Chaar Minar |
By
January 1978 I was repositioned at Nagpur. My wife and I decided in later 1978 to
take a trip to South India availing of leave travel concession touching as many
places as we possibly could. As we had to travel by trains we had to have
reservations but there was no online booking then and there was no system of
stopping-over either at multiple places if one had a long-distance ticket. We
overcame the problem by an arrangement with a travel agent who agreed to buy
our tickets for onward journeys at every destination to be collected by us on
payment of the fare. This proved to be not much of a problem except that it
proved trifle costlier. Only constraint was to strictly adhere to the pre-determined
itinerary which, mercifully, we could do and we didn’t lose money on that
count.
Hyderabad
The
first halt was at Hyderabad, the Qutb Shahi town established more than five
hundred years ago on the banks of River Musi. It was then the capital of
undivided Andhra Pradesh created in 1956 under re-organisation of states but
still had the tell-tale signs of its Qutb Shahi past. It was yet to become
Cyberabad and was a plain and simple capital of its state generally known for
its pearls market and flavoured “biryani”
The
very mention of Hyderabad takes one’s mind to the resistance that its Nizam
exhibited soon after independence of the country and reminds one of its Razakar
militia led by Kasim Razvi. The militia and the Hyderabad Nizam’s forces were
no match for India’s own nascent divided force that was ably led by Gen JN
Choudhury. The Hyderabad action, code named Operation Polo, resulted in breakdown
of the resistance and flight to Pakistan of Kasim Razvi, the brain behind it.
Staying
plumb in the midst of Abids, a major shopping area, we could
get a feel of the
place. Named after an Armenian, Albert Abid, a valet of the then reigning Nizam,
who had a shop here. The entire area eventually developed taking his name to
become a thriving market which it continues to be till today. A trifle crowded,
the place witnesses hustle and bustle that builds up by the evening. That used
to happen forty years ago; now it should be worse.
Abids Circle |
Char
Minar was close by and we saw it almost every day as we passed by. Built in
1591 by Quli Qutb Shah, it is an iconic monument that is globally recognized as
representative of Hyderabad. It has four towers which, unlike Taj Mahal, are
part of the structure below which are four grand arches that open on to four
streets. It was built like that – as the centre of the city. A mosque is
located on the second floor. Theories abound about the reason for which the
structure was built but the most plausible one appears to be that Mohammed Quli
Qutb Shah had prayed for the end of the plague that was then ravaging the city
and had promised to build a mosque if and when it ended – a simple trade-off. After
loss of numerous lives when the scourge finally disappeared he built up Char
Minar with the mosque and created what now is a globally known monument.
Pearls in Laad Bazar (From internet) |
We
did not make it to Golkunda Fort as it was then lying in an uncared for
condition. We, instead sought out the Salar Jung Museum which was something
special. It is a huge place, reputed to be one of the largest in the world. It
contains collections of one man, Mir Yusuf Ali Khan Salar Jung, former prime
minister of the Nizam. He spent considerable amount of his wealth to stack up
the Museum with sculptures, paintings, carvings, textiles, manuscripts,
ceramics, metallic artifacts, carpets, clocks, and furniture sourced from
various countries including India. It is
impossible to cover it during a visit
of an hour or two, enormous as it is. But the collection is fascinating. Some
of the European and Indian sculptures are marvelous. Then, of course the museum
is known for its collection of clocks. The immense collection defies description. One
comes back marveling at human ingenuity.
Marble statue at Salar Jung (from internet) |
Bangalore
From Hyderabad we
moved on to Bangalore – now Bengaluru. It wasn’t what it is today – Information
Technology capital of India. It too was the capital of a state with a new legislative assembly building. It has behind it a complicated history
having changed hands several times during the medieval times. Only after the
British conquest at the Anglo-Mysore wars that the place attained a semblance
of stability.
Vidhan Saudha (from internet) |
The city at that
time had a spanking new legislative Assembly building known as Vidhan Saudha.
Conceived in the early 1950s it was completed by late 1950s. Built in Indo
Saracenic and Dravidian styles it is a very imposing structure. Surrounded by
beautiful gardens, a hallmark of the Garden City, it is, in fact a sight to be
seen.
Happily placed at an
elevation of around 3000 feet it has a very pleasant climate all the year round
it used to have quite a few water bodies which were then being progressively
filled up in the process of urbanisation. With planned gardens, especially
Lalbagh and Cubbon Park inside the city it came to be known as “Garden City”,
an ideal base for people retired from civil or military services. That
attribute,
however, it progressively lost as it gradually emerged as the
Silicone Valley of India. Top class educational institutions in the fields of
science, technology, engineering, mathematics and management facilitated the
process. It also had great shopping even then at Brigade Road which, I believe,
is not off-colour even today despite having lost out a bit to several malls
that dot the city.
At Lal Bagh, Bangalore |
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