The country where the baradari stands was once very picturesque with the Beas River flowing by through a thickly wooded tract near the present town of Chunian. That was when Raja Todar Mal built his pleasure house sometime in the early 17th century. A native of Lahore, the Raja’s family owned large properties around Chunian. It was this man’s admirable acumen as finance manager and administrator that won him place among the Nine Jewels of Akbar the Great.
I first saw this building in 2003, or the year after. As my friend Iqbal Qaiser and I got off the car, the men at work in nearby fields said something about ‘the map’. When I asked my friend, he said I would soon understand.
We climbed up the plinth to the flat-roofed building that had the trappings of Mughal architecture: arches, stylised brackets supporting projecting eaves and exquisite frescoes. For some peculiar reason, this was the only baradari with two wings, separated from each other by a metre or so.
On closer scrutiny, I realised that the building was actually not designed in two wings. It was, in fact, two distinct structures separated in time from each other by about 200 years. The larger building occupying the middle of the plinth was clearly early 17th century, but the smaller one to a side was from the Sikh period.
The ingenuity of the builders of this latter structure lay in the fact that they exactly copied the main baradari. Only the style of the arches was a giveaway. Still, it took nothing away from the setting of the whole; it blended in subtly.
The buildings that looked almost pristine from the exterior had another very sorry tale to tell from the inside. Both had been completely ruined. In the older building, the floor of the main hall was uprooted, the thick walls between the rooms dug into to reveal gaping holes. Even the arches were destroyed. Ditto the smaller building. Here, a couple of the domes had also been bored into and large chunks of brickwork removed to leave yawning openings.
Treasure hunters had been at work, said my friend. Then I understood what the man on the tractor had said laughingly. He had asked if we had now returned with a proper map of the treasure.
Since the building was in a lonely, unfrequented spot, the Rapacious Morons (so many of them running loose) of the land had decided it could only be a receptacle for treasure. So they came with their picks, chisels and hammers and set upon the priceless medieval building. They systematically destroyed it in full view of the likes of the man who thought we had the map.
Surely, someone could have reported it to the local landlord and he in turn to the police. But nothing of the sort happened. Indeed, the police with all its stoolies, who squeal on who is drinking and who is dating, would have heard of the carrying on. Or was it that the touts thought the destruction of national heritage of no consequence? Indeed, what was the worthless DCO-type doing? Did such vandalism not fall under his purview?
The ruin visited upon the building is not the work of a few hours. It would have taken at least a week or 10 days. I cannot imagine that in this time, the unholy din did not attract the attention of even a single concerned local. Are we that dead as a nation?
If anything, the uncaring, frivolous manner in which the man asked if we had the map tells everything about us: this is not our land; we care nothing for it or its heritage. We are here all Arabs, Central Asiatic and Iranians. We came to this land with plundering armies and we are biding our time seeking the moment when we should be able to carry our plundering raids elsewhere.
Published in The Express Tribune, August 4th, 2012.
COMMENTS (17)
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As usual perceptive, correct and a trifle sad. Keep up the good work, Sir
I’ve been reading Mr. Salman Rashid columns for years now ..the best thing I like about him is that he does hide the Hindu past of Pakistan which most of the Pakistani’s conceal with Islam. I remember watching ‘The Story of India – Michael Wood’ in Discovery channel, an archeologist, historian of a site in Peshwar was digging to find it’s old historic layers of an old Monument..So there was a Greek layer, Buddhist layer, Afghan layer, Turks Layer, Mughal layer etc.. but no Hindu layer.. I’m sure Mr. Rashid knows about a big grand Buddhist Stupa in Peshawar which was called Purushpur earlier build by Kanishka in the 2nd century. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kanishka_stupa
@Ali Tanoli- Nothing wrong with the author. He is only suggesting introspection and rationality for his countrymen through his beautifully written article before it is too late for all.
Nice essay. Thank you.
Although towards the end it became pretty negative.
Saving our heritage is not just upto the government. It is shared responsibility.
How about we start the "Raja todar Mal" foundation and collect money and rebuild/rehab the structure.
No need to play a blame game. Nothing against the local farmer, or DC or police.
Only positive attitude and collective effort will get us out of our misery.
Regards
@Ali tanoli: Shame on you for making such racist statement and let me tell you M. Iranian, Arab or whatever, ninety nine percent of Pakistan is indigenous and descendants of the followers of Hindu tradition. Hope this helps you to wake up; it is twenty-first century and twelve years have already passed.
@ Author: Thank you very much and from the bottom of my heart for bringing us our archaeological inheritance and exposing our shameless lust and scavenger-hunt.
Good article. But I disagree about one point. "So they came with their picks, chisels and hammers and set upon the priceless medieval building. "
Today's Pakistan is medieval and not the one then.
@Ali tanoli
Nice try! When you loose, you abuse....Hee.
Don't worry about Salman saab. He knows his place on earth. It's you who should start looking for a place in Iran,Central Asia,Saudi Arabia,Uzbekisan or Turkey. Though I doubt if they will accept you as one of them.
raja todarmal was not a native of lahore as you say but of laharpur in UP india.
@Ali tanoli: As an Indian, I would love it if Mr. Salman Rashid came to India and wrote similar articles about pre-Hindu, Hindu, Islamic, Buddhist, Christian and other monuments. . Using his unique narrative style, I would love it if he highlighted monuments that have been neglected or are in disrepair so that we ordinary Indian citizens could save them before it is too late.
Pakistanis are arabs? really
What do you expect in the world's least functional literate country.
This is a complete and a total shame. Th author tells story after story after story about the same issue and even now nothing is really being done. All the shameless government is concerned is if they can get an exemption from "contempt of court". What a pity............
The author writes so beautifully. The last paragraph is like a spalsh of cold water on your face. Such a thought could only come from a mind that has travelled well ... across the pages of many, many books ... a mind that has thought deeply ...
After reading this article, I immediately went to Amazon.com to buy the authors book - but it costs between $100 - $200 !!! I'll be saving up to buy the book...
Pity the nation who does not wish to remember their roots. Salman Sahib, thanks for keeping us informed and educated.