Mr Abidi’s first stop was the city of Ambala, which had figured in all historical accounts from the Mughals to the British Raj: according to some sources, such was the centrality of the city to the Raj that the first telegram announcing the outbreak of the war of 1857 was received at Ambala Cantonment. Mr Abidi particularly relished his visit to the Sayeen Tawakkul Shah Mosque in Ambala, where he met two Hindu boys laboriously learning Urdu, not only for their trade (they were commission agents whose records were maintained in Urdu) but also for the love of the language. This mosque also had the distinction of continuing almost uninterruptedly as a place of worship. After Partition, it had been converted into a hostel for Muslim girls but was soon reverted to its original purpose.
Beyond Ambala, Mr Abidi’s bus passed through expansive plains bearing silent witness to history. He passed the town of Thanesar (renamed as Kurukshetra), which had, in its day, not only given way to Mahmud of Ghazni in his expeditions into India but, earlier still, had laid itself down for epic battle between the Korus and the Pandus. He stopped briefly at Karnal and visited an old haveli as well as a dargah, which bore a sign welcoming people from all faiths. He reminisced about the town of Panipat, which had at one time been a stronghold of Muslims. One elderly resident recalled that Mahatma Gandhi had come to the town before Partition and had urged the Muslims to remain in their homes. The Muslims, however, were eager to migrate to the Promised Land! Din Mohammad, a simple villager from the area, still recounted undertones of tension between the Muslim and Hindu communities, leading Mr Abidi to wonder if the Mahatma’s audience had not, perhaps, chosen wisely.
At long last, Mr Abidi reached Delhi, which appeared to have recovered from the then recently held Asian Games, the 1984 Sikh insurgency and the assassination of Indira Gandhi. He headed almost directly for the Jamia Masjid, through roads and streets crowded with traffic, human rickshaws and people. He met Lala Amarnath, whose seven generations had lived in the shade of the masjid, as well as Habibur Rehman Saifi, a welder who had squeezed his entire family of 10 into a house barely large enough for one man. More important than meeting these people, he absorbed the ambience of the mosque made lively by food vendors of every ilk and sanctified by whispered prayers in its hallowed halls and courtyards.
Mr Abidi was keen to see Sher Shah’s Dilli and found old city gates near Feroz Shah Kotla as well as ruins of an old fort and a mosque built by him. He also visited the nearby tomb of Humayun, which was built by his wife Haji Begum some years after his death and which, subsequently, not only formed a resting place for countless other Mughal princes and princesses but also the final sanctuary for Bahadur Shah before he was arrested by the British and deported to Rangoon. Standing amid these ruins, Abidi marvelled at this glorious Dilli which, according to legend, had been destroyed and rebuilt seven times — and, in reality, perhaps even more — and which formed the seat of government for the Mughals as well as the Raj, and had throughout retained its splendour, vivacity and unique place in history.
(To be continued)
Published in The Express Tribune, November 30th, 2011.
COMMENTS (29)
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antanu : No, lies hurt.
@yousaf: These articles are written from the view point of a traveller who sees things and forms opinions based on what he/she hears or learns as history from others and just gives his/her impressions. These are his/her personal feelings and In no way any one should consider these impressions as accurate history lessons. For that you can read text books. As far as reading some thing else in between lines, it depends on what your interests are. You can always find human misery and exploitation in any article if that is all you are looking for. I am a traveller myself and always interested in what others have to say. I would always prefer to read articles such as these than to read stories on "Memogate" or such. Thanks for your kind input though.
@Jack: Hinduism is way older than just 2000 years. The Gita itself is from 3000 BC, ie 5000 years old. The vedas are probably 20,000 to 50,000 years old.
@antanu: Up to the same old tricks I see. This takes us away from the topic of this rather well-written (with some errors) article, but I guess replying to you is rather fun. Of Islam, (to put it simplistically) there is a broad framework and certain caveats that are non-negotiable for one to become and stay a muslim. After that one can be a good person or bad person, and ascribes reasons within and outside the religion for one's actions. Apparently, many adherents believe they are working for the greater glory of Islam, and the moderates refuse to acknowledge that the religion can easily be (mis) interpreted by its believers in a harmful way. On the side of Hinduism, the main problem is the caste system, which has morphed into a monster that works against egalitarianism in all future generations, not just in this one. There is broad consensus that this needs to be discarded, and this gradual process is underway - and for a religion that is over 2000 years old, in fairly quick time. However, the bedrock of Hinduism is that there are many ways to God (and this is where the contrast lies) - so one is a Hindu by value system rather than faith in an all-powerful force. You cannot say that a person is Hindu or not Hindu - only he or she can - if they want to. With Islam of course, if you don't tick certain boxes, the question is moot.
Ambala city named after Goddess Amba (mother divine durga) (pubh).
@anil: Very well said....but the problem with pakistan is its intelligentsia who are not able to provide much needed moral boosting to the people and only scorn them
@vasan: Why...the truth hurts? If you keep on putting your foot on other's toes, others may also reciprocate in the same manner...and by the way what do you know about hinduism? Just beeing borne hindu or muslim does not make one.
@Ali Tanoli: I been to Ambala city developing so nicely and industrail powerhouse due to chandigarh proximity. City named after Goddess Amba (durga) who very powerful goddess and protect her devotees. Your family lucky to be from ambala and blessed. Chandigarh city named after goddess chandi, other form of durga.
@yogesh
You are quite right.This is like reminisence of the days gone by with a bit of nostalgia brought in.
@kaalchakra: How are you so sure your system is guaranteed to take you to heaven in your afterlife? What will you do if later it transpires that the book has only taken you for a ride?
@yousaf: I fully agree with your between the lines reading....
I don't know about the "austerity" part but India does have a high savings rate and their culture eschews ostentatious consumption. We act more like the Moghal's did -- fond of showing off.
While they are distortions in economic policies that do not help, one consequence is our very poor rate of savings and it's counter-part: high dependence on external savings.
Kallchakra : You please mind your outlook and approach,. Hindus can take care of it themselves without any false reminders. Do u have bring religion into everything you see, read, breath, eat, puke, smell, hear and touch. Pathetic mindset, And you exposed your falsely taught ideas of hindus and hinduism, Dont make a fool of yourself.
Good write up. It's silly to worry too much about 'errors' which obviously could not be much known about in a Muslim country. Wonderfully written, though.
Now, to the main thesis - Hindus do have a much more materialistic (banya) outlook - which could well doom their after life. So let's not rush to see doom for Muslims only. It's a matter of perspective. As Allah says in the Quran - you have your path, we have ours. No point abandoning what we believe or what makes us who we are. Best.
@DS:--You are one of those happy-go-lucky fortunates who see no doom and gloom in these articles,whereas all I see is doom resulting in gloom for muslims of the subcontinent and all that of our own making.Please,if you may,read between the lines and you will find the true message conveyed to us by the original writer of this subject.This message in fact is the pointer towards our follies that we have been making for the last several decades causing us to land in the current state of affairs in our country.If you still feel that there is no doom/gloom,may God bless you
Even though it is interesting why narrates the travelogue of 1985? Why not the latest?
Thank you dear readers. It is always such a pleasure to get feedback. For those of you who have pointed out errors, I deeply regret them. My excuse is (perhaps lame) that I am exclusively relying on Mr. Abidi's book. I am grateful for the corrections and will try to do so more research for the next piece.
Why stopping at 1985? To make it interesting should have doene another circa 2011 and then compared. And best would be to start at Peshawar and continue till Dhaka!
Introduction - India vs pakistan economically after 1947. Para 2,3,4,5 - Islamic imperialism in India and its remnants in modern India.
waiting for the next installment...
Yeh dil maange more. Its always interesting to read about people's travel experiences. But tell me nevertheless, this mr. Abidi, why were his trip, his narrative and his gaze so incredibly centered on all things muslim? Was it his obsession or was he simply incapable of perceiving other aspects of india's magnificence, dynamism and multiculturalism? His itinerary suggests he might have been in a time warp and mentally living in the mughal era. Looking forward to a more secular and balanced account of a pakistanis travels to india in your next instalment.
The first sloka of the Bhagvat Gita mentions the name as Kurukshetra.And Bhag.Gita was written 5000yrs ago.So Kurukshetra is the original name.
please post next episode at earliest.
You have way too many errors in your paper. The battle of Thaneshar was fought twice between Mahmood Ghori not Ghazanavi with Prithvi Raj Chauhan. The first one Ghori lost second time around he won.
There is no "Korus". The word is "Kaurav". The battle of Kurukshetra was fought before the known time. It formed the basis of great masterly book of Mahabharat by Vyas. Gita is on the chapter of this great book.
I did not read any further. You have made many errors already.
Hari Sud
Excellent article - helps Indians like me undertand an informed perspective from those days as well. The 'Korus and Pandus' could have been marginally better researched - the battle was between the Kauravas and the Pandavas - both of whom were Kurus. No issues - look fwd to the next instalment.
There is a common saying in my regional language and let me translate it . "Thieves have stolen everything from my home , but that doesn't mean that I would start eating in a broken mud pot". It means we can't seat quietly by just saying that our country is already divided , we have to stand up with the things we are left with . Forget past and move along . It is applicable for both the sides . If you hook to history whether it is a glorious history or disastrous history ,then we will become present day Greece or Mongolia which had glorious history and japan which had notorious atomic disaster .keep walking..
Looking forward to the next article!
@Amber Darr, Very nice work well done maam i would like to say i wish there was no migration from both sides and by the way my grand father lived in Ambala and he allways talked about that untill his death in 1993 at age of 101. may god bless his soul and peace.
I love reading this piece of travelogue giving a sense of history as well. I eagerly wait to read the next installment. I hope after you finish with this series you will consider compiling them and publish them in a book. Reading these articles is more refreshing than reading doom and gloom news in the rest of the newspaper.