The best kept secret in Mansehra
I’m curious about how certain historic and political incidents can change the course of life in places. With that in mind, I went on a road trip on the Karakoram Highway and my first stopover was in Mansehra, 160 kilometres north of Islamabad.
My friend Faheem Awan, a professor at Hazara University, was my host in Mansehra. I intended to explore the archaeological sites of Ashoka from the third century BC in the city. However, Faheem convinced me instead to see one of the most prominent Sikh heritage sites in the city.
Mansehra city is at the junction of two highways, N-35 (The Karakoram Highway) and N-15; both roads are gateways to Gilgit-Baltistan in the northern part of the country. A Sikh garrison town in early 19th century, Manshera’s demographics changed rapidly after Partition in 1947 when thousands of Sikh families migrated to India. They left behind historical buildings and heritage sites in the hands of Muslims who took over the places, including markets, houses, lands and places of worship.
A gurdwara-turned-public library is a place of refuge from the hustle and bustle of the city and an important historical site
It was a cold but sunny day when Fahim drove me through the narrow and crowded streets choked with chaotic traffic. Our stop: a building which was built in 1937 as a gurdwara, and has now been converted into a public library known as Mansehra Municipal Library.
On main Kashmir Road stands the three-storey building in the middle of small shops in Kashmir market.