Category Archives: Misc

City Monument – Old Stephen’s, Kashmere Gate — The Delhi Walla

The building that once housed a famous college. [Text and photos by Mayank Austen Soofi] Red bricks, sprawling gardens and a cute little chapel. That’s St Stephen’s College in Delhi University’s North Campus. But this dream destination for millions of aspiring college students earlier used to be housed in this stone edifice here in Kashmere…

via City Monument – Old Stephen’s, Kashmere Gate — The Delhi Walla

The Artisans of the Walled City of Lahore — Harry Johnstone

Perched outside his workshop in Lahore’s Walled City, Mohamed Tahir plays a harmonium while watching the passing melee. The melancholy sounds of the instrument are barely audible over the din of motorbikes and wheel cutters, but still they evoke something of Lahore’s history, a world that lives on beneath the dust and frantic rhythms of […]

via The Artisans of the Walled City of Lahore — harryjohnstone

Around Lahore – A Photo Essay — The Chai brewer

Past moves around the present.

via Around Lahore – A Photo Essay — The Chai brewer

City Faith – Hazrat Shah Turkman Bayabani’s Sufi Shrine, Old Delhi — The Delhi Walla

A hidden landmark. [Text and photos by Mayank Austen Soofi] This is the whole of it. This small room with pink walls and a white marble grave. The shrine of Sufi saint Hazrat Shah Turkman Bayabani stands unobtrusively beside the entrance of the Walled City of Shahjahanabad. Hazrat Turkman is believed to be one of […]

via City Faith – Hazrat Shah Turkman Bayabani’s Sufi Shrine, Old Delhi — The Delhi Walla

City Monument – Dilli Gate, Central Delhi — The Delhi Walla

The ignored one. [Text and photos by Mayank Austen Soofi] Dilli Gate is one of those great monuments that are taken for granted and seldom gushed over by guidebook junkies. Instagrammers too give it a royal ignore. Built more than 400 years ago, it’s one of the few intact gateways still standing sentry at the…

via City Monument – Dilli Gate, Central Delhi — The Delhi Walla

“When you enter the Kabuliwalas’ homes in Kolkata you feel like you’re back in Afghanistan” – Moska Najib — South Asia @ LSE

Inspired by Rabindranath Tagore’s 1892 short story, the Kabuliwala, photographers Moska Najib and Nazes Afroz spent three years capturing the lives of the Kabuliwalas of Kolkata. Chris Finnigan talks to Moska about how their new exhibition in London reveals how generations of Afghan migrants have preserved their Pashtun identities in their new homeland. How did Tagore’s story…

via “When you enter the Kabuliwalas’ homes in Kolkata you feel like you’re back in Afghanistan” – Moska Najib — South Asia @ LSE