The timeless appeal of Fort Kot Diji

Published August 8, 2011
Still majestic, the fort has seen almost no repair work since it was taken over by the government in the 1950s.
Still majestic, the fort has seen almost no repair work since it was taken over by the government in the 1950s.
The fort, though an army installation, was not built by them but by hundreds of internally displaced persons from Jaisalmer and Jodhpur who found refuge here after their lands were ravaged by drought.
The fort, though an army installation, was not built by them but by hundreds of internally displaced persons from Jaisalmer and Jodhpur who found refuge here after their lands were ravaged by drought.
Some say the Talpur king died two years before the completion of the fort.
Some say the Talpur king died two years before the completion of the fort.
In the distance you can see the Mehrano Muharri. Belo forest sprawls over six miles, once a favourite hunting ground of the Talpurs, is now a private wildlife refuge.
In the distance you can see the Mehrano Muharri. Belo forest sprawls over six miles, once a favourite hunting ground of the Talpurs, is now a private wildlife refuge.
Timeless appeal: Old concentric flooring.
Timeless appeal: Old concentric flooring.
The soldiers' abode.
The soldiers' abode.
The place has been ravished and dishonoured by none other than the local tourists.
The place has been ravished and dishonoured by none other than the local tourists.
View from the throne: The blue lake below is extremely polluted with untreated sewage drained into it.
View from the throne: The blue lake below is extremely polluted with untreated sewage drained into it.
The staircase, now decrepit, leads to the tower of the fort.
The staircase, now decrepit, leads to the tower of the fort.
Grain storage.
Grain storage.
Water reservoir.
Water reservoir.

As you enter the mammoth solid doors of Fort Kot Diji, carefully so the iron arrow-like nails protruding do not touch you, you cannot help but recall that they were once laced with a lethal poison. At least that’s how the story goes! What if the shiny metal was still potent, you wonder as you bend to enter through the mini gate. Imagination runs amok as you walk past the fort built over 25 years.

Past the entrance, you come upon a courtyard and on your right find a well, still not dry that the old guide tells us is several thousand feet deep and is the habit, littered with plastic soda bottles and candy wrappers.

And then much to your horror you suddenly find yourself snaking up a concrete stairway. The railing and the wide shallow steps make your way up easier but look rather out of place inside this old brick fort. Looking back you realise why entranceways were supposed to be wide - just enough to let supplies to be brought in, yet be able to provide a solid wall to the enemy.

The fort was built between 1785 to 1795 by Mir Sohrab Khan Talpur, the ruler of Khairpur (1783-1830) in Rohri taluka, of Khairpur district, in Sindh province. It is about 40 km east of River Indus at the border of Nara-Rajisthan desert. The eighth sovereign of Khairpur, Mir Ali Murad Khan Talpur II, acceded to Pakistan on October 3, 1947.

Once invincible, the lime and mortar plaster has fallen off the walls leaving the kiln-baked bricks exposed to the vagaries of climate. Like the fort, the history and heritage of the Talpurs is left at the mercy of nature to be erased. - Text and photos by Zofeen T. Ebrahim

Opinion

Editorial

Agriculture tax
Updated 16 Nov, 2024

Agriculture tax

Amendments made in Punjab's agri income tax law are crucial to make the system equitable.
Genocidal violence
16 Nov, 2024

Genocidal violence

A RECENTLY released UN report confirms what many around the world already know: that Israel has been using genocidal...
Breathless Punjab
16 Nov, 2024

Breathless Punjab

PUNJAB’s smog crisis has effectively spiralled out of control, with air quality readings shattering all past...
Last call
Updated 15 Nov, 2024

Last call

PTI should hardly be turning its "final" protest into a "do or die" occasion.
Mini budget talk
15 Nov, 2024

Mini budget talk

NO matter how much Pakistan’s finance managers try to downplay the prospect of a ‘mini budget’ to pull off a...
Diabetes challenge
15 Nov, 2024

Diabetes challenge

AMONGST the many public health challenges confronting Pakistan, diabetes arguably does not get the attention it...