Suhail Zaheer Lari (13 November 1936 – 5 December 2020; Urdu: سہیل ظہیر لاری) was a Pakistani historian and author who focused on research and documentation of the history of the Sindh region in Southern Pakistan.
He was a co-founder of the Heritage Foundation of Pakistan, a conservation organization which sought to drive awareness to the region's art, architecture, and cultural heritage.
Early life
Lari was born in Gorakhpur, in modern-day Uttar Pradesh state in India, on 13 November 1936, in what was then undivided British India and was raised in Allahabad.[1][2] His mother, Qabila Khatoon, was a homemaker while his father, Zaheer ul Hasnain Lari was a judge and lawyer. The family was known to be close to India's first prime minister, Jawaharlal Nehru. The family did not leave for Pakistan during the Partition of India in 1947, but, remained in Allahabad until 1950, when they moved to Lahore and later to Karachi.[1]
Returning from England after his studies, Lari spent two decades in the corporate world becoming the managing director of Khyber Insurance Company. He gave up his role when the company was nationalized by the government.[1][3] Post his retirement from corporate world, he immersed himself in research and documentation of the history of the Sindh region of Southern Pakistan.[1]
Along with his wife, Yasmeen Lari, he founded the Heritage Foundation of Pakistan in 1980, as a conservation organization to generate awareness about Pakistan's art, architecture, and cultural heritage. Specifically, they focused on the preservation of over 600 historical buildings, many of which were in advanced stages of decay.[1] In one of his noted actions, he drew attention to the Makli Necropolis, through multiple proposals for its conservation leading to the cemetery becoming a UNESCO World Heritage Site.[1]
As an author and a photographer, he generated interest and attention to the history of the Sindh region in Southern Pakistan.[1] He wrote more than 60 books on history, heritage and culture including An Illustrated History of Sindh, Neither Islamic nor Persian, Makli under the Samma, Makli under the Sufi, Makli under Timurid, and Meri Society Ke Log.[4][5] His book Meri Mitti Ke Log, chronicled the rise of Zulfikar Ali Bhutto, Pakistan's fourth President, while Meri Society Ke Log was a societal snapshot of guests at his home.[6] He also wrote his own memoirs online documenting his life.[7]
He was an advocate of rainwater harvesting as a means to conserve groundwater and means to avoid flooding.[8] He also advocated the need for low-cost housing to train manpower to build earthquake and flood resistant housing.[9]
Personal life
Lari met his future wife Yasmeen Ahsan (later Yasmeen Lari) when he was in Lahore and she went on to study architecture in London. With their parents objecting to their marriage, he would write in his memoir that they threatened to get married in Scotland where the legal age for marriage was lower than that in England; their parents subsequently agreed to the union.[1] His wife, Yasmeen went on to become a prominent architect in Pakistan. The couple had two sons and a daughter.[1] Their house would be the site for artists, politicians, and writers to meet.[6]
Lari died on 5 December 2020 from COVID-19 related complications. He was aged 84.[1][3]
^Reporter, The Newspaper's Staff (6 December 2020). "Suhail Lari dies of Covid-19". DAWN.COM. Archived from the original on 4 January 2021. Retrieved 25 January 2021.