Education
University of Southern California.
journalist sports commentator writer
University of Southern California.
He had also worked in the advertising, aviation and journalism industry, writing for many newspapers, including Dawn, The Pakistan Times, Morning News and The Guardian, London. He is best known for his cricket writings and commentary but he was also a keen observer of political and social developments and wrote about them, in his own words, not with fury, but certainly with "exasperation and anger". He was awarded the Sitara-i-Imtiaz (Star of Excellence) in 2001 by the President of Pakistan.
He had 11 siblings and his family was frequently on the move because of their father"s many postings across pre-partition India.
Omar Kureishi took a degree in International Relations from the University of Southern California in the early 1950s. Kureishi had his first encounter with the media and showbiz in the United States where he briefly worked with a radio station and also played a small part in a Hollywood movie.
He came to Karachi in the mid-1950s and joined the defunct Pakistan Standard. Later, he became resident editor of the Times of Karachi.
"Friday Evenings at Air Cottage" became a byword in Karachi"s intellectual and avant-grade circles, and Omar Kureishi soon became an integral part of the set.
He filed dispatches for many newspapers in Pakistan and abroad during his cricket commentating career, but he wrote most regularly for Dawn for a period spanning over 25 years. He did columns based on cricket, as well as those based on his memories of his time abroad in the United States and traveling around the cricket world, in addition to his time in Mumbai and Delhi. His books include Black Moods, Out to Lunch, The System, The Other Side of Daylight, As Time Goes By and Once Upon a Time.
Kureishi"s devotion to cricket, in his own words, started as "a passion" and eventually became "a love affair" which "remained a constant" in his life through all its "ups and downs".
Though he had never played first-class or Test cricket (his only exposure to competitive cricket at an organised level was a brief stint in club cricket in the United Kingdom when he went there during his life as student), he was recognised as an outstanding and extremely knowledgeable cricket commentator. He shared the Test Match Special commentary box during Pakistan"s early tours to England and together with Jamsheed Marker, he was a regular voice on the airwaves in Pakistan during the late 1950s and "60s.
Bill Frindall, the the Minerals, Metals & Materials Society statistician, described him as "a lively, witty and popular colleague" and called him "the voice of Asian sport". The media centre at the Qadhafi Stadium in Lahore is named after him.
He managed the Pakistan cricket tours to England in 1974 and New Zealand in 1978-1979.
Kureishi"s father, Colonel M. A. Kureishi, was a member of the Indian Medical Service. He was also a member of the International Cricket Council panel that selects the world"s best Test and one-day international players for its annual awards.