Long before human beings began to commit their stories to paper, and the academia distinguished between myths and historical facts, it was said that on one moonlit night in the Salt Range in northwest Bharatvarsha (now Pakistan) the peacocks suddenly fell silent, folded their plumage and huddled together in dismay. In the vicinity sat Lord Shiva, his head bowed, disconsolate at the demise of his consort Sati. At every sigh of his, the bushes shivered. With doleful eyes Shiva looked at the sky. A wisp of cloud floated to shroud the moon. The dense forest then began to echo with music. Lord Shiva saw Sati before him. But he did not attempt to reach out to her. He understood she was lost to him forever, that it was a dream born out of deep sadness. Two drops of tears fell from his eyes.
Of the two teardrops, Hindus in northwest Bharatvarsha believed, one fell in Katas in the Salt Range; the other in Pushkar, Ajmer. These became two water bodies symbolising Shiva's unfathomable grief. The 19th century British archaeologist, Sir Alexander Cunningham, traced the origin of the word Katas to Katasha, or "the spring of raining eyes."
And long before BJP leader L.K. Advani came down to Katasraj, in what was precisely the 58th year from the time Bharat, as also its families and myths and civilisation, was partitioned into India and Pakistan (and Indian and Pakistani), the spot where Lord Shiva had grieved over Sati continued to add to itself new layers of memories and historical conjectures. It was here the Pandavas were supposed have stayed for four of their 14 years in exile; it was here on the banks of Shiva's teary pool that Yudhishthira too passed his greatest test of wisdom to restore to life his dead brothers. From its vicinity in the Salt Range have also been discovered fossils dating to anywhere between 6000 and 7000 BC, axes and tools, and pottery bearing resemblance to those in Harappa. And it was here that Mughal emperor Babar supposedly addressed his troops in 1525 from a stone platform, still preserved as Takhtey Babri.