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Shabqadar: Imprisonment for 180 years and indelible impressions of history
Azmat Akbar
The loneliness and darkness of the cage has such an effect on the heart and mind of the prisoner that the very idea of freedom begins to seem foreign to him.
Night and day, all hours feel the same. Especially for a prisoner who doesn't even know his guilt. What was my fault? Finding the answer to this question paralyzes thinking.
Of course, incarceration is a painful experience and is only felt by humans or animals who have gone through this ordeal. But last week, I met a prisoner who is neither a human nor an animal, but the two gates of Shabqadar Fort, which have been bound for 180 years under man-made law for uncommitted crime. It seems that after the end of their imprisonment, they went to the prison of the pages of history, that perhaps only imprisonment is written in the destiny of these doors.
2 such gates of Shabqadar Fort which have been bound for 180 years; Azmat Akbar
It was the reign of Raja Ranjit Singh and in Shabqadar (formerly called Shankargarh) there were fierce attacks by the Mohmand tribes against the Sikh army. During this period, Raja Ranjit Singh ordered his son Sher Singh to build a fort at a safe place in Shabqadar to prevent attacks by the Mohmand tribes.
Sher Singh approached Tota Ram, an architect of the time, and after finalizing the design, began the construction of the fort on a relatively high mound at Shankargarh (Shabqadar) in 1835.
The Watch Tower in the very center of the fort;
Watch Tower;
The fort was to be used to communicate with Sikh forces in other forts around the city and to monitor the movement of the Mohmand tribes. The construction of the fort was completed in a short span of 2 years and in 1837, the Sikh forces under Sher Singh started regular work here to suppress the Mohmand tribes. Prior to the construction of the fort, Shankargarh was called Sharif Kaur, but after the completion of the construction work, the Sikhs settled around the fort, started their business here and renamed the area Shankargarh.
The purpose of building this fort at a height was to provide long-range surveillance so that it could better line up against possible enemy attacks while also connecting Peshawar and adjoining areas through its Watch Tower. Was done
In a short span of 3 years, the Mohmand tribes attacked the fort several times but without much success.
The construction of the fort was completed in a short span of 2 years; Azmat Akbar
In the winter of 1840, an army of Mohmand tribes led by Saadat Khan attacked the fort of Shankargarh (Shabqadar). At first, the Sikh forces fought hard but some of the invading lashkar soldiers managed to break through the main gate of the fort and started killing the Sikh soldiers inside the fort. Raja Sher Singh sent a message of help to the troops at Peshawar and Machnai forts, forcing the army of the Mohmand tribes to retreat.
While Sher Singh began to amass an army of his own, the Mohmand tribesmen, after considering the move to break down the gates of the fort, filed a case in the court of the then 'French General Jean Vittoria'. Within two days, the court convicted Tota Ram, the architect who designed the fort, and sentenced him to cut off his hands and imprison him for 100 years. Under this decision, while Tota Ram's hands were cut off, the main gates of the fort were bound with iron chains along with the Watch Tower for a long imprisonment.
Sher Singh had filed the case in the court of French General Jean Vittoria - Azmat Akbar
.
I have spent the best years of my life from childhood to boyhood in the historic city of Shabqadar and I have seen this fort many times, but last week I visited the historical city of Shabqadar again with a few local journalist friends and 180 in this fort. I had the opportunity to hear the cries of the imprisoned for years. Here I had the opportunity to hear again the stories of my forefathers' struggle for freedom and the countless sacrifices made for that purpose.
After the death of the Mughal Emperor Aurangzeb Alamgir, the area came under the control of the Sikhs and remained under their control till 1850. The area later came under the control of the East India Company. While the Mohmand tribes continued to fight against the Sikhs, they also fought against the British under the leadership of Malanjamuddin alias Hada Mullah.
In 1876, the area was renamed Shabqadar in order to celebrate the religious fervor of Muslims in the area, to celebrate Shab-e-Qadr in full force and to quell the revolt of the local Muslim tribes against the British.
The two huts in the castle were reminiscent of the stay of Winston Churchill, a former British prime minister, writer and British army officer.
Churchill's living room; Azmat Akbar
Churchill Hit;
After the uprising at Chakdara ended in 1897, Churchill stayed for a while at Shabqadar Fort in order to control the long-running Mohmand invasions. The room in which Churchill lived is still called Churchill Hut, and the beds, fans, pictures and other items used by Churchill adorn the room.
Beds, fans and other things used by Churchill; Akbar
The graves of the British soldiers inside the FC Training Center outside the fort compound were reminiscent of the battle of 1915 between the local Muslim army led by Haji Sahib Tarangzai Baba and the British army.
Graves of British soldiers killed by local Muslim soldiers in 1915 - Azmat Akbar
The Frontier Corps (FC) Force was formed in 1913 by combining the Samana Rifles and the Border Military Police, and in 1944 the fort became a regular FC training center. Young people receive training and play their part in national security and defense.
In the year 1913, FC Force was formed by merging Samana Rifles and Border Military Police. Azmat Akbar
With a population of about 400,000 and an area of more than 4.5 million, the beautiful Shabqadar Tehsil of Charsadda District is located between the Swat River and Kabul. ﯾﮧ ﺷﻤﺎﻝ ﺳﻤﺖ ﺳﻤﺖ ﻣﯿﮟ ﺳﮯ ﺳﮯ 35 ﮐﻠﻮﻣﯿﭩﺮ ﮐﮯ ﻓﺎﺻﻠﮯ ﭘﺮ ﻭﺍﻗﻊ. Due to its strategic location, the area is prominent in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa.
Azmat Akbar
The loneliness and darkness of the cage has such an effect on the heart and mind of the prisoner that the very idea of freedom begins to seem foreign to him.
Night and day, all hours feel the same. Especially for a prisoner who doesn't even know his guilt. What was my fault? Finding the answer to this question paralyzes thinking.
Of course, incarceration is a painful experience and is only felt by humans or animals who have gone through this ordeal. But last week, I met a prisoner who is neither a human nor an animal, but the two gates of Shabqadar Fort, which have been bound for 180 years under man-made law for uncommitted crime. It seems that after the end of their imprisonment, they went to the prison of the pages of history, that perhaps only imprisonment is written in the destiny of these doors.
2 such gates of Shabqadar Fort which have been bound for 180 years; Azmat Akbar
It was the reign of Raja Ranjit Singh and in Shabqadar (formerly called Shankargarh) there were fierce attacks by the Mohmand tribes against the Sikh army. During this period, Raja Ranjit Singh ordered his son Sher Singh to build a fort at a safe place in Shabqadar to prevent attacks by the Mohmand tribes.
Sher Singh approached Tota Ram, an architect of the time, and after finalizing the design, began the construction of the fort on a relatively high mound at Shankargarh (Shabqadar) in 1835.
The Watch Tower in the very center of the fort;
Watch Tower;
The fort was to be used to communicate with Sikh forces in other forts around the city and to monitor the movement of the Mohmand tribes. The construction of the fort was completed in a short span of 2 years and in 1837, the Sikh forces under Sher Singh started regular work here to suppress the Mohmand tribes. Prior to the construction of the fort, Shankargarh was called Sharif Kaur, but after the completion of the construction work, the Sikhs settled around the fort, started their business here and renamed the area Shankargarh.
The purpose of building this fort at a height was to provide long-range surveillance so that it could better line up against possible enemy attacks while also connecting Peshawar and adjoining areas through its Watch Tower. Was done
In a short span of 3 years, the Mohmand tribes attacked the fort several times but without much success.
The construction of the fort was completed in a short span of 2 years; Azmat Akbar
In the winter of 1840, an army of Mohmand tribes led by Saadat Khan attacked the fort of Shankargarh (Shabqadar). At first, the Sikh forces fought hard but some of the invading lashkar soldiers managed to break through the main gate of the fort and started killing the Sikh soldiers inside the fort. Raja Sher Singh sent a message of help to the troops at Peshawar and Machnai forts, forcing the army of the Mohmand tribes to retreat.
While Sher Singh began to amass an army of his own, the Mohmand tribesmen, after considering the move to break down the gates of the fort, filed a case in the court of the then 'French General Jean Vittoria'. Within two days, the court convicted Tota Ram, the architect who designed the fort, and sentenced him to cut off his hands and imprison him for 100 years. Under this decision, while Tota Ram's hands were cut off, the main gates of the fort were bound with iron chains along with the Watch Tower for a long imprisonment.
Sher Singh had filed the case in the court of French General Jean Vittoria - Azmat Akbar
.
I have spent the best years of my life from childhood to boyhood in the historic city of Shabqadar and I have seen this fort many times, but last week I visited the historical city of Shabqadar again with a few local journalist friends and 180 in this fort. I had the opportunity to hear the cries of the imprisoned for years. Here I had the opportunity to hear again the stories of my forefathers' struggle for freedom and the countless sacrifices made for that purpose.
After the death of the Mughal Emperor Aurangzeb Alamgir, the area came under the control of the Sikhs and remained under their control till 1850. The area later came under the control of the East India Company. While the Mohmand tribes continued to fight against the Sikhs, they also fought against the British under the leadership of Malanjamuddin alias Hada Mullah.
In 1876, the area was renamed Shabqadar in order to celebrate the religious fervor of Muslims in the area, to celebrate Shab-e-Qadr in full force and to quell the revolt of the local Muslim tribes against the British.
The two huts in the castle were reminiscent of the stay of Winston Churchill, a former British prime minister, writer and British army officer.
Churchill's living room; Azmat Akbar
Churchill Hit;
After the uprising at Chakdara ended in 1897, Churchill stayed for a while at Shabqadar Fort in order to control the long-running Mohmand invasions. The room in which Churchill lived is still called Churchill Hut, and the beds, fans, pictures and other items used by Churchill adorn the room.
Beds, fans and other things used by Churchill; Akbar
The graves of the British soldiers inside the FC Training Center outside the fort compound were reminiscent of the battle of 1915 between the local Muslim army led by Haji Sahib Tarangzai Baba and the British army.
Graves of British soldiers killed by local Muslim soldiers in 1915 - Azmat Akbar
The Frontier Corps (FC) Force was formed in 1913 by combining the Samana Rifles and the Border Military Police, and in 1944 the fort became a regular FC training center. Young people receive training and play their part in national security and defense.
In the year 1913, FC Force was formed by merging Samana Rifles and Border Military Police. Azmat Akbar
With a population of about 400,000 and an area of more than 4.5 million, the beautiful Shabqadar Tehsil of Charsadda District is located between the Swat River and Kabul. ﯾﮧ ﺷﻤﺎﻝ ﺳﻤﺖ ﺳﻤﺖ ﻣﯿﮟ ﺳﮯ ﺳﮯ 35 ﮐﻠﻮﻣﯿﭩﺮ ﮐﮯ ﻓﺎﺻﻠﮯ ﭘﺮ ﻭﺍﻗﻊ. Due to its strategic location, the area is prominent in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa.