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Pakistan’s Pride

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Pakistan’s Pride

Taxila is one of the few cities in Asia where travellers can revel in centuries-old archaeological remains of great cities and stupas.


Far from the crowds in the cities below in Pakistan, a Buddha figurine smiles serenely in the shadows of a pair of stupas. The statue in the courtyard, part of the remains of a monastery, is not of immediate interest to a casual visitor from Indonesia, home of the Borobodur Temple, but the guide here draws you to the precious find.

“Come, come, this is very beautiful,” he says.

Parts of the Jaulian monastery survived destruction and the small figures supporting the stupa include elephants and lions, reflecting the influence of both Indian and Roman cultures.


"Experts, we’re told, have yet to decipher the meaning of many of the unfamiliar scripts found throughout these areas."

This is the highlight of Taxila, located in the region where the Indus Valley civilisation around the Indus River had its origins. Now a Unesco protected area, the Indus Valley was the site of the sophisticated construction of cities up to 2500 BC. The oldest city, Moenjodaro, is located in what is now Sindh province, home of assassinated Pakistani leader Benazir Bhutto.

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From the village below, where residents make replica figurines for tourists, it is a climb of some 200 steps to reach the compound. Here, young monks once studied the way of the Buddha, living alongside their mentors. Although razed by fire in an attack by the White Huns around 460 AD, archaeologists have identified classrooms, chapels, a kitchen and scullery, a dormitory and an assembly hall.

Buddhism was not the first religion here. Although Taxila, later known as the seat of the Gandhara civilisation, became one of the world’s centres of Buddhism, it was founded by worshippers of the snake.

One writer describes these people as “descendants of Zohak, the Iranian king with two snake-like tumours on his shoulders”. M Hanif Raza writes the Takkas invaded the region around 1200 BC, ruling the area centuries before Alexander the Great attacked Taxila in 326 BC, followed by several other invaders.

A nearby museum houses many of the findings from excavations dating back to British colonial rule. Besides several Buddha statues from the monastery, artifacts abound of propagators of various faiths seeking to convert everyone they can along the valley and mountain trails, crossing what are now Pakistan’s borders with other South and Central Asian states.

There are also signs of the traders who travelled similar routes along the famed Silk Road to China’s northern Xinjiang province, and the crockery, toys, gold ornaments and coins found under mounds of dust and soil in what were ancient cities.

Experts, we’re told, have yet to decipher the meaning of many of the unfamiliar scripts found throughout these areas.

With the different conquerors seeking fertile lands, and the merchants and propagators of all manner of faiths passing through the region, Pakistan’s diversity can be traced to Persian, Greek, Arabic, Turkish, Hindu and Buddhist influences, among others. Among the Zoroastrians, known as worshippers of the sun, was the wife of founding father Muhammad Ali Jinnah, who then converted to Islam.

Add to this tapestry, the mystery and challenge of a danger zone in the beautiful mountainous region, and the area becomes the dreamy goal of the adventure-seeking traveller. (By ATI NURBAITI In Taxila/ The Jakarta Post/ AsiaNews)

Pakistan’s Pride | My Sinchew
 
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I wanted to bring this article to spotlight. I hope your TV media starts this new revolutionary movement. I was trying to find something similar on youtube, didn't find anything significant. Why don't you edit some of the existing south asian ancient history videos and add "Pakistan" after every sentence? Actually I did find some videos where atleast title has been changed to Pakistani Civilization.

Keep up the good work.

I wish Indian Muslims follow the same. (no offence)

Although it will be hard to explain Taliban the meaning of words like "civilization", "university" and "education". But I have full confidence in intellectuals like you. Best of luck!!!
 
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