A Sacred Geography of Sindh: How Sindh Built, Lost, and Rebuilt Its Holy Places
Reading a Province by Its Shrines Good evening. Before I show you a single map, I want you to picture something. Picture the Indus at dusk — a broad, brown, restless god of a river, sliding south through a land that receives almost no rain. Now picture, strung along its banks like beads on a thread, the domes and cupolas and whitewashed tombs of the men and women whom Sindh decided to call holy. That thread of the sacred, running from the northern gate at Kashmore down to the tidal creeks below Thatta, is the subject of today’s article. And today, we are going to read it quantitatively — as data. The evidence in front of us is a database of 624 documented religious sites spread across all 30 districts of modern Sindh: shrines and tombs, temples and mosques, churches, gurdwaras, stupas, a Parsi fire-temple, and a synagogue. The dataset was compiled from encyclopaedic and news coverage, heritage archives, devotional websites, and district profiles. Every site is geo-located; ...