Homeless Pakistani woman went from living in abandoned bus to painting highway trucks

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Updated 05 April 2021
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Homeless Pakistani woman went from living in abandoned bus to painting highway trucks

Homeless Pakistani woman went from living in abandoned bus to painting highway trucks
  • Rozina Naz, a single mother with two children, paints trucks and buses in a small settlement on the outskirts of Karachi
  • The truck artist says her profession has brought back color into her life

KARACHI: Two decades ago, an abandoned old bus that stood on top of a mound of scrap was home to Rozina Naz and her two children. Today, she is an accomplished artist, known as Ustad Rozi Khan, who paints buses and trucks in the very same neighborhood on the outskirts of Karachi. 

Newly widowed and homeless 19 years ago, Naz had moved her family into the old bus, taking up odd jobs to feed herself and her children. But it was when she began visiting a painter’s shop years later, that she realized buses like her home could be her canvas.

“When my husband died, I had no one by my side and was all alone. I spotted a bus that stood on a heap of scrap and started living there with my two children,” she told Arab News at the Mawach Goth bus stand on Saturday.




Rozina Naz, popularly known as Ustad Rozi Khan, speaks to Arab News at the Mawach Goth bus stand on the outskirts of Karachi on April 3, 2021. (AN photo)

Naz kept up with different odd jobs and the routine continued well after she was able to move out of the bus into a real home.

“I didn’t give up,” she said. “I was thinking, this time will pass too. I didn’t want to spread my hands in front of anyone.” 




Rozina Naz, a truck artist in Pakistan’s southern city of Karachi, prepares colors before painting a bus at the Mawach Goth bus stand on April 3, 2021. (AN photo)

Her life changed when she began visiting a painter’s shop to unwind and read newspapers after a hard day’s work.

“The owner of the shop had two or three students,” she said. “When they left for home, he would put their wages in their hands.”

“I thought, this is a good way to earn a living.” 




Rozina Naz, popularly known as Ustad Rozi Khan, is busy painting a bus at the Mawach Goth bust stand on the outskirts of Karachi on April 3, 2021. (AN photo)

Naz was good at drawing in school and she put these skills to work painting trucks, a popular form of art decoration native to South Asia which features elaborate florals, calligraphy, landscapes and poetry painted on large cargo trucks in vivid colors. 

The trucks, which colorfully dot inter-city highways, are painted almost exclusively by men in Pakistan.

“Many people would say: ‘You’re a woman and this line of work is not meant for you,’” she said.

“But I told them, it’s just another form of work and it has nothing to do with my gender.” 

“If someone makes these statements, I don’t pay attention and continue to do my work,” she said. “I only think of my children.”




Rozina Naz, popularly known as Ustad Rozi Khan, is busy painting a bus at the Mawach Goth bust stand on the outskirts of Karachi on April 3, 2021. (AN photo)

Now, armed with her paint buckets, Naz goes about her day on a motorcycle she bought on installments.

“My life became colorful when I started painting,” Naz said. “I fell in love with colors.” 

“It’s been 19 years since I started using this brush. I still work in this small neighborhood, but I can sketch any design,” she continued proudly.

“I can paint anything.”