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The lonely death of Delhi's jungle prince

livingdead

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In terms of snobbery it was hard to beat the man who claimed to be the last prince of the royal house of Oudh.

"Don't talk to me about the Mughals," Prince Cyrus once bellowed at a friend of mine. "They were as common as dirt."

The Mughals, of course, were the rulers of India from the early 16th Century until the British violently overthrew them in the mid-19th Century. They were, without question, one of the grandest and most powerful imperial families in history.

But Prince Cyrus insisted his lineage was even more noble, despite the fact that he now lived in abject poverty.

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There are no doors or windows, just open arches

The prince was very much a product of his formidably eccentric mother. She called herself Begum Wilayat Mahal and claimed to be the direct heir to the kings of Oudh, whose realm covered much of what is now Uttar Pradesh, India's most populous state.

The family had huge estates and vast palaces, and hosted famously lavish parties. The British regarded them as unacceptably dissolute. A contemporary report describes how the last Nawab of Oudh had resigned himself to a life of "debauchery, dissipation and low pursuits". He was unceremoniously booted off his throne in 1856.

The family lost their fortune but not their sense of entitlement and, in the 1970s, the Begum decided to take action. She camped herself in the First Class Waiting Room of the Delhi railway station together with her young son and daughter, seven liveried Nepali servants, some 15 ferocious bloodhounds, and a collection of huge and beautiful Persian carpets.

And there she insisted she and her retinue would stay until the Indian government recognised the sacrifice she claimed her family had made during the uprising against the British in 1857.

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Cyrus's mother called herself Begum Wilayat Mahal

She cut an imperious figure: square-jawed, stern-faced and utterly implacable. I met an eminent MP this week who recalled how she had set her dogs on him when, as a young boy, he'd had the temerity to approach her.

After eight years, the government finally capitulated and offered her a home in the deceptively grandly named Malcha Mahal. "Mahal" may mean palace in Hindi but this is actually a thoroughly overgrown medieval hunting lodge, deep in what is known as the Ridge Forest, a swathe of dense woodland that - rather unexpectedly - bisects the teeming megacity that is Delhi.

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The place has no electricity or running water, no doors or windows, just a series of large open arches. Nevertheless the Begum decided to stay.

She hung a metal sign outside: "Entry restricted. Cautious of hound dogs. Proclamation: Intruders shall be gundown." And there, what remained of the house of Oudh lived in regal isolation as the keekar and babul trees grew up around their ancient new home.

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Until, that is, the princess succumbed to years of depression and took her own life by - or so the story goes - grinding her remaining diamonds into dust and swallowing them.

True or not it certainly created a legend that drew foreign correspondents towards the remaining members of the family like a moth towards a candle flame.

Which is where I come in.

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I felt distinctly uneasy as I led my six-year-old boy past the now rusted but still ominous warning sign and into the undergrowth. I knew Prince Cyrus and his sister Princess Sakina were famously unfriendly and had calculated that bringing my tousle haired son along might make them a little more welcoming.

A rough path lead up a small hill, and then the formidable walls of the lodge appeared. I was relieved there was no barking - the bloodhounds seemed to have vanished.

Prince Cyrus was initially angry at our intrusion when he appeared at one of the arches, but Will's charms and the power of the BBC brand swiftly won him over.

Soon I was making regular visits. Prince Cyrus would complain about the rain that seeped through the roof, the spiders, and the jackals that howled in the woods at night. But most of all he would talk about terrible sorrows his family had endured and all the injustices they had suffered over the years.

I learned that Princess Sakina had died some months before my first visit and that Cyrus was now alone in the crumbling lodge.

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Prince Cyrus with his sister Princess Sakina and their dogs

He showed me the table setting he still laid for his mother, and told me how he refilled her glass with fresh water every morning.

It was clear that he was terribly lonely yet his unshakable belief in his own nobility prevented him from mixing with anyone he regarded as a social inferior - and that meant virtually everyone else on Earth.

As far as I could tell, his only other regular visitor was the bureau chief of the New York Times.

She left Delhi in July. I was also out of the city for virtually the entire summer. So neither of us had seen Prince Cyrus for a few months when I hiked up to the Mahal last week.


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he lodge was silent when I called his name. His mother's place at the table was set but there was a smudge of green algae in the water. His belongings had been ransacked. On the floor was a litter of letters and business cards - all of them from journalists.

It turned out his body had been found by the police a month earlier.

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In death as in life, the prince had never betrayed his family's belief in their own exceptional nature.

"Ordinariness is not just a crime, it is a sin," Cyrus's sister Sakina had once declared to a colleague: "A sin."

There was certainly nothing ordinary about Cyrus or his family. That was both their charm, and their tragedy.

http://www.bbc.com/news/stories-41861843
 
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The lesson from story is , there is no such thing as Entitlement to something. What they lost in 1856 , was lost and they had no political power to reclaim anything after 1947. Now the background story did indicate that their family did had some strong position in war against the East Indian company

Now instead of working their way up from ground and being part of society the family was hoping to regain their status by means of a gift or grant or acknowledgement and that is how they wasted away their lives

Quite a sad story , but we see that sense of Entitlement in Pakistan with PPP (Bhutto Family or Nawaz Family) they feel they own the country and it's institutes


I did read about the last nawab of region in question , seems like the Person was fairly unorthadox, a reasonable ruler , he had great interest in music and folk dancing and theatre.
And infact every year during his birth day he was dressed up as a Jogi Baba becasue some forture teller told his father about some event so only way to twart that was to dress the child as Jogi baba reference: Wikipedia

It seems the East Indian company decided to annex the land and their family lost out on the state they owned

Like many Mughal Emperors this Nawab family were not different they were quite practitioner
of unorthodox form of religious views heavily mixing with their Hindu population

After partition in 70's their family lodged a protest to get something back form Indian government


The dwelling the remaining members of the nawab's family did a 10 year protest after which they were granted a property in middle of jungle/forest which did not had any doors or windows
_98607697_mother.jpg


Extraordinary bad treatment for a family that did participate in 1856 freedom movement

Just a haunting story .... the wrecked place and lack of recognition etc

Interesting read
Last Nawab of Oudh (Wajd Ali Shah)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wajid_Ali_Shah

Their family domain before annexation
800px-India_Awadh_locator_map.svg.png


Apparently the wife of the Last Nawab , did act as a General to lead the troops to pick up arms against the then East Indian company soldiers

Reference on another forgotten person:
http://thewire.in/27390/the-forgotten-women-of-1857/

begum-hazrat-mahal.jpg


April 7 marks the 138th death anniversary of Begum Hazrat Mahal, a woman who has gone down in history for her valour and courage in standing up to the might of the British forces in India’s first war of independence in 1857.

This is as good a time as any to remember not the begum but also all the other women who sacrificed their lives in 1857 – many of whom are unknown and unheralded.




Surely Indian government could have afforded to give some pension to the remaining member from that family after all they did took the province / state :wacko:



The prized remaining posession of the family few old carpets and some hand full of other items forced to live in a abondoned building in middle of forest with no doors or windows

Just wow...
_98607701_f4c6c5c2-3f9f-43f9-b220-e3ef4ab8f4a8.jpg
 
Last edited:
.
The lesson from story is , there is no such thing as Entitlement to something. What they lost in 1856 , was lost and they had no political power to reclaim anything after 1947. Now the background story did indicate that their family did had some strong position in war against the East Indian company

Now instead of working their way up from ground and being part of society the family was hoping to regain their status by means of a gift or grant or acknowledgement and that is how they wasted away their lives

Quite a sad story , but we see that sense of Entitlement in Pakistan with PPP (Bhutto Family or Nawaz Family) they feel they own the country and it's institutes


I did read about the last nawab of region in question , seems like the Person was fairly unorthadox, a reasonable ruler , he had great interest in music and folk dancing and theatre.
And infact every year during his birth day he was dressed up as a Jogi Baba becasue some forture teller told his father about some event so only way to twart that was to dress the child as Jogi baba reference: Wikipedia

It seems the East Indian company decided to annex the land and their family lost out on the state they owned

Like many Mughal Emperors this Nawab family were not different they were quite practitioner
of unorthodox form of religious views heavily mixing with their Hindu population

After partition in 70's their family lodged a protest to get something back form Indian government


The dwelling the remaining members of the nawab's family did a 10 year protest after which they were granted a property in middle of jungle/forest which did not had any doors or windows
_98607697_mother.jpg


Extraordinary bad treatment for a family that did participate in 1856 freedom movement

Just a haunting story .... the wrecked place and lack of recognition etc

Interesting read
Last Nawab of Oudh (Wajd Ali Shah)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wajid_Ali_Shah

Their family domain before annexation
800px-India_Awadh_locator_map.svg.png


Apparently the wife of the Last Nawab , did act as a General to lead the troops to pick up arms against the then East Indian company soldiers

Reference on another forgotten person:
http://thewire.in/27390/the-forgotten-women-of-1857/

begum-hazrat-mahal.jpg


April 7 marks the 138th death anniversary of Begum Hazrat Mahal, a woman who has gone down in history for her valour and courage in standing up to the might of the British forces in India’s first war of independence in 1857.

This is as good a time as any to remember not the begum but also all the other women who sacrificed their lives in 1857 – many of whom are unknown and unheralded.




Surely Indian government could have afforded to give some pension to the remaining member from that family after all they did took the province / state :wacko:



The prized remaining posession of the family few old carpets and some hand full of other items forced to live in a abondoned building in middle of forest with no doors or windows

Just wow...
_98607701_f4c6c5c2-3f9f-43f9-b220-e3ef4ab8f4a8.jpg
Last nawab of lucknow Wajid Ali sah had 45 legal children ! And countless illegal. Now imagine the population of descendants now !! In old lucknow every second person claims to be a nawab. How is it possible for Govt of india to do any thing in such cases.
 
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