Delhiwale: This way to Urdu Bazar | Latest News India | Times Of Ahmedabad

As part of our ‘Walled City dictionary’ series that is exploring every Old Delhi place.

Delhiwale: This way to Urdu Bazar
Delhiwale: This way to Urdu Bazar

Urdu Bazar is a terrifyingly congested block of human cacophony and traffic tumult. Tolerated only because it hosts a picturesque part of the Walled City (Jama Masjid gate no. 1), and because of its dozens of kebab shacks (Chunnu Chacha Kakori Kebab’s, etc). Not many are aware that these popular eating joints replaced the once-popular institutions that constituted the spine of Delhi’s literary world—the Urdu bookstores and publishers that gave the bazar its name (according to a version). Today, a Walled City bashinda finds it impossible to name even a single of those extinct landmarks. But reader, you won’t be one of those ignorant citizens. Here’s a list of all the disappeared icons:

Azad Kitab Ghar

Central Book Depot

Chaman Book Depot

Deeni Book Depot

Ilmi Kitab Ghar

Kutub Khana Hamidia

Kutub Khana Nazirya

Kutub Khana Rashidia

Lajpat Rai and Sons

Maktaba Akhlaqia

Maktaba Burhan

Maktaba Ishat ul Quran

Maktaba Shah Rah

New Taj Company

Saji Book Depot

Sangam Kitab Ghar

Make no mistake, Urdu Bazar is still left with a few bookshops:

Kutub Khana Anjuman-Taraqqi-e-Urdu

Kutub Khana Azizia

Kutub Khana Rahimiya

Maktaba Jamia Ltd

Markazi Maktaba Islami

Madina Book Depot

Rizwan Book Depot

Indeed, it is the generous gentleman at Maktaba Jamia Ltd who listed out all the extinct bookstores. The unassuming Ali Khusro Zaidi, 68, is the bazar’s longest serving bookstore staffer (see photo). A Sikandrabad native, he has been manning the shop since 1978. “All those bookstores were in existence when I started working in Urdu Bazar.” The man’s Urdu diction is genteel, leisurely paced and melodious. You are tempted to preserve his speaking voice into the mobile phone recorder to replay later on loop. “Urdu ka mahaul waqt ke saath ujadta raha,” he mutters, picking up a receipt booklet.

This afternoon, the bookstore is as quiet as a qabar. A 2023 wall calendar is highlighted with an Allama Iqbal verse:

Sitaaron se aage jahan aur bhi hain

Abhi ishq ke imtihan aur bhi hain.

(More worlds exist beyond the stars,

More love trials still to surpass.)

On enquiring about a framed calligraphy nailed on the shop’s mehrab, Ali Khusro explains “that’s ‘khushamdid,’ meaning welcome.” And this paper scrap with handwritten Urdu on the desk? These are the books ordered for a customer, he says. He reads aloud the list:

Yehudi ki Ladki

Urdu Shayari Ka Fanni Irtiqa

Urdu Nasra Ka Fanni Irtiqa

Sharah-e-Bang-e-Dara

Sharah-e-Diwan-e-Ghalib

Tamasha Ghar

Rasta Band Hain

The bookstore, since 1949, stands beside the much-loved Tasty Chicken Corner, formerly Maktaba Akhlaqia.

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