Saudi Airlines veteran turns restaurateur, blending history and food in Karachi

Special Saudi Airlines veteran turns restaurateur, blending history and food in Karachi
This combination of photos shows exterior and interior of Café 1947 in Karachi on September 22, 2025. (AN Photo)
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Updated 30 September 2025
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Saudi Airlines veteran turns restaurateur, blending history and food in Karachi

Saudi Airlines veteran turns restaurateur, blending history and food in Karachi
  • Asiya Rizvi opened Café 1947 in May with her neurodivergent son and nephew as co-owners
  • It runs a rotating menu from Afghan to Palestinian cuisine, donating proceeds from select dishes

KARACHI: When former Saudi Airlines flight attendant Asiya Rizvi opened a restaurant in Karachi’s upscale Defense neighborhood earlier this year, she brought not only her mother’s Mughlai recipes but also a trove of dishes she discovered during 15 years of flying with colleagues from around the world.

The result is Café 1947, an eatery that blends food with history and is co-owned by two neurodivergent children: Rizvi’s 12-year-old son, Shabbar Ali, who has Down syndrome, and her relative’s son, Raza Shah, who is autistic.

Rizvi, who worked as cabin crew from 1999 to 2014 and flew with colleagues from 51 nationalities, said she often exchanged food and stories with women from different cultures.

“We used to stay with each other for a week or a couple of days,” she told Arab News. “We used to talk about food, what to cook, what to eat. We used to try each other’s food.”

Those exchanges inspired her to design a rotating seven-day menu: Afghan cuisine on Mondays, Chinese on Tuesdays, Pakistani on Wednesdays, Mughlai on Thursdays, Palestinian on Fridays and Middle Eastern and fusion dishes on weekends.

Rizvi said she left her aviation career to care for her son, remained associated with the real estate industry and eventually opened the restaurant in May this year.

Named Café 1947 by S&R — after the initials of the two children — it reflects her personal journey and her mission to build a future for her son.

“I have done this for him,” she said of her son, who helps in the kitchen. “I want Shabbar to be a chef, a baker. The business idea came from Shabbar. If Allah has blessed you with a special child, you have to take special care of them.”

Her husband, Syed Asad Ali, a banker, also vouched for the boy’s passion.

“He stays in the kitchen… He is taking a lot of interest in baking particularly.”

The café’s name is also deliberate.

“We are giving a cultural history with food. So, we thought its name should have a historical aspect. That’s why we selected Café 1947,” Ali said, noting it referred to the year of Pakistan’s independence.

FLAVORED STORIES

The storytelling does not end with the menu. Rizvi’s elder daughter, Aemal Zahra, works part-time, explaining the origins of dishes to diners.

“My main role is helping out in the kitchen and when guests come, because our dishes are quite unique, I explain their history and their taste profile to our customers,” she said, before introducing Musakhan Chicken, a Palestinian dish traditionally cooked during the olive harvest.

“Its main ingredient is olive oil,” she told the diners. “The flavor has a lot of cinnamon, black pepper, sumac and allspice. It is very rustic and it is covered with caramelized onions.”

For Rizvi, Palestine carries special significance.

“We should raise the issue of Palestine from every platform. We decided to make their national dish a part of our cuisine,” she said, adding that proceeds from some dishes are donated to humanitarian causes.

HOMEMADE TOUCH

Customers say the café offers both taste and authenticity.

“Today we have come here since I wanted to eat Chapli Kabab,” said Adnan Hussain, a textile businessman. “It’s amazing. I have never eaten such delicious Chapli Kabab.”

He also tried Musakhan Chicken after Zahra explained its history.

“It’s a new experience. It’s a new dish. It’s a new flavor,” he said.

Another visitor, Mubeen Khurram, praised the “homemade feel.”

“The food was very delicious,” he said. “The rotating menu makes you want to come again. Tomorrow you’ll get a different experience.”

Rizvi acknowledges small adjustments are sometimes made for local palates.

“When food travels, there is variation,” she said, noting that Afghan and Arab dishes are spiced up to suit Pakistani tastes.


Beauty of the written word celebrated in Tabuk

Beauty of the written word celebrated in Tabuk
Updated 10 November 2025
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Beauty of the written word celebrated in Tabuk

Beauty of the written word celebrated in Tabuk
  • Writers and intellectuals gather for ‘When Poetry Speaks’
  • Literature, Publishing and Translation Commission event

RIYADH: The Cultural Cafe, the literary partner of the Literature, Publishing and Translation Commission in Tabuk, recently hosted an evening titled “When Poetry Speaks,” the Saudi Press Agency reported on Monday.

Writers, intellectuals and enthusiasts who attended discussed contemporary poetic structures and expressions of reality and life.

Several attendees read their creations which included poems in traditional and modern styles. There were subsequent discussions about how poetry has been affected by rapid cultural and social changes in the world.

Participants said that poetry remains a mirror of human emotions and a means of embodying the aesthetic and intellectual values of society.

The evening was a part of The Literary Partner Initiative which seeks to highlight the importance of literature in society. The initiative organizes diverse cultural events across the Kingdom.

The aim is to raise public cultural awareness, celebrate the written word and embrace dialogue.

The project also wants to expand the reach of Saudi Arabia’s cultural production worldwide, through public-private partnerships.