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