At Derawar, I have been told of such a subterranean connection with the fort of Jaisalmer and Bahawalpur; at Rohtas, of a link with Rewat (outside Rawalpindi which, incidentally, is not a fort but a caravanserai) and also Kashmir. The so-called guides proclaim that the emperors not wishing the unwashed subject to take a gander at their womenfolk travelled secretly between all these places by the tunnels.
This rubbish has received so much notice over the years that most folks visiting a Mughal site firmly believe in the existence of the non-existent tunnels. Try to tell them that it is hogwash and they look at you as if you are a heretic. Which actually proves what I have long-maintained: proclaim with all your passion a truth and see it rejected; but whisper the most absurd inanity to the winds with no human within miles of you and it becomes gospel within seconds.
There were no tunnels of any considerable length built by the Mughals. There may have been short escape passages from the bastions of, say, Lahore Fort to the Ravi in days when the river washed the walls of the fort. I believe there is one about 15 metres long from Attock Fort to the Sindhu River.
If the tunnels were required to be any longer, it was beyond the capability of the Mughals: they simply lacked the capacity of tunnel engineering. By extension, since none of us in Pakistan belongs to the subcontinent and many of us (those who are not Syeds) are the descendants of the Mughals, we are still deficient in the science. Observe that in four decades, we have still not been able to complete the Lowari Tunnel between Dir and Chitral.
Since we are on the subject, also consider the Lak Pass tunnel between Quetta and Mastung. This was commissioned in 2007, after hundreds of overloaded lorries had crashed on the perilous bends of the pass and dozens of good men, who worked long hours as drivers, had died. It was completed about the 60th birthday of Pakistan and it is about 60 feet long. In a way, it took us one year to build one foot of it!
But back to the Mughals. We never hear from any original source that royalty travelled underground. All the books, whether authored by court historians (Akbar, Shahjehan, Aurangzeb) or by the king himself (Babur, Jahangir) or by the king’s sister (Hamayun), are totally silent on this mode of invisible travel. Indeed, there is no mention anywhere of any great tunnel builder, who connected the great cities of Mughal India with one another by underground roadways. Nor, too, do we hear of someone such as Sher Shah Suri having ousted the milksop Hamayun and trapping him and his army in the tunnel under Chaunsa where the final defeat took place.
The question, then, is where do these crazy stories originate? Anyone who has spent more hours than the average tourist in the Lahore Fort will know of the dungeons and cellars under the fort. The romantically fertile minds of storytellers blew these chambers out of all proportion, turning them into tunnels to all over the world.
Years ago, having heard the tunnel story at Lahore Fort, I very conspiratorially told the so-called guide that I had a map of the tunnel leading from Lahore to London. I said if he was ready to join me, we could begin a company sending uneducated, unskilled young men to UK. We could take our half million per head, split it 70-30 (since I had the map, I took the greater share), stuff the boys into the tunnel and they could virtually pop out of the ground in Britain or anywhere else in the continent as they pleased.
Sadly, the man was not half as gullible as those who listen to his balderdash.
Published in The Express Tribune, September 17th, 2012.
COMMENTS (16)
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Lak Pass Tunnel is 180 meters long. Its constructions was delayed mainly due to political reasons.
Mughal Emperors wasted money and so their economy in building buildings if they have poured their investment in army east India company would not had ruled subcontinent..the writer has said well that they lack in sciences lead to their fall but completion of tunnels anywhere here in Pakistan is not because we are lagging behind world in science(as most of these project are assisted by international agencies or countries)but It is corruptions which seems to be snag the projects.
@Lala Gee: I have three names for you, Sir. Rabindranath Tagore, C V Raman, and Amartya Sen; literature, Physics, and Economics respectively. All three were Indian citizens who won a Nobel, they were all from India who lived and worked here for a good part of their lives. Moreover, for obvious reasons I am not going to bring up the names of at least three other Nobel laureates who were born here but trained and worked abroad. Talk about inbred biases.
@anwar : No please rename it "Arab River" , that may strenthen your claim to be people of "Arab bedouin origin".
Pakistan has only one river now... Its called Indus lets rename it Pakistan river
@Koshik Patel:
"Mughals lavishly lived on People’s money wasted money on monuments when contemporary western society started World Class Universities. Mughals put South India behind by a century. Zero achievements in science and technology and literature too."
You are questioning what India achieved in science and literature during Mughals' rule about 300-500 years ago. The Renaissance in the West started much after the Mughal's era, only about 200 years ago, you should be questioning what did India achieve during last 200 years, or more precisely after independence. I do not see India winning any number of Nobel prizes either in science or literature. Inbred biases and prejudices don't go away easily and there is no cure, unfortunately, for narrow-mindedness.
Yes, there are tunnels , but made by some non state actors.... some has been found recently by Indian army in Jammu and Kashmir!!!
Indeed it was not for the "royalty to travel underground" but for some other actors trying "this mode of invisible travel"
In my previous post I meant to state South Asia instead of South India
Mughals lavishly lived on People's money wasted money on monuments when contemporary western society started World Class Universities. Mughals put South India behind by a century. Zero achievements in science and technology and literature too.
You a right. The less education the more believe in conspiracy stories. Tunnels, ghosts etc. are also readily believed.
Tunnel is not an easy mode to travel. They are usually crawled in. Only dedicated soldiers can use tunnels. Building 6 foot height tunnels in those days is not possible. I dont think Mughal rulers liked to crawl on all fours for miles.
Salman jee, some stories add a little romance to life which otherwise is all drudgery. So let us have these canards with us!
"proclaim with all your passion a truth and see it rejected; but whisper the most absurd insanity to the winds with no human within miles of you and it becomes gospel within seconds."
Capacity to see the truth requires inquisitiveness and work; absurdity is logical for a lazy mind. Inquisitiveness comes from observing things.
Great read. Still people believe in Atlantis.
You still got that map to London??? :) Great article... but you forgot to mention the most important tunnel of the Mughal Age, the one that Anarkali took from behind the wall to get out of the dominions of the Mughal Empire (as stated in the Mughal-e-Azam) and considered gospel truth by so many people.
We are a people who want to hear dadi - nani's story.That is why we lap up what is served either by our political leaders,our text books or poor guides!
Mr Rashid, I like your columns and learn quite a bit. Would you please do me and several other readers a favor by not calling us a s descendants of Syeds, Qureshis, Turkmenistanis or whatever. Pakistan has a population of around 200 million. If 20 thousand of them claim to be aliens that does not mean anything as it is statistically insignificant. Please, please, please sir, it will be a favor and I and several other readers will stay obliged. I just feel like that someone is slapping me in the face by calling such names. I am sure, you don't and cannot be one of these slappers. Thank you Sir.