Delhi column COMMENTS
Ibn Batuta’s wondrous Delhi lingers on in ruins, amid oblivion


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Published
Daily Mail
Digression
1
Apr 16, 2012
When PIque and Peak Collide

Sam Miller’s rather desolate lament that he often feels he’s the only one who cares about Delhi’s ruins (Tangerine Dreams) strikes a chord.


Sheila Kumar, on e-mail


The squalor around the remains of Muhammad bin Tughlaq’s palace is replicated across Delhi all the time. The reason: a pathetic lack of public loos.


Jyoti Rani, Delhi


Wouldn’t all the money spent on the scam-tainted CWG have been put to better use in improving sanitation in Delhi?


Shyam Sethi, Delhi


Interesting that only foreigners seem to value our treasures.


Anwaar, Dallas

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1/D-83
Mar 24, 2012
07:01 PM

Useless article. Another Brit Turd with a fascination for fellow imperialists and ravagers, in this case the Tughlaks and Khiljis. When I was in India recently, I visited Suraj Kund, a rare Tomar, pre-Sultanate site on the outskirts of Delhi.

Varun Shekhar
Toronto, CANADA
2/D-116
Mar 24, 2012
10:50 PM

One wishes the columnist had been equally fastidious about some of the more graphic biological descriptions.

ashok lal
mumbai, India
3/D-67
Mar 25, 2012
12:59 PM

" I am surrounded by the ruins of the city he knew, ruins that I adore, and that are disappearing—and I sometimes feel I am the only one who cares. The southern quadrant of modern Delhi is full of medieval ruins, hundreds of them, tombs, palaces, fortresses, mosques, wells, pavilions—more than any other city I can think of. Almost anywhere else in the world, many of these ruins would be major tourist attractions."

Fascinating article. It is interesting that only foreigners seem to value these treasures. The three admirers of these ruins mentioned in this article are all British!

Anwaar
Dallas, United States
4/D-111
Mar 25, 2012
07:39 PM

If Briturds like Miller are so fascinated by ruins of Moslem dynasties, there's no need to come  to India to wax eloquent or sorrowful about them.. He can go to Morocco, Tunisia, Libya, Iran or even Pakistan. Why India?  One explanation that makes sense is that these Briturds have an affinity for fellow rapacious, ravaging imperialists and brigands.Not the wimpy, sissy Hindu vegetarians. How boring they are.

Varun Shekhar
Toronto, CANADA
5/D-17
Mar 26, 2012
12:57 AM

Varun,

>> "If Briturds like Miller are so fascinated by ruins of Moslem dynasties, there's no need to come to India to wax eloquent or sorrowful about them.. He can go to Morocco, Tunisia, Libya, Iran or even Pakistan. Why India?"

Why not India? India has a magnificent Muslim heritage. Ours is a rich Hindu/Muslim/British heritage. If you reject some of it, you are the poorer for it.

Anwaar
Dallas, United States
6/D-42
Mar 26, 2012
08:28 AM

The question is why. For a Briturd, the motive is usually obvious- empathy with fellow ravagers and brigands. Read imperialists.

Varun Shekhar
Toronto, CANADA
7/D-52
Mar 26, 2012
10:16 AM

INDIA WAS A BETTER PLACE WHEN we were 90% tribal and 10% urban-rural. The 10% could guard the 90%. As we became more urban-rural-industrial quite like how videshi wanted, our power dwindled. Our 90% world was in peace with nature without videshi triggered modernization/advancement/high-tech taliban or the taliban of 3 venomous middle-east religions.

Shyamal Barua
Kolkata, India
8/D-81
Mar 26, 2012
12:37 PM

Varun,

>> For a Briturd, the motive is usually obvious- empathy with fellow ravagers and brigands. Read imperialists.

What an ugly statement! Many British scholars and writers have an abiding interest in and love of India.

Anwaar
Dallas, United States
9/D-135
Mar 26, 2012
06:24 PM

"Many British scholars and writers have an abiding interest in and love of India."

  But what about those, like Miller, who have an abiding interest in, and affinity for, brigands and gangsters, read imperialists. There is no love for India, or even Delhi, in this Briturd's article. Nostalgia for imperialism, though projected onto Moslems, as opposed to the British.

Varun Shekhar
Toronto, CANADA
10/D-17
Mar 27, 2012
12:42 AM

Varun,

>>  There is no love for India, or even Delhi, in this Briturd's article.

For you Indian culture means only Hindu culture!

Anwaar
Dallas, United States
11/D-19
Mar 27, 2012
12:48 AM

 "Almost anywhere else in the world, many of these ruins would be major tourist attractions."

These ruins are symbols of Hindu defeat and hence they do not hold any attraction to hindus.

Ganesan
Nj, USA
12/D-23
Mar 27, 2012
12:58 AM

Ganesan,

>> These ruins are symbols of Hindu defeat.

When will you recover from your victimhood complex?

Anwaar
Dallas, United States
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