Kambojaric
MODERATOR
Malik are a big brand in the hockey world. Even many Swedes who I played hockey with in my younger days used Malik sticks. Many major international players today use Malik sticks (https://www.malik-hockey.com/athletes.html)
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Less then one Wal-Mart outlet.

Malik are a big brand in the hockey world. Even many Swedes who I played hockey with in my younger days used Malik sticks. Many major international players today use Malik sticks (https://www.malik-hockey.com/athletes.html)
Total "documented" exports from sialkot are around 2.2-2.5 billion dollars. Saga could have become a global brand but death of owner and subsequent feud in the family ensured there is nothing in that direction.
Nice new info , RoohAfsa used to be favourite here in IndiaStory is that the Roohafsa was created by an British Raj Indian Muslim in the early 1900. When Paksitan and India were seperated he sent one son to Paksitan and one to India to open up 2 different companies with the same name. So technically Roohafsa belongs to whole of subcontinent.
I have tried Laziza foods as well and those are pretty good. In fact, we do not like the taste of Indian spices as once we bought some because Pakistani spices were short in the local supermarket but their taste was strange and we just gifted to our Indian friends.Shan and national spices and products are mostly everywhere in Canada, besides rural small towns. Otherwise all major chains carry them
who is he?Yeh chacha Pakistan bi pooch gaya ??View attachment 557088
Yeh chacha Pakistan bi pooch gaya ??View attachment 557088
I have tried Laziza foods as well and those are pretty good. In fact, we do not like the taste of Indian spices as once we bought some because Pakistani spices were short in the local supermarket but their taste was strange and we just gifted to our Indian friends.
who is he?
Better a loser then then a puff like you. And only a confused, she-puff marooned in the west like you would fail to understand what I was conveying. That for a country of 200 million our exports and brand presence is weaker the just one America retailer.What a loser you are..you don't even know the facts & figures about either
We need to talk through facts ... and not rely on the brain-farts only.Better a loser then then a puff like you. And only a confused, she-puff marooned in the west like you would fail to understand what I was conveying. That for a country of 200 million our exports and brand presence is weaker the just one America retailer.
We need to talk through facts ... and not rely on the brain-farts only.
Less then one Wal-Mart outlet.

The Indians even knocked that off
I might still have the image
Rooh Afza (Bengali: রূহ আফজা (rūh āphjā); Hindi: रूह अफ़ज़ा (rūh aph.j.ā); Urdu: روح افزا) is a concentrated squash. It was formulated by Naqi in 1906 in Ghaziabad, British India,[1] and launched from Old Delhi, India. Currently, Rooh Afza is manufactured by the companies founded by him and his sons, Hamdard (Waqf) Laboratories, Pakistan and Hamdard (Wakf) Laboratories, India. Since 1948, the company has been manufacturing the product in India, Pakistan and Bangladesh.
In 1906, Hakim Mohammed kabiruddin, a physician of Unani herbal medicine, founded his clinic in Old Delhi, India. The following year, he launched Rooh Afza from an establishment at Lal Kuan in Old Delhi. Following the partition of India in 1947, while the elder son stayed, the younger son migrated to Pakistan and started a separate Hamdard from two rooms in Karachi.