Oh, Ghalib!

Oh, Ghalib!

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Just a stone's throw from the sedate, tree-lined, high-end New Delhi neighbourhood of Nizamuddin East is a patch of Old Delhi – one of the places along the Jamuna that has seen the longest continuous inhabitation. Take a turn and a dip off the road called Mathura Road, and you are suddenly transported through time, cultures and senses. The lane winds ahead, towards the dargah of the Sufi saint Nizamuddin Aulia. On the left-hand side of a plot cleared of all humanity, standing alone behind some imposing iron bars, is the mazhar of Mirza Ghalib.

Asadullah Beg Khan (Ghalib), the foremost shayar of Urdu, is rather lonely here. All the excitement of this Muslim mohallah is on the outside of the enclave, where the faithful throng on their way to the Nizammudin dargah. With nary a thought for Ghalib, they also ignore the insistent sellers of chadars (offerings for the shrine), caps and posters of the Swiss Alps. Beggars here seek alms in a decidedly jocular manner.

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