Welcome to The Delhi Walla

You can change this text in the options panel in the admin

Member Login
Lost your password?
Not a member yet? Sign Up!

City Monument – Ajmeri Gate, Near New Delhi Railway Station

September 13, 2010
By

City of Ruins

The lonely gateway.

[Text and pictures by Mayank Austen Soofi]

It is so rooted to the place that few realise it’s there. Ajmeri Gate (circa 1644-49) needs a setting in which it can smolder as sexily as, say, Humayun’s Tomb. Instead of landscaped grass, open space and placid pools, it is tucked within a free-for-all traffic square. One road head to nearby New Delhi railway station; another to GB Road, the red light district, which is also the city’s largest bazaar for toilet fittings; and a third to Chawri Bazaar, a teeming market that boast of Delhi’s deepest metro station. One back alley that ends at the Gate is so dangerously peopled with pickpockets and knife-yielding goondas that I insist you stay away from it.

During the Mughal times, this sturdy signpost was the principal exit point for royal processions on their way to Ajmer, the sufi pilgrim town in Rajasthan. Built as one of the 14 gateways in the great wall of Shahjanabad, today’s Old Delhi, Ajmeri Gate lies disconnected from its past. The wall that it guarded has disappeared. Also lost to time are most of the wall’s gateways; only four survive – Ajmeri Gate, Lahori Gate, Mori Gate, Kashmere Gate.

Ajmeri Gate is also disconnected from the present. It is that lonely. The surrounding scenery of commercial signboards carries forward no progression of any artistic style from the area’s principal landmark. To be frank, this single-arched gateway, in terms of architectural merit, is unimpressive. The turrets, niches, battlements are commonplace. Tourists don’t come here. If Municipal Council of Delhi demolishes the gateway tonight, the city will not be poorer, aesthetically.

But some historical buildings are important for the continuity they give to a place. Mughals fell, British fell, Gandhis fell; Ajmeri Gate remained erect. Everyday thousands of migrants step out of New Delhi railway station and the first significant landmark they see, or see through, is Ajmeri Gate. So do the daily-wage labourers walking past the ruin, dragging heavy loads with their bare arms. Doped addicts take siesta on its border wall. Autos and rickshaws are parked at its entrance. Hundreds of women from India’s poor villages come every year to live in the gateway’s immediate vicinity to work as prostitutes.

Situated in such a grim and noisy region, Ajmeri Gate is strangely one of Delhi’s most quiet monuments. Once abused as a urinal and garbage dump, it has been cleaned of filth. Often locked, you can get the caretaker inside to open it for you. The last time I went there, it was raining. The stone-paved ground was mossy-green. Three peepal trees stood in the courtyard. Inside, the curved archway looked to the clutter of Old Delhi. The Rehmani mosque, the New Chicken kebab shop, a branch office of Indian Labour Union, an abandoned police post, as well as fruit stalls and omelet carts were just across the railing but that could be a different continent. As still as a grave, the gateway was at peace with the changing world around it, but on its own terms. It absorbed nothing of the outside chaos. Instead, the damp rubble wall exuded the calming vibes of a meditative yogi. Standing under the gateway’s roof was like being on a remote mountain peak.

While leaving I spotted a lone pot in the courtyard. It had a cactus plant. Cactus grows best in the desert, and Ajmeri Gate is like a cactus: an oasis of solitude in a wasteland of multitudes.

Nearest Metro Station New Delhi railway station Time Sunrise to sunset

Strong and rooted

City Monument – Ajmeri Gate, Near New Delhi Railway Station

View through a rickshaw

The Delhi Walla

It’s always there

City Monument – Ajmeri Gate, Near New Delhi Railway Station

Part of the landscape

Closer look

City Monument – Ajmeri Gate, Near New Delhi Railway Station

Spot the pigeon

City Monument – Ajmeri Gate, Near New Delhi Railway Station

The world outside

City Monument – Ajmeri Gate, Near New Delhi Railway Station

The signboard scenery

The Twin Worlds of GB Road

Witnessed too many eras

City Monument – Ajmeri Gate, Near New Delhi Railway Station

The everyday clutter

The Ruin is Ruined

Ajmeri Gate’s cactus

City Monument – Ajmeri Gate, Near New Delhi Railway Station

Almost like home

Ruined by Ruins

Dream-like

City Monument – Ajmeri Gate, Near New Delhi Railway Station

Dreaming in the Gate

Sweet Dreams

Be Sociable, Share!

Related posts:

  1. City Style – The Classy Delhiwalla, New Delhi Railway Station
  2. City Secret – Delhi Kishanganj Railway Station
  3. City Neighbourhood – BP Road, near Ajmeri Gate
  4. City Monument – Old Delhi Wall, Near Dilli Gate
  5. City Monument – Shri Shiv Mandir, Near Dilli Gate

One Response to City Monument – Ajmeri Gate, Near New Delhi Railway Station

  1. Vishal on September 15, 2010 at 8:08 AM

    Wonderful, great to read, poetry in prose, loved it. Thanks MAS.

Sideshow

The Guardian

"The Delhi Walla is a celebration of the food, culture and books of India's capital."

Lonely Planet Discover India

"The Delhi Walla shows an offbeat view of Delhi."

CNNGo

"The Delhi Walla spends his time in Delhi’s most obscure streets looking for endangered chaiwallahs making tea or other cultural touchstones."

The Caravan

"The Delhi Walla is one of the city’s best-known flâneurs."

Time Out Delhi

"The Delhi Walla is a one-man encyclopedia of the city."

Author Khushwant Singh

"The Delhi Walla has the knack of bringing out the unusual from the usual, and presenting the city in a different light."

The Rough Guide to Rajasthan, Delhi and Agra

"The Delhi Walla is an excellent Delhi website with news and views about the city."

The Independent

"The Delhi Walla is the most compelling guide to India’s capital."

DK Eyewitness Travel Top 10 Delhi

"The Delhi Walla is a great website for offbeat views of the city."

The Wall Street Journal

"The Delhi Walla is one of the most insightful guides on life — and food — in India’s capital."

Historian William Dalrymple

"The Delhi Walla is Delhi's most idiosyncratic and eccentric website, and reflects a real love of this great but under-loved and underrated city."

Mail Today

"Perhaps the most compelling and attractive Indian blog is The Delhi Walla blog run by Mayank Austen Soofi."

Write to thedelhiwalla@gmail.com



Monuments

Ad Enquiries

Contact mayankaustensoofi@gmail.com for ad enquiries.

Switch to our mobile site