Bahadur Shah Zafar in 1858, just after his trial and before his departure for exile in Burma
Photo :  Wikimedia Commons
Bahadur Shah Zafar in 1858, just after his trial and before his departure for exile in Burma Photo : Wikimedia Commons

The tomb of Sha-Za-Fa

BOOK EXTRACT: A writer in search of Bahadur Shah Zafar’s tomb in Burma.

Salil Tripathi writes for Mint and the Caravan, besides other publications. He chairs PEN International’s writers in prison committee. Born in Mumbai, he is the author of three works of non-fiction and lives in New York.

Published on

(An extract from Salil Tripathi's upcoming book, a collection of travel essays called Detours: Song of the open road, to be published by Tranquebar Press on 30 December 2015.)

I had one more place to visit – the final resting place of Bahadur Shah Zafar, the last Mughal emperor of India, who died as a British prisoner in Rangoon in 1862. Finding his tomb was not going to be easy, but I was determined to succeed.

How was I to find Zafar's resting place? When I asked my hotel concierge where I might find the tomb, he looked at me as if I was in the wrong country. Bahadur Shah's remains certainly were in the wrong country. Sha-Za-Fa, as many Burmese knew him, seemed elusive.

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