Tomb of Ganj Baksh, Sarkhej Roza, Ahmedabad.
Sarkhej Roza is a mosque and tomb
complex located in the village of Makarba, 7 km south-west of Ahmedabad in
Gujarat state, India.
Although there are many rozas
across Gujarat, the Sarkhej Roza is the most revered. Sarkhej was once a
prominent centre of Sufi culture in the country, where influential Sufi saint
Shaikh Ahmed Ganj Baksh lived. It was on the saint's suggestion that Sultan
Ahmed Shah set up his capital on the banks of the Sabarmati, a few miles away
from Sarkhej.
Shaikh Ahmed Khattu Ganj Bakhsh
of Anhilwad Patan, the friend and adviser of Ahmad Shah I, retired to Sarkhej
in his later life and died here in 1445. In his honour a tomb, begun in 1445 by
Muhammad Shah II, was, in 1451, finished by his son Qutbuddin Ahmad Shah II.
The next Sultan Mahmud Begada was fond of the place and expanded the complex
greatly.
Entering the covered eastern
gateway on the north bank of the Sarkhej Lake, the building to the right with a
handsome stone pavilion in front of it, is the mausoleum of Shaikh Ahmed Khattu
Ganj Bakhsh. This, the largest of its kind in Gujarat, has along its whole
length its sides filled with stone trellis work, and inside, round the tomb,
has a beautifully cut open metal screen. Beyond the Ganj Bakhsh mausoleum is a
courtyard, covering more than an acre of ground, surrounded by cloisters, with
a mosque only slightly smaller than the Jama mosque. The want of minarets and
the shallowness of its caves rather mar the outside effect. But inside 'it is
the perfection of simple grace unrivaled in India except by the Moti mosque at
Agra.'
Picture Credit: Parth Vaghela
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