Saturday, 9 May 2020

My Visit to Hari Mandir, Hazro (2018)


My Visit to Hari Mandir, Hazro


—All photos and text by the author
Date of Visit: -      29-03-2018






Hazro is a town located in the north-west of Pakistan in the Attock District of the Punjab province Pakistan. According to the Gazetteer of Rawalpindi, Hazro was the scene of the great battle in which, in AD 1008, Sultan Mahmud Ghaznawi defeated the united forces of the Rajas of Hindustan and the Hindus of Punjab with a slaughter of 20,000 men, it was afterward fixed upon by some of the Pathan followers of that chieftain to be the site of the colony
The population according to the 1901 census of India was 9,799. According to the Gazetteer of Rawalpindi, Hazro had a significant Hindu population which was "half Pathan, half Hindu".


Long ago, I have seen a picture of this town. A large complex of Hindu Temple, with amazing Jharoka’s, wooden balconies, and paintings at the facade.  That made me travel from Lahore to visit this magnificent architecture. The temple is named 'Hari Mandir’ and located in the middle of town. After all this travel, when I reached this place, I came to know that this Hindu temple is occupied by an Afghan refuge family and they were very much reluctant to show this building.
In fact, they did not open the door and asked me from the inside to run away.  I was standing in despair when I told by local boys that the first floor of this temple has been occupied by some other family. I found that family very welcoming and they allowed me to visit their portion of the building. Narrow damage stairs took me to sikhara (tower of the temple). On the lower part of Sikhara, few lines in Hindi script have been carved on the surface. Thanks to my friend Rohit Bhat from Mumbai, India, who has translated these for me:-


OM
Shree Ganeshay Namah
Shrimaan Bhagat
Vishandas Swargwasi ji ki Mitrawari
Shrimaan Swami
Dayanand Saraswati
Babu Ramdasji mandir banwaya.
Mahina Falgun (Feb- March basically Holi)
The last lines are blurred




That temple is constructed for Hindu deity Vishnu. Most of the rooms of that portion were locked and their keys are with the owner.











I again came outside the complex and started taking photographs of elevations. Then, I saw another inscription present above the main entrance:-

The temple was built in memory of Bhagat Bishandas Vekanth by Swami Diyanand of the Sarswati Sabhapati Harri Mandir committee of Hazro in vikram sambat (Indian calendar) 1989 that is, circa 1928 A.D.











So, it means that this temple is constructed nineteen years before the partition of British India.
The mandir is connected with an adjacent building with a bridge and might be served as the living quarters for the pilgrims at that time.

The photograph of the front facade and floral painting which I have seen some years back is sadly disappeared now.
My task of visiting the ground floor of this complex was still left and I was standing in chaos what to do next? I have no energy left to knock the door again and to request the Afghan family to permit me to visit this place. I was about to leave, then suddenly somebody called me from behind, it was an old Pathan lady from a neighboring house. She already came to know from street children that a guy comes from a Lahore and leaving the place because of not getting the permission. But she still inquired me my purpose of visit and asks me to wait outside. She went inside the Afghan family living portion and came after five minutes and asks me, "Son, I took the permission but took photos as earliest as u can."
Earlier, I read an article by prominent writer Zulfiqar Ali Kalharo about this place that there were floral paintings in every room of this temple, but the current owner whitewashed them. Unfortunately, Zulifqar not able to take any picture of inside of this building
I hastily went inside the Afghan living portion of the building, found a rectangular roof supported by two-story motifs-column and arch frame. That roof luckily still has floral patterns and landscape paintings on its surface.






I thank the old Pathan lady and left the place.
It is very sad to see the current depilated state of this amazing historical and religious architecture. Old edifices like these are representations of the true heritage of any place. But the concerned department's negligence brought it to total vandalism.