Wednesday 16 September 2020

Re-shaping Delhi

The Central Government has taken the onus to reshape Delhi.  

Delhi is an ancient city.  There have been seven cities.  The oldest is the area around Qutub Minar (quite close to JNU and in fact, we can see the tall building from my colleague's office).  The remnants of the Qila (Fort) Rai Pithora can be seen around Qutub.   The second city was Mehrauli, again near Qutub Minar.  Then came the city of Siri.  There is the old crumbling Siri Fort still standing.  This area was developed during Asian Games, 1982 and thus, ruined Delhi forever.  The fourth city was that of Tughlaqabad.  The Tughlaqabad fort still stands, though in very bad shape.  These four cities were far away from the flood plains of Yamuna River.  The fifth city was built on the flood plains by Firoz Tughlaq and is known is Firozabad.  The fort is now a cricket stadium.  The sixth city was built by Sher Shah Suri around Purana Qila or Old Fort.  The seventh city was built by Shah Jahan, the fourth Mughal Emperor.  He built the Red Fort on the banks of Yamuna and developed the area that is known as Shahjahanabad.  Incidentally, Shah Jahan also built Taj Mahal in Agra. 

When the Britishers decided to shift the capital from Calcutta (Kolkata) to Delhi, the eight city called New Delhi was built on the Raisina Hill.  This is still as Delhi Imperial Zone or Lutyens' Delhi as it was designed and built by Edwin Lutyens.  The two major roads were the King's way (known as Rajpath after Independence) and the Queen's way (known as Janpath after Independence).  When we moved to Delhi in 1972, we lived on Janpath within the telephone exchange complex called Kidwai Bhawan,

Those days Delhi was a small ra ra town filled with government offices, government officers' residences, and refugee families.  Being right in the center of the town had its advantages.  We would walk down to Rajpath to watch the Republic Day parade on 26th January.  At one end of Rajpath is the Rashtrapathi Bhawan (it was known as Viceroy's Residence during British Era).  At the other end is the India Gate which was built as a war memorial.  The space in between is covered with lawn and man-made ponds.  This is where, even today, people gather to enjoy a bit of greenery.

We would walk down to catch concerts  at Rafi Hall, Mavalankar Auditorium, and Kamani Auditorium.  Appa tells of the days in 1960s when he would walk through Parliament House and how one day he saw Nehru get down from his car and walk into the Parliament house. 

 On Rajpath, came up, I will admit, soulless buildings that housed the government offices.  But Appa for some time worked in Dak Tar Bhawan which I thought was a very nice building.  Opposite it was the All India Radio.  I remember my Athai (father's 2nd older sister) going for recording an interview.

Further away from the Central Part, we would cross the flyover across Safdarjung Airport and come into  residential areas where appa's colleagues lived.  We ourselves moved across the city once appa was transferred to a new office.

These are memories.

Delhi has changed over the years.  The first major change came in 1982 when major construction activity took place as Delhi host Asian Games.  Delhi expanded into and beyond Qutub.  It also expanded across Yamuna.  But the buildings remained.  I left Delhi in 1991 and came back in 2004.  However, I could still go to Janpath and retrace the paths and the roads where we once walked. The shops were still there- the book store where we would browse, the dry fruit shop where amma used to buy cashew nuts and raisins, Keventers'  the iconic milk booth where we used to eat ice cream once a month... So things had changed and yet not changed. 

But now the Government has decided to reshape the Lutyen's Delhi.  Specifically the Rajpath.  All the buildings are to be razed, the green space decimated and converted into buildings and it breaks my heart.  It will no longer be the Rajpath that I recognize and loved.

But the unkindest of all cuts is the building of the new Parliament House.  The current Parliament House is a circular building built by Edwin Lutyens and Herbert Baker.  This is where on 15th August 1947 India gained Independence.  It is where Nehru gave the speech "Tryst with Destiny" It is where the Constitution of India was adopted  (26th November1949) and came into force on 26th January 1950.  Of course the building is old and CPWD excels only in ensuring seepages but that does not mean that it should be abandoned or converted into museum. It is the soul of the country.  

But such things are beyond comprehension.   PIL filed in the Courts have been dismissed.  And so the eighth city is to be razed to build a ninth city.




No comments:

Post a Comment