Thursday, 10 October 2019

GARI SHAHU LESS EXPLORED (2018)



Date of Visit: 21-01-2018
All pictures are owned
Historical writings taken from Majid Sheikh article

The Gate way of Gari Shahu Constructed  some 350 years back 

In past, my father's eldest sister had a home in the narrow streets of Gari Shahu. We used to visit this place from childhood.  I have a long list of relatives who work in Pakistan railways. My maternal and paternal grandfather worked in this department. I have been visiting Gari Shahu and its surroundings from mid-'80s Lahore definitely has a rich historical past, and when talking about Garhi Shahu, one cannot forget but mention the railway station, or the Christian community, or the Burt Hall, that wonderful dance club (Nautch Ghar) that no longer functions.  Then there are also the Convent of Jesus and Mary, the Jamia Naimia Mosque, and the Taj and Crown cinemas but surely there is much more to this place than we have ever cared to explore.

Mosque of Shah Abu Alkhair




During the reign of Emperor Aurangzeb, the fame of Abul Khair had spread far and wide. The emperor, wishing that the maximum number of people should benefit from the sage, ordered that a madrassah be built for Abul Khair and a suitable residence be arranged for the scholar.  A fireman or a Royal Order was also issued instituting a maintenance allowance for the upkeep of the house and the madrassah and so Abul Khair’s institution was founded.  A domed mosque was also built along with rooms for students and dervishes. For some time after that, the area was also known as Khairgarh.  
The area is lost with new construction, these are supposed to be constructed over old 350 years old construction. luckily we found remains of an old hujra constructed of an old Mughal era bridge, In the present picture, we are standing in the drawing-room of the house the openings visible is the entrance of the hujra.

Chamber of student now used as  store

Another Chamber 

There is house constructed above this chmaber, no light could not take clear pictures

Another view of dome

The Dome Ceiling 

With my friend Kashif Gurki inisde the chamber on my birthdday

Another view of adjoining chamber


These chambers have still remains of students

Another view of Dome

The Chamber converted into new houses

3 ft wide walls old construction converted into new houses

The connection between two chambers could not travel more 

There was fortress and minarets around Gari Shahu, remains of an old wall

Remains of Old Wall 

Remains of an Old Wall

Remains of an old Wall





Abul Khair taught in his madressah till the age of 105, and on his death, during the reign of Muhammad Shah, he was buried here. As the Mughal Empire was folding and anarchy was slowly settling in, scholarship and learning were no longer on a premium.  Before Maharaja Ranjit Singh came to power in 1799 and finally managed to bring order for 40 odd years.  During this period, anarchy reigned supreme and the madressah was taken over by a khalifa by the name of Muhammad Naeem, who taught there but on his death there was a void.

Nearby this madressah, there was a famous mohallah named Thathi Gagga. When the marauders ransacked it, its inhabitants ran off and took shelter in a neighborhood called Fata Shah. Then one day, Abul Khair’s madressah also came under attack by a roaming band of thieves.  They had figured that since the madressah was quiet large and had bricked dwellings, there must be some treasure here. But the students and the dervishes had nothing except the clothes on their backs and they were stripped of even these meager belongings as they escaped with their lives.

Then came a gangster by the name of Shahu, and along with his gang of rustlers, he took possession of the buildings meant to accommodate Abul Khair and his scholars. His gang went on a rampage, stealing cattle and other valuables from the area which they then hid in the madressah for safekeeping.  If the owners demanded their possessions back, they would return them for a small price otherwise, they would sell their goods.

This was the age when Lehna Singh, Suba Singh, and Gujjar Singh (the three rulers of Lahore) were restricted to their small domains.  In between there was no law.   The gang of Shahu ruled supreme, and it was from him that the name Garhi Shahu (Fortress of Shahu) came. Shahu died five years later and his men took control of the land. They did not have the same influence as Shahu did so the residents of mohallah Thathi Gagga, who had earlier taken shelter in Fata Shah, found an opportune time and managed to kick Shahu's men out and occupied the buildings for themselves. But Shahu’s name forever remained attached to it and was never changed, even by the British.

The actual fortress building itself had a solid brick boundary wall with towers in all four corners. Portions of the original wall and the towers still exist, incorporated in walls of some of the houses. The entrance is through a large arched gateway to the north, which still exists, although the original door is long gone. Beside the western wall is the domed mosque with its tall minars. It is still known as Abul Khair's Mosque. Some of the original rooms, built for the students are still intact under the modern houses that have sprung up everywhere. Once all the land inside the fortress was built upon, people started building outside the boundary walls and so a number of havelis sprung up all around the original fortress. Then the British came and expanded it even further by laying out the Mayo Road (now renamed Allama Iqbal Road) and establishing residential colonies for the railway employees. Today, the area known as Garhi Shahu is much larger than the original fortress that was built for Abul Khair and then subsequently occupied by Shahu and his gang.

Gari Shahu still was a village in times of British, still found the remains of original wall of fort


Remains of Fort Wall

Grave of Shah Abul Khair


Baba Inyat Shah Wali another Saint burried in Gari Shahu

Saturday, 5 October 2019

SARAI MUGHAL (2018)


Date of  visit 04-03-2018
All pictures are owned
Tomb in Sarai Mughal


Ten years back Sir Salman Rasheed wrote enlightening writing about Sarai Chamba and Akbar era tomb near Sarai Mughal.

Sarai Mughal is a small village that lies hardly seven kilometers from the Head Baloki. Last year, I traveled to Sarai Mughal to visit one of the tomb sites. Fortunately, along with that tomb, I found remnants of two more historical edifices in Sarai Mughal Village. Not sure what was the name of Sarai Mughal in the past, but it is named like this due to the presence of a caravanserai in its vicinity. 
An arched gateway standing in the middle of the village constructed from Mughal era bricks. Imran Saeed is another brilliant historical writer who has visited this place and he thought that this could be the only evidence that this place once lies between the ancient route between Lahore and Multan that was called Kakkhan Wali Sarak.


The other landmark, found in this village was ruins of a British-era rest house. The most notable thing about that rest house was that it was also constructed from Mughal era bricks. These Mughal era bricks must be taken from the parts of old Sarai building.













Also, I found many houses in this village which construction done by Mughal era bricks.




Thursday, 3 October 2019

A Ten year Wait to Visit an Akbar era Tomb in Sarai Mughal (2018)

Date of  visit 04-03-2018
All pictures are owned
Tomb in Sarai Mughal





Sir SALMAN RASHID is my favorite travel writer from Pakistan. In the mid-90s, there was a TV show that used to be telecast on PTV “Travelling along the Alexander trail” that was hosted by Sir Salman Rashid. That, TV show not only inspired me but also become a reason for growing wish inside my soul that sometime in my life; I will do some similar exploring work. 

More than ten years back, I read one of his articles that was about a tomb whose history and name is totally unknown to historians. Sir Salman mentioned some general guidelines about the location of this tomb; it is somewhat 5 km from the head of Baloki on the outskirts of Sarai Mughal. I could not find the exact location of this site on Google earth; however, I put a location pin on the map that maybe I would be able to visit in the future.

My plans to visit Sarai Mughal could never get finalized due to a lack of information about the place. Also, I could not able to find any post or picture related to this tomb on the internet

Well in 2018 after a lap of ten years; I left for Sarai Mughal in search of an unnamed tomb. To my good luck, I found the tomb after some effort.

An eighteen feet high, square tomb stands at the outskirts of the village graveyard. The site is roughly five kilometers to river Ravi. There is no grave inside the tomb. Salman Rashid during his visit to the place had concluded that this (most likely) Akbar-era tomb of the 16th-century era was pre-built but no one got the honor/chance of getting interred here.  A little outside the village, by a government school, and surrounded by a graveyard there stood the lofty building with its squat dome. Other than the lime plaster eroded from the plinth and in patches from one side, the building was in good fettle. In fact, if the plaster on the dome had not been blackened by age, I could have said it had been laid only a few years earlier. In my layman’s estimation the building dates to the last quarter of the 16th century, that is, the final years of the reign of Akbar the Great. The interior of the square building had a bare floor: there was no burial. But the walls were ornate with Mughal-style frescoes. Faded, discolored, and chipped, they had also been marred by cow dung patties.