ISLAMABAD: The government of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province has approved a budget of Rs23.56 million ($146,400) to buy the dilapidated ancestral homes of Bollywood legends Raj Kapoor and Dilip Kumar, and turn them into museums, the provincial archeology department said on Saturday.
The two houses in Peshawar stand next to Qissa Khwani, the city's oldest and most famous road known as the "Street of Storytellers," and belonged to the families of the Bollywood who were born and raised there. They migrated to India before Pakistan was created from the British Raj in 1947.
"Chief Minister Khyber Pakhtunkhwa approves Rs. 23.56 million to buy the ancestral houses of two Indian film legendary actors Dilip Kumar and Raj Kapoor in Peshawar," Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Directorate of Archaeology and Museums said in a tweet.
It added that Rs15 million had been allocated to purchase the Kapoor haveli, which was built between 1916 and 1918 by Kapoor's grandfather, Dewan Basheswarnath Singh Kapoor.
To buy the ancestral home of Kumar, the chief minister has approved Rs8.56 million.
The archeology department welcomed the budget approvals as bringing the province "one step closer" to turning the buildings into museums, after it had declared the buildings a national heritage site
The current owners of the houses were planning to demolish them and build commercial centers in their place. The archeology department stopped the process under the Antiquity Act 2016 in late September, prompting Kumar, 97, who lives in Mumbai, to turn to Twitter and request those in Peshawar to share their photographs of the house.
Kapoor, who was born in Peshawar in 1924, passed away in New Delhi in 1988.