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Who built Derawar Fort?
The historic Derawar Fort, enormous and impressive structure in the heart
of Cholistan desert, is rapidly crumbling and if the immediate
preventative measures are not taken, the edifice will be destroyed and the
historians, researchers and
sightseers deprived of the view of the legacy of the bygone era. Like so
many other historic sites in the country, Derawar Fort is yet another sign
of old times we are poised to loose forever due to the apathy of those who
are responsible for its upkeep and preservation.
Before it disappears, once again, I was on my way to Cholistan: the place
that is crucible of one of the world's oldest civilization, where some of
the past secrets are hidden, where history is still active.
Derawar is the oldest fort and the only perennial water-hole in the area.
But a visit to the Fort is painful for those locals or foreigners who
value the heritage and other signs of past eras. They are disappointed
with its fate and neglect of its wonders. Neither is it being maintained
as a tourists’ attraction, for which it has good potential, nor as a
historical and archaeological monument. Result: the days do not seem far
when the Fort would be converted into a sand dune. Main entrance and
ceiling have developed cracks. Most of its buildings and portions, which
had been an abode of the Abbasi Nawabs, are already in ruins. The
three-storey fort is now without any storey. There are also ditches in it
which can be dangerous for anyone not walking with care. At least the
boundary walls and the main gate of the fort can still be preserved so
that something is left as an evidence of the past. The monument has
architectural, historic, documentary, and symbolic values. Remain of the
monument have to be preserved and saved from total ruination, a danger
they are facing at present.
The Fort was
built by Deoraj, a prince of Jaisalmir. It was in possession of royal
family of Jaisalmir when it was captured by Abbasis in 1735. As per
Bahawalpur Gazetteer (1904), in 1747 the Fort slipped from the hands of
Abbasis in the reign of Nawab Bahawal Khan due to his pre-occupations at
Shikarpur. Nawab Mubarak Khan took the stronghold back in 1804.
The lofty and rolling battlements made of thin red bricks, ten on each
side of the fort are visible from miles around. The circumference wall is
about 40 meters high. There are two old vintage guns mounted on pedestals
in the dusty courtyard of the Fort. On the western side are small under
ground cells now infested with bats and wood being eaten by termite. As
per the fable the secret to change metal into gold was told to Prince
Deoraj by his guru Yogi and there still is a treasure hidden somewhere in
the Fort. ((This idea keeps coming to me again and again: what if I can
find the hidden treasure?) Nawab Bahawal Khan constructed a mosque with
cupolas and domes of exquisite marble in 1849. It is a replica of Moti
Mosque, Delhi. As per the legend there are some graves near the fort,
which are said to be of the companions of the Prophet Muhammad (PBUH) and
the other Muslim reformers who rendered great services to spread the light
of divine Islam in the area. A few hundred yards from the Fort in a hall
with engraved doors in witch Abbasi Amirs and their families are buried:
Nawab Muhammad Bahawal Khan (2nd), Nawab Sadiq Muhammad Khan (2nd), Nawab
Muhammad Bahawal Khan (3rd), Nawab Fateh Muhammad Khan, Nawab Muhammad
Bahawal Khan (4th), Nawab Sadiq Muhammad Khan (4th), Nawab Muhammad
Bahawal khan (5th), and Nawab Sadiq Muhammad Khan (5th), Sahibzada
Abdullah son of Nawab Sadiq Muhammad Khan (5th), Rahim Yar Khan son of
Nawab Sadiq Muhammad Khan (4th) are prominent among those buried there.
There are graves of the ladies of the Abbasi family in the north-western
corner.
On the way to Derawar, pass Shahi Wala and Burji 42 Hazar and start
thinking of Cholistan as an idea for which no language has an apt word,
something waiting to be discovered in some out-of-the-way place, difficult
to access, if one is enterprising enough to go out and look; an indefinite
thing, taking different shapes in the minds of different individuals
according to their interests and wishes.
“Derawar itself is considered as pre historic and pre Harappan settlement.
It survived not only during pre Harappan period but also afterwards,” says
contemporary historian and researcher Nurul Zaman Ahmad Auj, “The fact
that it was the first settlement of Indo-Scythian race also points to the
antiquity of the place. The settlement existed when Alexander crossed the
Hakra River near Derawar. It was one of the important boarder posts of the
caravan route and lastly was the capital of Bahawalpur State. Abbasi
rulers turned the Hindu city into a perfect Muslim metropolis.”
Leaving the road
and the four wheels driven jeep at Derawar, it was while exploring beyond
that I found a few of the desert realities. Aside from wildlife, scenery,
big solitude, and nomad culture, Cholistan also offer plenty of wind. The
rippled shadows of the landscape dissolve at midday, and then deepen again
in the afternoon. You find the sense of isolation. The faint white ridge
line that marks the far edge drops beneath the horizon and one finds
himself adrift in a sterile sea of yellow dunes. Inspired by the gorgeous
absence of everything but curves and light, get in the utter emptiness of
the landscape and vividly see slight details: telltale irregularities in
the texture of the sand; the metallic ping of the odd pebbles beneath
feet; a lone big black ant marching up a dune, its abdomen tilted skyward,
lizard (Kirla) raising head to look at you from the distance and then
rushing to the sanctuary of a bill in hurry, camels marching in perfect
order or grazing on shrub called Katran. There is a complete lack of odour
in the air.
There is an inland dry delta southwest of Fort Derawar. Some researchers
are of the opinion that this is the place where the Hakra River ended
centuries ago. The presence of the delta suggests that all, or most, of
the River’s water was sopped up in this area where it would have been used
for intensive agriculture and other pastoral needs. There seems to have
been enough water to support intensive agriculture but not enough to push
through to the Arabian Sea. However, a second group of experts holds the
opinion that the Hakra River did reach the Arabian Sea. Both the groups
have substantial data to prove their points.
At night, walking through the desert under the light of the moon was quite
similar to hiking the dunes in daylight. The only difference was that the
air was cool, the sand was gray and the Milky Way was more clearly defined
in the sky. Later at night, footfalls did not sound like they were coming
from my own feet any more; I kept turning around to see if I was being
followed. Even sudden patches of soft sand would give me an occasional
start in the dim silence.
Eventually, my paranoid habit of veering caught up with me, when -- just
short of midnight -- I found familiar Jeep tyre marks in the sand. Since I
had been walking what I thought was east for nearly eight hours, I had
been circling around the same set of dunes near the Fort. |