HERITAGE: ROCK OF ALL AGES
The legend in Saddo Mazzo, Sindh that lives on through the ages is that of the sisters Saddo and Mazzo, princesses who ruled from a hilltop castle in the rugged and largely barren hills west of Johi (Dadu district). As their forces prepared to set out to attack a neighbouring settlement, the duo instructed the general to see that the flag was kept flying high for them to spot from their hilltop eyrie. This would tell them the proceedings were going in their favour.
Any lowering of the standard would indicate the field had been lost. Then, in keeping with true Rajput tradition, the princesses were to fling themselves off the lofty ramparts to death on the rocks below. But as the distant fray unfolded, for one brief moment, the flag was lost from sight in the dust and commotion. For the princesses this was enough sign of defeat. Both Saddo and Mazzo leapt off the castle ramparts and died even as their victorious army turned homeward.
This legend keeps the area of Saddo Mazzo alive in local lore and the minds of those who graze their livestock among the tortuous bends of the Nali Stream as it meanders eastward down the great wall of the Kirthar Mountains. However, we were there not to lament the needless deaths of the princesses. We had other reasons. We know that the people of the Sindhu Valley routinely travelled back and forth between their homes and distant Mesopotamia by this very conduit through the rugged Kirthar Mountains. We were treading on that same ancient highroad to look for the art those far off ancestors had left behind.
Saddo Mazzo is a site of historical significance. In another country, this would have been a protected national monument but in Pakistan, it is just one more piece of our history consigned to oblivion
My friend Zaman Narejo who had travelled there before was leading us to the little known petroglyphs of Saddo Mazzo. His batchmate Sara Rashid and his friend Mohsin Soomro completed our quartet. Somewhere we picked up a guide whose name I have forgetten and drove on through the river valley the same way as camel caravans had plodded 6,000 years before us. We passed rocks inscribed with esoteric English letters and numbers and, mostly, a downward pointing arrow, all in blue paint. Zaman said these were signs that these rocks would be blown up by some company exploring either for natural gas or oil.
The three of us were dumbstruck. Some of the marked rocks were adorned with ancient carvings!