바카라바카라Yeh duniya mano jism hai aur Dilli uski jaan바카라바카라Mirza Ghalib
(...The world is the body and Delhi its soul.)
바카라Dil-o-Dilli dono agar hain kharaab/Pa kuchh lutf is ujde ghar mein bhi hain바카라바카라Mir Taqi Mir
(My heart and my Delhi, though both are ruined/There's some delight in this wrecked house too.)
Ghosts and stories: Old Delhi is home to plenty of both. On a warm Sunday morning, Chandni Chowk shimmers in the sunshine. Dust swirls; the air thrums with traffic noises and the hum of human voices. Crowds overflow on the streets, the narrow lanes, the narrower alleys. There are hawkers and shoppers, food carts and flower sellers. Rickshaws ferrying people to temples, dargahs, masjids, gurdwaras. Havelis looming like sentinels; horse-carts trotting by at their own pace. The past and the present stroll arm in arm here. Ghosts and stories hover at every turn.
Right opposite the Lal Qila Metro station, the Lal Mandir glows red, true to its name. But the revered Jain mandir in Shah Jahan바카라s walled city, Shahjahanabad (Old Delhi today), has had other names before. Once upon a time, it was called Urdu temple because it stands very close to the Urdu Bazaar. The idols in the temple are from the 1400s. The temple and the city stand on the banks of the Yamuna바카라the stoic witness of history. In the heart of the walled city, there are many architectural marvels. The Jama Masjid, Delhi largest mosque, filled with throngs of believers and tourists. There is Shahjahan바카라s magnificent Red Fort, which he built after shifting the Mughal capital from Agra to Delhi over 300 years ago. From the peacock throne installed in the fort, the emperor ruled over his realm.
Chandni Chowk never tires. There are lanes and lanes filled with silver merchants who바카라ve set up shop here for generations. Food carts dot these lanes. There are jalebiwallas and kachori sellers who will regale you with stories and throw in a quote from Ghalib as you bite into a crisp jalebi or its grander Mughal avatar, the imarti. Electrical goods of every kind known to man are on sale in one part of the market. In another, stores hawk brick-red ghagras embellished with tiny mirrors and sherwanis fit for kings.
Chandni Chowk, the 바카라Moonlight Square바카라. Shahjahan바카라s daughter Jahanara Begum had conjured up a marketplace that had room for beauty and commerce바카라a rarity in Mughal times, a rarity in our time too. A pool, whose waters reflected the moon in all its glory, lay at the marketplace바카라s central avenue. Canals crisscrossed the market and mirrored the blue sky. Even though the pool and the canals have vanished, it바카라s easy to imagine them glimmering as you walk down these streets. Even though commerce has captured the lanes and sidewalks, it바카라s easy to picture how beauty used to roam these streets too.
In Dariba Kalan, the scent of Ittar overpowers you when you step into Gulab Singh Johrimal바카라s perfume shop. Johrimal moved to Delhi about 200 years ago and soon grew more prosperous than all the other merchants in the walled city. He was the Badshah of scents: the official supplier to the Mughal zenana. Poets and lovers swooned over the fragrances his perfumery extracted바카라like the exquisite and super-expensive Rooh-Gulab (soul of the rose). Fragrances permeated Urdu poetry as naturally as light pierces clouds.
Ahmed Wasi wrote:
바카라Wo kare baat toh har lafz se khushboo aaye/Aisi boli wohi bole jise Urdu aaye바카라
(When he talks, every word has a fragrance/This is possible only with those who know Urdu.)
Not far from Chandni Chowk, in the neighbourhood of Ballimaran, stands Mirza Ghalib바카라s haveli. It바카라s a heritage site now and there is a guard at the entrance who loves to chat. 바카라Ghalib loved to eat,바카라 says the guard, waxing eloquent about the poet바카라s love for Old Delhi바카라s signature dishes. He talks of Ghalib with such familiarity as if the two of them used to be close friends in another lifetime. 바카라Do you like his poetry?바카라 I ask. The guard smiles. 바카라Shayar the,바카라 he rolls his eyes. 바카라Mashhoor aadmi the바카라. I am tempted to quote Ghalib바카라s lines on fame and its ephemeral nature, but I refrain. There is a time to speak and a time to be silent and listen to the stories the haveli바카라s walls have to tell.
Onward to the Jama Masjid. Red sandstone, white marble, the sun shines brightly on the Masjid-i-Jahan Numa. There is a crowd here, as always, but there is peace too. The mosque looms tall, dwarfing us humans and our petty concerns. The scale of the structure and its architectural daring inspire awe no matter how many times you have been here. Children scurry about, playing a game they have invented on their day out. There is shouting and laughter, much excitement. The sound of the azan fills the air. A gentle breeze blows over the crowd; the bleached blue sky stretches above us all바카라believers and non-believers, the faithful and the sceptics.