“Here lies the Victor of Maiwand”
Ali
Jan
From
The English Daily, The Statesman
Maiwand is a small
village town in Afghanistan,
about
45 miles from Kandahar that gained fame during the
Second Anglo-Afghan War in 1880. It was at this
battlefield that the British army suffered its most
embarrassing defeat at the hands of Sardar Muhammad Ayub
Khan, an Afghan general, whose mausoleum is in Peshawar.
He was the son of the
King Ameer Shere Ali, who ruled Afghanistan from
1863-1878. Ayub Khan was born in 1855 and spent most of
his early life in Afghanistan. His brother Yakub Khan
ascended the throne after his father's demise and Ayub
Khan became the governor of Herat.
The term 'Great Game'
was popularized during the British Empire's conflict
with Tsarist Russian Empire in the 19th century.
Afghanistan and its monarchs became pawns in this
imperial game of rivalry and strategic influence and its
outcome was to have a direct bearing on the British
Empire's hold over India. The British had not forgotten
the terrible First Afghan War disaster when an entire
army of 15,000 was wiped out in 1842 ending the four
years of their initial presence there. Retribution and
vengeance were key considerations that paved the way for
another military campaign. Incited by the murder of the
British agent Major Louis Cavagnari at the Kabul
Residency and to counter the increasing tilt towards
Russia by the Afghans, the British army once again
advanced into Afghanistan in 1878 commencing the Second
Afghan War.
Soon after their
arrival, the British deposed
Ayub's brother Yakub Khan and then a long campaign
ensued. The battle at Maiwand was fought on 27th July
1880 when Ayub Khan successfully led 6000 men and
intercepted the British army at this place in order to
thwart their invasion of Afghanistan. The terrible heat
of the Afghan summer that year and other logistic
difficulties greatly disadvantaged the 66th (Berkshire)
Regiment led by General Burrows in its advance and it
was annihilated by the Afghans who tore through all its
lines. The victory is often cited as being perhaps the
only instance where an Asiatic leader won a pitched
battle fought against a vastly superior European army.
Sardar Muhammad Ayub
Khan is revered as a freedom fighter and national hero
in Afghanistan. Many 19th century poets have composed
ballads about the 'Ghazi of Maiwand' and glorified him
for giving the foreign invaders a bloody nose. There is
a monument to the battle of Maiwand in Afghanistan. The
tower, known as Minar-e-Maiwand was erected by King
Zahir Shah in 1959 in the town square. A Pashto
inscription, taken from a poem, relates a legend how at
one stage the Afghans were preparing for retreat when a
young woman named Malalai, stepped forward and pleaded
to them: "If you do not taste of martyrdom today on this
field of Maiwand, By God I am afraid you'll lead an
ignominious life forever more." It is recounted, upon
hearing this the men turned back to win the battle.
A colossal cast-iron
lion statue in the memory of the men of 66th Regiment of
Foot who died at Maiwand stands in Forbury Gardens,
Reading in Berkshire England. The few remaining
survivors that managed to reach the safety of the
British garrison at Kandahar, got a medal from Queen
Victoria on return to their country. One of the medal
recipients was a dog named Bobbie.
The unprecedented
British defeat caused a sensation in Europe and provided
much literary fodder for English writers such as Rudyard
Kipling who composed a poem on it entitled, That Day.
Sir Arthur Conan Doyle's fictional character Watson is
actually based on a surgeon of the 66th Regiment. In A
Study in Scarlet (1881), Watson describes how he got
shot whilst attending to a fallen soldier at Maiwand.
"How are you? …You have been to Afghanistan, I
perceive." are the opening words spoken by Sherlock
Holmes to Dr. Watson. "How on earth did you know that?"
Watson asks in admiration. It is the first of many
displays of Holmes's brilliant deductive abilities.
Ayub Khan's victory was
short-lived as another army under the direction of Field
Marshal Frederick Roberts came in his pursuit after a
few months. And when the British army drew back into
India leaving the Afghans to govern themselves, Ayub's
cousin and staunch enemy Abdur Rahman Khan proclaimed
himself Ameer routing Ayub's supporters. Ayub Khan was
forced to flee to Herat and later sought refuge in
Persia where he spent many years in exile.
The new King Ameer
Abdur Rahman continued to hatch conspiracies against him
and made his life difficult even there. On his part,
Ayub Khan too tried vainly to topple him and attempted a
coup against his cousin but with no luck. As time wore
on and the political landscape gradually changed Ayub
Khan finally turned himself over to the British emissary
in Meshed, Persia. He was sent to India as a state
prisoner and kept in confinement for sometime. He spent
the last years of his life with his family in Lahore,
living off a pension fixed by the Government of India.
He died on 7th April 1914 and was buried in Peshawar.
Today, the Victor of
Maiwand rests alone in his glory in a small marble
mausoleum in the Durrani Graveyard near Wazir Bagh, just
outside the old walled city of Peshawar. His tomb made
of pure white marble is a fine example of hand
craftsmanship. It has a round canopy and bears beautiful
floral carvings, geometric patterns and Islamic
calligraphy. The mausoleum's construction was
commissioned by the government of Afghanistan during the
reign of King Habibullah Khan. The gravestone carries a
Persian inscription that lavishes much praise on the
inmate. Other dignitaries buried in the Durrani
Graveyard compound include his mother (wife of Ameer
Shere Ali and queen of Afghanistan), Sardar Ibrahim Khan
(brother), Sardar Jalaluddin Khan and other close family
members.
The Great Game of the
old empires has entered a new round. In the current
setting the rules are the same however the players and
pawns are different. The future of Afghanistan, as it
appears, is still as undecided today as it was more than
a century ago. Peace in Afghanistan may still be a long
shot, however its former royal family members rest in
eternal peace in this graveyard |