The Haunted House of Hill Park

Posted on October 31, 2009
Filed Under >Owais Mughal, Humor, Society
35 Comments
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Owais Mughal

If you have visited Hill Park, Karachi of many years ago, you may remember the presence of a haunted house inside Meraj amusement park. It was a small igloo shaped structure covered in bougainvillea and on the entrance there was a plaque displaying just two words: bhoot bangla (The Ghost House). When I first heard of this haunted house, my friends and I became very excited and we decided to check it out.

One fateful evening in 1981, we reached Hill Park around dusk time. At the entrance of the haunted house, we saw a 6-feet-tall, 3-feet-wide, and 2-feet-deep human being who was issuing entry tickets. He had six inch long moustaches and with a sinking sun in the background, his silhoutted image appeared like a complete ‘bhoot’ (ghost) in itself.

I was only 10 years old at that time and to me this 6 x 3 x 2 = 36 cubic feet voluminous guy looked like a ghost. My friends and I immediately gave him the nick name of Mr. bhoot. (Mr. Ghost)


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After issuing tickets, Mr. bhoot placed us in a straight line and for some unknown reason he told me stand in the front of the line.

My situation was such that I was shivering with anticipation of an impending horror. He then told us to enter the haunted house one by one but only after we start hearing some scary music. All of us solemnly moved our heads in affirmative.

A dark night, fear of unknown and a giant ghost-cum-human were looking scary all right. The eerie set up had already starting to freak us out a bit. After giving us instructions, Mr. bhoot suddenly disappeared behind some curtains made out of torn ‘bori’ (jute bag.)We then heard a distinct click of a cassette player button and the place started rocking in a blast of theme music. The supposedly horror music was not scary at all. It was more like a sea storm making a land fall like:

khooo khooo shooo shiaaoooN shapar chiaaoN and repeat.

As soon as we got the queue of scary music, we entered the horror house. We were walking very cautiously and in a line according to Mr. bhoot instructions. Suddenly from left side something came flying in the air and hit one of my friends right on his face. It was a human arm, torn apart from the shoulder blade and soaked in blood. All of us shrieked in horror, but my friend who got hit was so scared that he grabbed onto this flying object as a reflex action and didn’t let go of it. While we were still checking on to what had just hit us, Mr. bhoot suddenly appeared from the darkness and in ultraviolet lit room, showing his large purple teeth he ordered us:

choRo bhuee choRo ! haath ko jaane do!
(Let go off the hand guys!)

That torn-apart human arm was actually made of cotton soaked in red color. It was made to slide across the room by pulling on a string. That string was pulled by none other than our Mr. bhoot himself from some hidden corner. The timing of rope pulling was so perfect that the arm had hit my friend right on his cheek. Mr. bhoot must have perfected this art over time. After my friend let go of the arm, Mr. bhoot disappeared in the darkness with as much swiftness as with which he had appeared.

We cautiously moved further. Wooden planks that made the passage were creaking under our feet. There were some gaps or holes in wooden planks where our feet were getting stucked.

We were too scared to look down while walking incase some other flying object decided to come our way. We saw some fake human skulls, bones and a few fake dead bodies lying around. The dead bodies had colorful zero-watt bulbs glowing under them, so instead of looking horrifying they actually looked hilarious in the colors of green, red, blue and yellow.

One dead body was however, wrapped in a white sheet (kafan) and was moving slowly from lying-down position to sitting-up position, on the beat of the same old stormy music.

Shoo (lie-down), khoo (sit-up), shiaooN (lie-down) chiaooN (sit up again) and so on.

Since there was no Zero-watt bulb glowing under this dead body and the approximate dead area of this body was 36 cubic feet, we guessed it must be the same Mr. bhoot pulling yet another stunt on us. So we acted cool and didn’t give him any reaction. The anti-climax of that moving arm scene earlier had removed all fear from us and we knew if any thing moved, it was probably Mr. bhoot himself. The bhoot guy probably gave up on trying to scare us any further as very soon the ‘cyclone’ music stopped and it was the queue for us to get out.

The management of this haunted house was probably very poor because the same guy who had issued us entrance tickets, operated the music player, pulled the string to hurl the arm across visitors and then wore a white sheet to become a dead body.

The total time we spent inside haunted house was probably 5 minutes but that fun memory has lasted with me fore more than 25 years now and I recall every detail as if it happened just yesterday.

35 responses to “The Haunted House of Hill Park”

  1. Seriously its seem most horrible haunted house in Karachi Pakistan as well but the thing is why people not insured in facility to their city for develop new haunted house rental for more fun.

  2. Farrukh Naik says:

    We are the first formal Ghost Hunting and Paranormal Scientific Investigation organisation in Rawalpindi/ Islamabad. We are giving our services for free to any body who really is experiencing any paranormal or ghost/ spirit activity in his/her premises.

  3. Hammad says:

    Please email me ur stories or haunted places in pakistan.

  4. Nice post Owais…

    It seems Karachi, and the whole of Pakistan for that matter, has now turned into a Bhoot Bangla….with “Mr. Bhoots” appearing at every nook and corner scaring people out of their breaths and ‘droning’ them out of their lives.

    Let us pray the dreadful Bhoot Bangla goes back to its original location and these ‘Bhoots’ leave Karachi and our beloved Pakistan alone.

    sincerely,

    Sohail

  5. MEHROZE says:

    AOA FRIENDS
    NICE POST

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