‘Rowdies’ mount some iron horses
Karachi – Revving round a dusty oval in the heart of Pakistan’s largest city, women on motorbikes practise looping a row of safety cones, their helmets securing colourful headscarves in place.
It is a rare sight in the culturally conservative country, where women are typically relegated to the back seats of cars or to riding side-saddle on motorbikes, ferried by a male relative.
“Change is under way,” says Zainab Safdar, demonstrating how to mount a two-wheeler while cloaked in a pink body-covering abaya.
The 40 year old is an instructor for the “Rowdy Riders”, a women-only group teaching novices in Karachi everything from the basics of balancing on a bicycle to high-octane gear changing and negotiating traffic.
Since being founded in 2017 by a handful of pioneering riders, the self-described “Rowdies” have swollen in number to more than 1 500 housewives, students and professionals.
“In the past, there were misconceptions about girls riding bikes,” Safdar said, referring to doubts about their abilities.
“Fortunately, with greater awareness, these notions have been dispelled.”
Women’s participation in the workforce is impacted by the limited availability of public transport services that ensure their safety.
In the sprawling megacity, granting women the skill and confidence to join legions of male bikers in the helter-skelter of congestion unlocks a new freedom.
Most of the riders hail from Karachi’s middle class, but rigid gender norms often still hold sway.
University lecturer Shafaq Zaman said “it took a while to get permission” from her family to start classes to master a pedal bike two months ago.
“I am so inspired that now I have my own dream for me, that I want to ride on a heavy bike. I want to ride the whole of Pakistan,” 30-year-old Zaman said.
Her story is not unusual. In Pakistan, very young boys are often seen steering motorbikes, but many of the “Rowdies” did not learn to ride a bicycle until well into adulthood.
“There should be a bike in every house and usually there is, but it’s rotting because men do not use it and women don’t know how to,” said Sana Kamran, a sister “Rowdie”. –