In Karachi’s Lyari, centuries-old Baloch basket craft finds new life during Eid

Special A man weaves a traditional basket from dried reeds and palm leaves in Lyari, Karachi, on May 21, 2026. (AN photo)
A man weaves a traditional basket from dried reeds and palm leaves in Lyari, Karachi, on May 21, 2026. (AN photo)
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Updated 28 May 2026 16:54
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In Karachi’s Lyari, centuries-old Baloch basket craft finds new life during Eid

In Karachi’s Lyari, centuries-old Baloch basket craft finds new life during Eid
  • Baloch communities in Karachi have practiced handwoven basket-making since migrating from Balochistan in the 1800s
  • Traditionally used for fish and flatbread, the baskets are also used to carry sacrificial meat during Eid Al-Adha

KARACHI: In the narrow streets of Karachi’s historic Lyari neighborhood, stacks of handwoven baskets sit outside homes and workshops as elderly Baloch men and women bend over strips of dried reeds and palm leaves, weaving patterns passed down across generations.

In the days before Eid Al-Adha, the pace quickens.

Before sunrise, piles of freshly woven baskets are loaded onto motorcycles, rickshaws and small delivery vehicles bound for markets across Pakistan’s largest city, where families use them to carry sacrificial meat, traditional flatbreads and flowers during one of the country’s busiest religious festivals.

For many artisans in Lyari’s Ali Mohammad Mohalla area, the seasonal rush offers a brief financial lifeline for a craft that has steadily declined over the years as younger Pakistanis move toward urban jobs and factory work.

The basket-weaving tradition traces back to the 19th century, when members of the Nigori and Dashti Baloch communities migrated from southwestern Balochistan province to Karachi in search of work. Over decades, weaving became both a livelihood and a marker of cultural identity for several Baloch communities settled in Lyari and nearby areas.

Across Pakistan, similar baskets have long been used in homes, fisheries and village markets. Artisans typically gather date palm leaves, pandanus leaves, reeds or rushes, dry them and split them into thin strips before weaving them into baskets, trays, mats and storage containers.

“[During Eid] it is used to keep meat and sheermal (flatbread),” local vendor Shahjahan Neik told Arab News.

“Those who place orders for sheermal and animal sacrifice, these baskets are used to carry them to their homes or venues.”

Neik said he had grown up surrounded by the craft.

“I have seen this craft ever since I was born in 1972,” he said. “When I was in school, my family, including my mother and my sister, used to make these baskets.”

The raw weaving materials are still sourced from Balochistan, where such plants grow naturally in mountainous and river-fed regions. In Karachi neighborhoods including Lyari, Golimar and Hub Chowki, families then weave the baskets by hand before selling them to traders and shopkeepers.

In the past, the baskets were mainly used in Karachi’s fisheries to transport fish and prawns. Today, they are more commonly associated with Eid sacrifices, wedding bread deliveries and flower arrangements.

But artisans say the tradition is fading.

Neik recalled that nearly every woman in the neighborhood once participated in basket weaving from home.

“The new generation did not learn the art of making handwoven baskets,” he said. “A lot of people left from here to other cities.”

For many families, the work survives less as tradition than necessity.

Fehmida Ali, a 40-year-old mother of three who has spent more than a decade weaving baskets, said the income helps support her children’s education because her husband’s earnings as a driver are not enough.

“We receive a pile of these strips with which we make the baskets,” she told Arab News.

“One bundle contains 20 strips and I make 20 baskets every day. We get Rs300 ($1.06) for 20 pieces.”

Ali said it takes her around two hours to complete the work each day.

“We make more of these baskets around Eid Al-Adha and get around Rs50 ($0.18) more, compared to the usual wage,” she said.

“During Eid, it picks up, followed by the wedding season for flatbread. Even during the month of Muharram, the demand increases.”

Still, even artisans who have spent their lives preserving the craft say they do not want their children to depend on it financially.

Fifty-four-year-old Murad Ali said basket weaving had supported generations of his family, and that his wife and four children had all learned the skill. But he no longer sees a future in it for younger people.

“This kind of work is for the elderly,” he said. “Since we don’t get work opportunities elsewhere, we do this to pass time.”

Murad said he made 80 baskets a day during the Eid season, earning slightly more than a daily wage of $3. 

“Youngsters should get a job in a company or government sector,” he added. “This is not as fruitful for them.”