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Manghopir Town

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Manghopir
Manghopir is located in KarachiManghopirManghopirclass=notpageimage| Location of Manghopir Lake in Karachi

Manghopir Town (Template:Lang-sd), (Template:Lang-ur) is a neighbourhood in the Orangi District of Karachi, Sindh, Pakistan, that previously was a part of Gadap Town until 2011, now it is one of the three towns of Orangi District of Karachi.

Demographics

Manghopir is a rural area of Karachi, The area has the oldest Sufi shrines in the city named after a Saint Saqib, hot sulphur springs that are believed to have curative powers, and many crocodiles - believed locally to be the sacred disciples of Pir Mangho. Balochs often call this place as ‘Mangi’ or Garm-aab/Sard-aab (due to the presence of the hot & cold springs).

There are several ethnic groups in Manghopir Town. Urdu-speaking Muhajirs are in simple majority in Manghopir sub-division. Population of Manghopir Sub-Division is 1,081,753 as of 2023 Pakistani census.

Languages of Manghopir Sub-Division (2023 census)

  Urdu (54.00%)  Pashto (15.63%)  Punjabi (6.80%)  Sindhi (6.73%)  Balochi (6.47%)  Saraiki (6.47%)  Others (3.24%)
Language Rank 2023 census Speakers
Urdu 1 54.00% 584,229
Pashto 2 15.63% 169,149
Balochi 3 4.08% 44,211
Punjabi 4 6.80% 73,612
Saraiki 5 6.47% 70,043
Sindhi 6 6.73% 72,841
All 7 100% 1,081,753

Manghopir Lake

Crocodile near the sulphur hot spring

The Manghopir Lake is situated near the shrine of Sufi Pir Mangho and there over one hundred Mugger crocodiles in the lake which are fed by the pilgrims.

Sheedis and Festivals

Manghopir is mostly inhabited by one of Pakistan's smallest ethnic communities, the Sheedi, also known as Makrani. Sheedi are said to be the descendants of Afro-Arabs from Zanzibar and maintain their distinct Afro-Arab and Omani identity in the midst of the dominating South Asian cultures.

Presently, these African-Pakistanis live in various parts of Karachi. Most are found in Lyari, but they are also found in Malir, Moaach Goth, Manghopir, and further in southern at Sindh and Balochistan. Due to Lyari's dominant Sheedi people population, it is often called 'Little Africa'. Some Afro-Arab style festivals and dances like Gowati, Lewa, Dhamaal, beating Omani style shindo, jabwah, and jasser drums are still popular in Manghopirs Lyari locale. Many forms of folk beliefs and medicines are also still practiced. A prominent Urdu poet and Lyari citizen, Noon Meem Danish, proudly claims to be the great-great-grandchild of an African from Zanzibar. "Now after centuries of cultural assimilation, Sheedis proudly call themselves Sindhis and Baloch.

See also

References

  1. Baldia Town Archived 2006-02-19 at the Wayback Machine
  2. "TABLE 11 – POPULATION BY MOTHER TONGUE, SEX AND RURAL/ URBAN" (PDF). Pakistan Bureau of Statistics. Retrieved 20 July 2024.
  3. Runaway crocodiles returned to Manghopir shrine

External links

Neighbourhoods of Karachi
Karachi Division
Baldia
Bin Qasim
Gadap
Gulberg
Gulshan
Jamshed
Keamari
Korangi
Landhi
Liaquatabad
Lyari
Malir
New Karachi
North Nazimabad
Orangi
Saddar
Shah Faisal
SITE
Cantonments
Industrial zones

24°59′N 67°02′E / 24.983°N 67.033°E / 24.983; 67.033

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