Born from a distance that
could not be crossed.
Heaven Hearts began with a single, unbearable truth: that love does not end at a graveside, and neither should care. We exist for the families who carry their departed in their hearts across oceans — and who long to know that the soil over them is not forgotten.
A trust that outlives presence
In our faith, the dead remain in our care. We are taught to visit them, to greet them, to make du'a for them, and to keep their resting places clean and honoured. It is a quiet responsibility — a trust passed between the living on behalf of those who can no longer ask for anything.
But families scatter. Work, marriage, and migration carry sons and daughters to the Gulf, to Britain, to North America. The grave of a mother or father remains in Karachi, while those who love them most are thousands of miles away. Heaven Hearts exists to stand in that gap — to be present where you cannot be, and to care exactly as you would.
You should never have to choose between your life and your grief
Distance has a way of turning remembrance into worry. A festival arrives, a death anniversary passes, the monsoon comes and goes — and you wonder whether the grave is overgrown, whether the marker still stands, whether anyone has been.
We take that weight from you. Whether you visit Karachi once a year or have not been able to return at all, we keep a steady, gentle presence at the graveside on your behalf. Every visit is documented — timestamped photographs and a short written record — so that care is something you can see, not simply hope for.
“When my parents were buried in Karachi and I could not be there, I understood that grief and distance are the same weight — carried for a lifetime, by everyone who left.”
Heaven Hearts was founded by Khawar Qamar after moving to Dubai and losing both of his parents in Karachi. He built what he wished had existed: a trusted presence at the graves of those we love, for the families who cannot be there. We have stayed small on purpose — the same team, the same city, the same care given to every visit, regardless of who is paying or what they have asked for.
Remembrance, dignity, and responsibility
Our work is rooted in the cemeteries of Karachi, the city where so many families laid their loved ones to rest before life carried them elsewhere. We treat every grave as we would our own family's — with dignity in the smallest acts: clearing the weeds, settling the earth, washing the marker, offering du'a, and leaving the place quiet and cared for.
For those who wish to give beyond their own family, we also carry requests forward as sadaqah— charity offered in a loved one's name, so that remembrance becomes a source of ongoing good. To us, this is not a service to be scaled. It is a trust to be kept.
Tell us who we would be caring for.
Share a name, a cemetery, and how often you would like us to visit. We will respond personally to confirm what is possible.
Begin an inquiry