ISLAMABAD: As autumn brings crisp sunny days to Pakistan’s capital, artisans from all over the country gather in Islamabad to showcase their indigenous crafts at the Lok Mela, organized each year by the Lok Virsa Cultural Center and Heritage Museum.
The fair, which has been held every year for the past four decades, brings together craftspeople, jewelry makers, painters, sculptors, wood workers, potters, dancers and musicians from al provinces and regions of Pakistan country. This year’s Lok Mela 2021 will run from November 1-7.
Kalu Abro, 33, from rural Sindh who attends the fair every year, told Arab News the fair was a family affair for him and the culmination of a year of hard work.
“For us it’s a family business, we have our stall here and at the bigger stalls, you will see our handmade carpets, which my brother oversees,” Abro said, as he sold eye-catching hand-beaded, embroidered bags of various sizes, from children’s backpacks to weekend travel bags. “We come every year with the support of the government, which encourages us to make our craft, and though this year is a little slow, it was still worth coming.”
Abro said the Sindh government helped his family travel to Islamabad for the fair every year.
Further down in the Punjab pavilion, Sadaf Nisar worked live on a piece of beaded Qur’anic verse wall hangings, an art form she says is unique to her hometown of Rawalpindi in Pakistan’s Punjab province. Nisar took up the craft after her father, who practiced it for 40 years. The father and daughter first attended the Lok Mela in 1991.
“I keep coming because I am proud of this craft and it is not known enough,” Nisar said, “and it is a source of pride that I am following in my father’s footsteps and sharing our craft here.”
From Hunza in Gilgit-Baltistan, Dil Shawar has returned to the fair after a year’s gap due to the coronavirus pandemic, and was selling traditional beaded hats and textiles worn in her region.
“This is a chance for us to make up for a year of loss thanks to corona, the mela has slowed down, but people didn’t know this was happening this year — that being said whoever came bought quite a lot, thankfully,” Shawar said as she laughed.
She also described the fair as a networking opportunity.
“You see people here you know; you can make business connections, it’s like a chain where we support one another and build business together,” Shawar said. “It’s always hard work to come out here but you have to be positive and be positive as a community, and a chain of business.”
For 21-year-old Jehanarra Aziz, who hails from Pakistan’s cultural heart of Lahore, the fair is an event she looks forward to attending each year.
“I do not get to come every year since I live in Lahore, but anytime I get to be here around the same time, usually in winter, fall time, I make sure to stop by,” said Aziz, who was at the fair with her family members. “You get to learn so much while of course shopping a lot.”
For Sara Amjad, 30, who resides in Islamabad, the fair is a rare opportunity to see performances, in addition to the art and craft.
“There are no other events like this one that I personally know of where you get the chance to hear folk music and see traditional folk dances,” Amjad said. “I buy a lot, I eat a lot, and I enjoy getting the chance to see people perform their cultural dances here.”