Servas Pakistan welcomes you every time to our beautiful country.
A trip to Pakistan is a face to face with a fascinating land that has withstood countless invasions and preserved the essence of its conquerors in its present day monuments and archaeological heritage.
A trip to Pakistan is a face to face with a fascinating land that has withstood countless invasions and preserved the essence of its conquerors in its present day monuments and archaeological heritage.
Half a dozen civilizations have flourished here and left their imprints. Historically this is one of the most ancient lands known to man. Its cities flourished before Babylon was built.. Its people practiced the art of good living and citizenship before the celebrated ancient Greeks.
One can see the excavated sites at Moenjodaro and Taxila - seats of the ancient Indus Valley and Gandhara civilizations, the architectural monuments of the Moguls, the Khyber Pass - the historic inlet to South Asia.
Here are some facts about Pakistan.
About Pakistan
Official Name: Islamic Republic of Pakistan (Pakistan means Pure Land)
Capital: Islamabad
Capital: Islamabad
Area: 796,096-sq. km
[Punjab 205,344; Sindh 140,914; Khyber Pakhtunkhwa 74,521; Balochistan 347,190; Federally Administered Tribal Areas 27,220 and Islamabad (Capital) 906 sq. km.]
Location: 23.30 Degrees and 36.45 Degrees North latitude and 61 Degrees and 75.30 Degrees East longitude in the northern hemisphere
Population: 172.80 million (2008 Census)
Ethnic Composition: 95% Muslims, 5% others
Currency: PAK. Rupee
Language: Urdu (National language), English (Official)
Major Cities: Islamabad, Karachi, Lahore, Peshawar, Quetta, Rawalpindi, Hyderabad, Faisalabad and Multan
Pakistan borders Afghanistan in the north-west, Iran in the west, India in the east, China in the north-east and Arabian Sea in the south. In the north-west a narrow stretch of Afghan territory, known as the Wakhan corridor, separates it from the former U.S.S.R. Pakistan, thus shares its borders with Afghanistan for about 2,400 km. with Iran for about 850 km. and with India for about 1675 km. It has a very rich historical and cultural heritage. It offers a great variety of vistas which range southwards from the highest mountains of the world, to the hills of fairly high altitude towards the west. The northern region offers raging rivers, breathtaking valleys, snow covered peaks and massive glaciers. These scenes then stretch south-east into uplands and fertile plains in the middle, sandy desolate deserts and arid plateaus towards the south- sandy silver white sandy beaches, lagoons and mangrove swamps and sea in the far south.
Some Salient Features
Natural fauna in Pakistan's lowlands is patchy - mostly scattered clumps of grass and stunted woodlands. However, as the landscape rises, there are quite large coniferous forests and carpeted slopes of multicolored flowers in the northern mountains. Fauna includes bear, snow leopard, deer and jackal. Pakistan's 800km coastline is rich in shark, shellfish and Sea turtle, while the Indus delta is home to marsh crocodile.
Pakistan has three seasons: cool (October through February); hot (March through June); and wet (July through September). There are big regional variations. In the south, the cool season brings dry days and cool nights, while the northern mountains get drizzle and plummeting night-time temperatures. The hot season means suffocating hot and humid conditions in the south but pleasant temperatures northwards. During the wet season, the tail end of monsoon dumps steady rains mostly in the narrow belt of the Punjab (largest province). But further north, the high mountains block all but the most determined clouds, which mean relatively little rain there.
Nearly all Pakistani are Muslim and Islam is the state religion. Christians are the largest minority, followed by Hindus and Parsees (descendents of Persian Zoroastrians). It is preferred that a woman visitor shauld fallow the Islamic dress code, which include knee length dress with full sleeves.
Bargaining is a matter of style, particularly in the many Pakistani Bazaars. Unlike western hesitancy for bargaining, shopkeepers in Pakistan lave to bargain as long as it is done with style and panache. Bargaining usually begins with an invitation to step inside for a cup of tea followed by a little bit of small talk, a casually expressed interest by yourself in a particular item, a way too high price mentioned by the seller, a way too low counter offer by yourself and eventually, after much comic rolling of eyes, a handshake and mutual satisfaction for both parties. Smiles, good humor and an ability not to get fixated on driving the price into the ground should always accompany bargaining.
Karachi: is the capital of Sindh province. Karachi was the Capital of Pakistan before Islamabad. It is also considered as the commercial capital of Pakistan. It is the largest city a sprawling place of bazaars, hi-tech electronic shops, scurf infested older buildings and modish new hotels. Its sights are spread far and wide so a taxi or rickshaw is necessary to travel between them. Good place to start is the Quaid-e-Azam Mausoleum, a monument to Pakistan's founder Muhammad Ali Jinnah. Another impressive site is the remarkable white-marbled Defense Housing Society Mosque. The single dome, claimed to be the largest of its kind in the world, will make your gum cleave to the roof of your mouth. Above the mosque is Honeymoon Lodge, birthplace of the Aga Khan. Other sights include the Holy trinity Cathedral and St. Andrew's Church, and the Zoroastrian Towers of Silence, hills where the dead is traditionally exposed to vultures. South of the city is Clifton, a former British hangout and now an exclusive coastal corner for the local wealthy, popular Clifton beach, and Manora Island, a less-crowded beach resort. Saddar, the city center, is the main shopping area with thriving markets selling carpets, fur coats, leather jackets, snake skin purses, silk scarves and the country's biggest range of handicrafts. It also has a number of food stalls and cheap restaurants and the majority of budget hotels. All major hotel chains including Sheraton, Marriott, Ramada is in the close proximity to Saddar. If you are an archaeological fan Moenjodaro- once a city of an Indus valley civilization- and the Chaukundi tombs are well worth a visit. Flights in and out of Karachi are numerous but it's worth checking the ETA of your flight. If your flight touches down in the middle of the night it would be wise to wait until sunrise before catching a taxi. Trains run from Karachi to most major destination. Bus travel is not advisable due to discomfort.
A great historic centre of transit-caravan trade with Afghanistan and Central Asia, Peshawar is today connected by the Grand Trunk Road and rail with Lahore, Rawalpindi, Hyderabad, and Karachi and by air with Rawalpindi, Chitral, and Kabul, Afghanistan. Peshawar's historic buildings include Bala Hissar, a fort built by the Sikhs on the ruins of the state residence of the Durranis, which was destroyed by them after the battle of Nowshera: Gor Khatri, once a Buddhist monastery and later a sacred Hindu temple, which stands on an eminence in the east and affords a panoramic view of the entire city: the pure white mosque of Mahabat Khan (1630), a remarkable monument of Mughal architecture: Victoria memorial hall: and Government House.