Ramadan night cricket: Karachi’s batsmen, guard your wickets!
Ramadan night cricket: Karachi’s batsmen, guard your wickets!/node/1498741/sport
Ramadan night cricket: Karachi’s batsmen, guard your wickets!
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A makeshift pavilion at a night cricket match in Karachi during Ramadan on May 16, 2019: As friends bat, other kids from the batting side sit on parked motorbikes and wait their turn. (AN Photo by Shakil Adil)
Ramadan night cricket: Karachi’s batsmen, guard your wickets!
Updated 18 May 2019
NAIMAT KHAN & SHAKIL ADIL
The batsman stands before the wicket and taps the earth in front of him twice with his bat. All around him, fielders, their faces resolute and sombre, are spread out in concentric circles. Chattering spectators line the side of the pitch. As the batsman looks ahead, the bowler starts running towards him, swinging his arm to deliver the ball. But just as he is about to release it, a tiny Suzuki Alto car carrying a family of seven zips through the pitch. The players groan in unison as the traffic stops play.
This is a usual scene in Pakistan’s teeming port city of Karachi: in the holy month of Ramadan the devout fast by day but at night, they come out on the streets to play cricket.
Halogen bulbs are tied to coat hangers and hung up on trees and power cables to provide extra lighting on dimly lit streets. Bricks are used to mark where the pitch begins and ends and crates of Coca Cola are stacked one on top of the other to form the wicket. One boy has already collected tiny donations, a dollar or less, from kids and adults in the street who want to participate in this year’s tournament. The rules of the game, too, are adapted for the street and the players are all locals to the area, arriving in shorts and tee-shirts and flip flops to play a game that will tide them over through the night until sehri, the pre-dawn meal eaten just before sunrise. After that, Muslims fast throughout the day, abstaining from food and drink, until sunset when an iftar meal is served. After tarawih, or late night prayers, the kids come out to play once more.
Here, Arab News takes you on a journey through the streets of Karachi that come alive with the sights and sounds of night cricket matches.