After an 18-year wait, Karachi welcomes the nation’s athletes – Pakistan

After an 18-year wait, Karachi welcomes the nation’s athletes – Pakistan

The dust of the city coated everything – the flags, the crisp new doboks, the hopeful faces of fathers shepherding their children. After 18 years, this was Karachi’s welcome: not a red carpet, but a gritty testament.

The National Games had come home.

The city, in its quintessential fashion, demanded a pilgrimage.

For the first Games on its soil after 18 years, it offered an obstacle course of its own making – cranes standing like sentinels over diverted roads that formed labyrinths of progress. But through the grit and the detours, they came. A river of colour, athletes from every corner of the country in their distinct tracksuits, and locals converging on the National Stadium. They arrived not for a mere ceremony, but in spite of the journey.

“I am almost covered in this dust,” a father told Dawn, guiding his young son in a taekwondo dobok toward the gates. “But we are glad. We are here.”

Flags of various participating contingents seen during the opening ceremony of National Games in Karachi on Saturday. — Tahir Jamal/White Star

That sentiment, gritty and determined, was the unspoken anthem.

An 18-year wait, borne of the nation’s tumultuous cycles, had culminated not in polished perfection, but in the magnificent, unruly spectacle that only Karachi – impatient, passionate, and perpetually under construction – would dare to stage.

In the cool December sunlight, the stadium slowly filled.

Nearly 2,500 athletes – a vanguard of the 11,000 competing – along with thousands of students, transformed the stands into a living mosaic.

Pakistani flags fluttered. Girls in cultural dresses posed for pictures; athletes snapped selfies. The air buzzed with the screams of students tumbling off buses, their energy infectious.

Then, the city’s notorious inertia set in. An almost two-hour delay saw the early carnival buzz curdle under the sun.

A view of the National Games in Karachi on Saturday. — Tahir Jamal/White Star

The vibrant dances on the field began to feel like a loop.

“They brought us here just to bake?” an athlete muttered in the open ground, echoing a growing restlessness. The band’s drills became background noise to shared sighs.

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