HERITAGE: THE BRITON PIR OF HYDERABAD
From Karachi to Kashmore, the people and communities of Sindh have promoted a devotional culture that transcends caste, colour or race. Whether it is the shrine of Abdullah Shah Ghazi in Karachi, Shah Abdul Latif Bhittai in Matiari or Qalandar Lal Shahbaz in Sehwan Sharif, people in general go to pay homage to these saints revering them all as role models who have served people at large. Their followers flock to their shrines to show devotion to the faith and principles these men of God practised centuries ago.
In a way, this is the beauty of mysticism that thrives in Sindh; the shrines of saints are emblems of the history of devotion.
Near Pakko Qilo, the site of a famed fort in Hyderabad, people keep alive the memory of a local saint at a shrine curiously named Ellicott Jo Pirr. Pirr is a Sindhi word that refers to an Imambargah and, the man revered as saint and buried there was Archibald Dudley Ellicott alias Shaikh Ali Gohar. His story of conversion to Islam and then ascension to this elevated spiritual status began with a son’s promise to his dying mother.
During the time of British rule over India, the Ellicotts lived in Hyderabad at Bhai Khan Chari, Station Road. Ellicott’s father was a high-ranking British officer. His mother was a head nurse at Lady Dufferin Fund Hospital (then a midwifery school) on Station Road, opposite the Mehfil-i-Hussaini Khoja Shia Isna Asheri Jamaatkhana.
An Englishman-turned-Muslim, Shaikh Ali Gohar aka Archibald Dudley Ellicott is an unlikely presence in the land of saints
The young Ellicott came to Hyderabad after receiving his education in England. Here, he joined the excise department as inspector and was appointed at a wine factory in Kotri industrial area. At work, he was a stickler for rules, punctual and responsible. His parents loved him for these habits — the sincerity he showed for his government job, and how he managed his time wisely. Outside work, Ellicott was very social, fond of late-night parties, singing and enjoyed a reputation for being a very good dancer.