Again Mademoiselle Mumbai called me. This
time it was through my cousin, when she declared, she's getting married!
Obviously a trip to Mumbai calls for its
own list of places to be visited. Much unknown to many, is that Mumbai has its
own bunch of ancient caves & 15-17th C AD forts. That includes caves in
Kanheri, 2 caves in Jogeshwari etc and forts in Sewri, Sion, Mahim, Bandra,
Madh, Vasai etc built by Portuguese & British. I wanted to see at least one
of these forts if not all, and Vasai Fort was first in the list.
The Vasai Fort was built by the Portuguese
and was called The Fort of St. Sebastian of Vasai. From the Portuguese, the
Marathas won it over by King Baji Rao Peshwa, in 1739. From the Marathas, it
went over to British Raj who called it Bassein Fort.
This is the first ever time I saw a fort of
this kind. I've seen the Chenji / Gingee fort in Tamil Nadu and Golkonda Fort
in Hyderabad, but the construction of those were very different, built with
huge boulders of granite. This was built with some smaller granite, bricks,
etc. The architecture is a major difference. The earlier places were South
Indian and Nawabi architecture, while this was purely western, Portuguese to be
precise. It was awesome. It was in ruins, still it was majestic.
I managed to spot the Fort beside a temple.
An ASI office is at the entrance. It was fenced by ASI. After spending almost
more than 15-20 mins in there, I realized this was just one of the 2-3 sections
of the fort. I moved over to the 2nd one.
This was much more maintained with a garden
in the front and a swivel door and heavier fence. It was all the more majestic
& bigger than the earlier one. I couldn't help but wonder how fabulous it
would have been when it was in use. I was visualizing people dressed in Portuguese
& Indian outfits of different races, walking about & talking in the
huge premises!
The flooring has been re-done by the ASI
and some broken places have been filled and renovated. There were some little
openings & paths that led nowhere. Earlier might have been doors, who
knows?!
Some planks with reliefs sculpted on them
were kept aside. Some more panels of relief sculptures were still intact on the
walls.
Some had written words - No I couldn't read
the language! All of the windows and doors were arched in true arches - that's
one fabulous aspect of architecture.
One thing that totally astonished was there
were no bats, no monkeys, no mongrels and no stupid humans too (read - smoking
drunkards or just college bunking brats). Not even broken whiskey bottles - that's
astonishing, I mean really, really astonishing. Just a few pigeons, nothing
else!!! Behind this building was a huge wild mango tree. I had seen wild mango
trees only in Parappalaru before this!
Further walking ahead lead to a school
here, while is located within the compound of the fort!! Beyond that is the
village. Women clad in traditional Marathi saree drape with Mangalsutras and
Men in the traditional triangular lungi tie-dyed in bright colors were walking
about. Enroute was a mini dhobi-ghat with about 20 women washing clothes here -
that itself was a colorful sight with their colorful outfit and all the more
colorful garments that they were washing. In a green environment, with granite
fort background, so much of colors, was an amazing visual treat!!!
TO
REACH THERE:
Nearest Railway Station in Mumbai: Vasai
Road station in Western Railway Line of Mumbai Local.
Trains to Virar pass through Vasai.
Autos can be taken from the station to the
Fort. Mumbai autos run on metre.
Refer to the fort locally as Vasai Khila,
as in the local language, so they understand!
Dedicated
to my Mom & Pop...
Written by Bhushavali
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