chaotic and sprawling city, it is most famous for the shrine of Sufi saint, Pir Mangho.

The unique bit about this centuries-old shrine is a vast pond and a sulphur spring. The pond is populated by dozens of crocodiles who are regularly fed by visitors to the shrine.

They believe the crocodiles are manifestations of the Sufi saint.

The shrine is mentioned in ancient texts from the area and also in the writings of 19th century British colonialists. According to some historians, the crocodiles have been here for centuries.

56cef8105024a.jpg

A group of 19th century British men and women feeding the crocodiles at the shrine.
Some archaeologists have claimed to have found fossilised remains of crocodiles here that are thousands of years old and some British colonial writers also suggested that they have been here for ‘thousands of years.’

Manghopir is also the patron saint of Karachi's boisterous Makrani/Sheedi community.

They are mostly the descendants of African slaves who were brought here by Arabs, Persians, Turks and the European invaders between 10th and 17th centuries. They are mostly Balochi-speaking Muslim working-class men and women with a passion for football, boxing, donkey-racing and dancing.

Every year the Sheedi celebrate their African roots at an annual festival at the shrine.

56cef9f33d78b.jpg

A sheedi community girl at the Sheedi Mela at the Mangho Pir shrine in the 1990s.
However, the festival hasn't taken place for the last couple of years, mainly due to the rise of street gang warfare in Karachi’s Lyari area (which is mostly populated by the Sheedi); and due to the creeping presence of religious extremist groups and militant outfits holed up in Manghopir.

A concentrated operation by the Rangers and the police in the city recently has, however, managed to largely clear the area of militant groups and the festival is expected to resume from this year onward.

The saint Mangho arrived here from Iraq in the 13th century when Iraq was being attacked by the Mongols. Mangho travelled from South Punjab and across the Sindh province and settled here (in present-day Karachi).

At the time Karachi just had a sprinkling of small fishing villages and the area in which Mangho settled to meditate was desolate. It was upon a hill and surrounded by palm trees.

He soon began to attract followers from the fishing villages. When he died, the locals constructed a small shrine of him at the spot.

Since the saint decided to live alongside the crocodiles, and maybe even shared his food with them, the locals weaved a fantastic legend that the crocodiles were actually lice which were turned into crocodiles by the miraculous powers of the Sufi saint.
Scientists and archeologists, however, believe that the area already had a lake/pond that held hundreds of crocodiles.

They suggest that the lake was formed due to an ancient flood and that the crocodiles were washed here with that flood.

Carbon-dating methods have placed the bones to belong to the Bronze age (3300-1200 BC). Archeologists have also discovered some copper artifacts with designs suggesting that a small Bronze Age village stood here thousands of years ago where people worshipped the crocodile.

The area was surrounded by heavy vegetation when the saint is said to have settled and died here in the 13th century.

Scientists also believe that by then the crocodiles had been ‘tamed’ and become dependent on the food fed to them by the saint’s followers.

There has never been a crocodile attack reported here and the crocodiles remain to be largely docile. But keepers of the shrine always advise caution.

Generation after generation of crocodiles have lived, died, procreated and are born here and all of them are the direct decedents of that group of crocodile which was washed here by the flood centuries ago.

Unlike crocodiles elsewhere, the crocodiles at the shrine eat almost everything. From meat to sweetmeat!

Scientists attribute this to the kind of food they have been fed for generations by the followers.

56cef8107f10b.jpg


A devotee feeding the crocodiles in 2015.

The crocodiles at the shrine in 1910.

56cef8107f401.jpg



A drawing of a keeper of the Mangho Pir shrine feeding a crocodile in the 15th century.

56cef80f9798b.jpg




The Manhgo Pir shrine in 1901.

56cef80fd22e0.jpg
 
Fascinating, thank you for sharing. I didn't visit this place when I was in Pakistan, next time perhaps!
 
It's surprising how domestic these crocodiles have become.

Have there been ANY incidences of attacks on humans?
 
Amazing part of the culture.
 
Back
Top Bottom