The aging reptile, his leathery skin fissured by time, waddled out
of the murky water toward a crowd of visitors wearing garlands, all
hoping to lure him with handfuls of sweets and choice pieces of goat
neck.
The pilgrims are Pakistani Sheedis, whose ancestors came from Africa
and are drawn from different Muslim sects, making them a potential
target for hardline militants who want to impose their strict
interpretation of Islam on others.
Their new-found confidence coincides with a major crackdown on crime
and militancy by paramilitary Rangers in the southern port city of
20 million people where the shrine is located, which has seen murder
levels drop sharply.
The Pakistani military has also been carrying out a major offensive
against the Taliban movement in the northwest of the country since
June, 2014, and its pursuit of militants gathered pace following the
massacre of 134 school pupils in December.
"Three, four years back, armed Taliban had become so influential
that police were afraid of them ... at the nearby police station
they killed 18 policemen," said shrine caretaker Mohammed Yaseen,
light glinting off tiny mirrors stitched into his traditional cap.
"Since the Rangers and police operation (in Karachi), people have
started to return."
Militant attacks across the nuclear-armed nation of 190 million
people have fallen by around 70 percent this year.
In Karachi, Pakistan's economic hub, violence is still rife. But
police say it is getting better, with 3,082 people murdered there
since the crackdown started in 2013 compared with 4,790 murders in
the two years before it began.
PEACOCK FEATHERS AND FESTIVALS
Yaseen recalls when displaced ethnic Pashtuns fleeing fighting in
northern Pakistan began flooding into Karachi after 2008.
Among them were Taliban sympathizers whose interpretation of Islam
had no place for crocodiles, around 100 of which inhabit the
shrine's pond. The site closed for 10 months in 2010 and a charity
fed the crocodiles in secret.
The shrine quietly reopened in 2011, but only a handful of
worshippers dared come. Gradually, improving security meant 100
people might turn up on a busy day last year. Now crowds of more
than 1,000 flock to the shrine several days each week.
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The drop in violence has also raised Sheedi hopes that they might
hold their annual four-day festival before the end of the year. It
has been canceled for the last five years for fear of attack.
At the autumn celebration, four Sheedi communities slaughter goats
and dance to a drum beat before the crocodiles, who are showered
with rose petals and anointed with perfume and saffron.
"This year we are planning to hold the festival, so our young
generation comes to know about our traditions," said Yaqoob
Qambrani, chairman of the Pakistan Sheedi Alliance.
While there is no reliable data available, estimates of the number
of Sheedis in Pakistan vary widely from tens of thousands to a few
million.
The community believes the crocodiles living in the shrine's pond
are the disciples of saints. A wrinkled man at a wooden kiosk sells
worshippers rose petals and other offerings.
At the inner entrance to the shrine hall, a bearded man in a small
black cap blessed pilgrims by patting their heads and shoulders with
peacock feather quills.
Among them was driver Mohammed Arif, 30, and his three children,
whose bright, freshly starched clothes shone in the gloom.
"My father used to bring me to this shrine, now I am bringing my
children," he said happily.
(Editing by Katharine Houreld and Mike Collett-White)
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