The postcard picture of Taj Mahal does not
adequately convey the legend, the poetry and the romance that shrouds what
Rabindranath Tagore calls "a teardrop on the cheek of time". Taj Mahal
means "Crown Palace" and is in fact the most well preserved and architecturally
beautiful tomb in the world. It is best described by the English poet, Sir Edwin
Arnold, as "Not a piece of architecture, as other buildings are, but the
proud passions of an emperor’s love wrought in living stones." It is a
celebration of woman built in marble and that’s the way to appreciate it.
Taj Mahal stands on the bank of River Yamuna, which
otherwise serves as a wide moat defending the Great Red Fort of Agra, the centre
of the Mughal emperors until they moved their capital to Delhi in 1637. It was
built by the fifth Mughal emperor, Shah Jahan in 1631 in memory of his second
wife, Mumtaz Mahal, a Muslim Persian princess. She died while accompanying her
husband in Burhanpur in a campaign to crush a rebellion after giving birth to
their 14th child. The death so crushed the emperor that all his hair and beard
were said to have grown snow white in a few months.
When Mumtaz Mahal was still alive, she extracted four
promises from the emperor: first, that he build the Taj; second, that he should
marry again; third, that he be kind to their children; and fourth, that he visit
the tomb on her death anniversary. He kept the first and second promises.
Construction began in 1631 and was completed in 22 years.
Twenty thousand people were deployed to work on it. The material was brought in
from all over India and central Asia and it took a fleet of 1000 elephants to
transport it to the site. It was designed by the Iranian architect Ustad Isa and
it is best appreciated when the architecture and its adornments are linked to
the passion that inspired it. It is a "symbol of eternal love".
The Taj rises on a high red sandstone base topped by a huge
white marble terrace on which rests the famous dome flanked by four tapering
minarets. Within the dome lies the jewel-inlaid cenotaph of the queen. So
exquisite is the workmanship that the Taj has been described as "having been
designed by giants and finished by jewelers". The only asymmetrical object
in the Taj is the casket of the emperor which was built beside the queen’s as an
afterthought. The emperor was deposed by his son and imprisoned in the Great Red
Fort for eight years but was buried in the Taj. During his imprisonment, he had
a view of the Taj.
As a tribute to a beautiful woman and as a monument for
enduring love, the Taj reveals its subtleties when one visits it without being
in a hurry. The rectangular base of Taj is in itself symbolic of the different
sides from which to view a beautiful woman. The main gate is like a veil to a
woman’s face which should be lifted delicately, gently and without haste on the
wedding night. In Indian tradition the veil is lifted gently to reveal the
beauty of the bride. As one stands inside the main gate of Taj, his eyes are
directed to an arch which frames the Taj.
The dome is made of white marble, but the tomb is set
against the plain across the river and it is this background that works its
magic of colors that, through their reflection, change the view of the Taj. The
colors change at different hours of the day and during different seasons. Like
a jewel, the Taj sparkles in moonlight when the semi-precious stones inlaid into
the white marble on the main mausoleum catch the glow of the moon. The Taj is
pinkish in the morning, milky white in the evening and golden when the moon
shines. These changes, they say, depict the different moods of woman.
Different people have different views of the Taj but it
would be enough to say that the Taj has a life of its own that leaps out of
marble, provided you understand that it is a monument of love. As an
architectural masterpiece, nothing could be added or subtracted from it.