HERITAGE: THE SECRETS OF DUKI
Something has been happening here in the outback of Duki in Balochistan. And it has been happening for a very, very long time. My friend Aziz Jamali, civil servant and a man of good sense, saw the worst of that happening.
In June 2018, as he drove from Kohlu to Quetta via Duki and Ziarat, he spotted the mound south of the road, about 20 kilometres southeast of Duki. Rising like a huge pimple from the dusty landscape, it was immediately recognisable as a cultural mound. Aziz resolved to check it out in detail at some later time but then he saw the mischief: a bulldozer was busily cutting up the mound and spilling the dust of ages over its eroded verges. He inquired and was told the mound was known as Shar Ghali — City of Ghali.
In the same hot month 404 years before Aziz, that is, in 1614, the English merchants John Crowther and Richard Steel passed this way en route from Ajmer to Isfahan. Neither commented on the mound, but they stopped for three days at the town of ‘Duckee’ inhabited by Pashtuns. Here, they tell us, the Mughal government maintained a garrison in a fort.
In Balochistan, a mound that could be the vestiges of a stupa, needs urgent protection from vandalism
If Steel and Crowther saw people digging the mound for treasure, they did not report it to the authorities in ‘Duckee’. Aziz did and Meeran Baloch, the proactive assistant commissioner, immediately went into action to arrest the man with the bulldozer.
As he drove me to it, Meeran recounted how the mound, measuring 26 acres, was allotted to the bulldozing man in 1996. In itself this was a criminal act because, even at that time, locals knew this as an ancient site which gave up its little secrets after every fall of rain. Here, with the top soil washed away, children came to collect shiny beads and terracotta items. It should, therefore, have been declared a protected monument.
Journalist Farid Kakar was one of those children who frequented this site in the early years of this century. Almost in the centre of the uneven surface of the mound was a thick and tall clay pillar, he recalls. Besides the trinkets he collected, Farid remembers seeing an opening on the northern verge of the mound which he and his friends entered. Inside, he claims, was a chamber with images and statues. This opening was covered when the bulldozing of the surface began in 2017.
Farid says that, for as far back as he can remember of his 20-some years, he saw men digging around the mound. But it was only in 2017 that this one person set about it with a dozer blade. Assistant Commissioner Meeran Baloch did well to put a stop to the vandalism.