History is
full of lessons for us, but it also has mysteries for us to solve. Some
of these mysteries are recent, others are millennia old – still waiting
for answers. In India too, generations of scientists and researchers
have grappled with many puzzling stories and events that have left them
baffled over the years.
Let’s take a look at some of these enigmas, some of which are truly
inexplicable and puzzling, to learn more about the mysteries of India.
You can play detective of course and leave us an explanation if you
solve any in the comment box below – we would be happy to cross them
off our list!
1. Disappearance of the Indus Valley Civilization
The Indus valley civilisation is perhaps India’s most ancient
mystery. There are many unanswered questions about this great
civilisation that was larger than the ancient Egyptian and Mesopotamian
civilisations combined. The secrets behind the identity of the people
who created it and their puzzling 4000-year-old Indus pictographic
script are yet to be discovered. Also, perhaps the most bewildering fact
about this civilisation is that all its major sites went into sudden
decline and disappeared more or less simultaneously. There are several
theories about why this happened but none of them have been very
conclusive.
2. Alien Rock Paintings Of Charama
Puzzling ancient rock paintings have been found in caves near the
town of Charama in the tribal Bastar region of Chhattisgarh.
Archaeologist JR Bhagat, who discovered them, says they depict eerie
humanoids with no facial features and other paintings of flying discs.
Interestingly, nearby villages have several legends of small ‘Rohela’
people who used to land from the sky in round shaped flying objects and
kidnap one or two villagers. The Chhattisgarh Department of Archaeology
and Culture has asked the Indian Space Research Organisation and the US
space agency, NASA, to help research these compelling finds.
3. Son Bhandar Caves of Bihar
Hollowed out of a single giant rock, the Son Bhandar cave of Rajgir
in Bihar is believed to be the doorway to the riches of Bimbisara, a
Magadhan king who loved hoarding treasures. Son Bhandar literally
translates to ‘store of gold’. It is said that when Bimbisara was
imprisoned by his son Ajatashatru, this is the place where his wife hid
the treasure on his orders. Undeciphered inscriptions in the Sankhlipi
script found etched on the wall of the western cave, are purportedly the
clues to open the doorway. The British once tried to cannonball their
way through the supposed doorway, but without success, leaving just a
black mark that’s still visible.
4. The Nine Unknown Men
India’s very own version of the Illuminati, the mysterious ‘9 Unknown
Men’ is believed to be one of the world’s most powerful secret
societies. According to legend, it was founded by Emperor Asoka himself,
in 273 BC, after the bloody battle of Kalinga that took the lives of
100,000. Each of these 9 unknown men had been entrusted with a book of
knowledge on different subjects ranging from time travel and propaganda
to microbiology and psychological warfare. The actual identities of
these 9 unknown men are still a mystery, but it is believed that the
secret society, preserved over generations, exists till date.
5. Mir Osman Ali’s Treasure Trove
The last and seventh Nizam of the Asaf Jah dynasty of Hyderabad, Mir
Osman Ali Khan, famous for his idiosyncrasies, was also known for his
stunning collection of jewellery and legendary treasure. TIME
magazine called him the richest man in the world in 1937 and he is
widely believed to have been the richest Indian ever. His
fabulous personal wealth and most of the famed Nizam jewellery were
never recovered after his death. It is believed they still lie somewhere
in the underground chambers of King Kothi Palace in Hyderabad where the
Nizam lived most of his life.
6. The 500-year old Mummy of Lama Tenzin
A trek in the Himalayas to the small village of Ghuen in Spiti
reveals the eerie and ancient tradition of self-mummification. Here, in a
tiny single-room concrete structure, rests a 500-year-old mummy
protected by only a thin sheet of glass. The remains of a 15th-century
Buddhist monk named Sangha Tenzin, the mummy is remarkably well
preserved, with unbroken skin and hair on the head. Sangha Tenzin’s body
apparently went through a mysterious natural mummification.
7. The Royal Treasure of Jaigarh Fort
Home to the largest cannon on wheels, the Jaivana, Jaigarh fort’s
history is filled with tales of intrigue and treasures. It is believed
that while returning from a successful campaign in Afghanistan, Man
Singh, Akbar’s defence minister, hid the spoils of war in Jaigarh Fort.
In 1977, at the height of the Emergency in India, Jaigarh Fort found
itself in the spotlight again when then Prime Minister Indira Gandhi
launched a thorough search of the fort on a tip-off that the water tanks
hid the Mughal treasure. Nothing was found but the incident received
immense publicity, also finding mention in Maharani Gayatri Devi’s
book, A Princess Remembers.
8. The Disappearance of Nana Saheb
Nana Saheb, regarded as one of the important leaders of the 1857
revolt, disappeared soon after his defeat at the hands of the British.
History is still unclear about his fate, with questions also remaining
about what happened to his fabled treasure that today would be worth
billions. Most historians believe that he was never captured and escaped
to Nepal with a significant part of his treasure, although no concrete
historical evidence of that exists. Even after 150 years, Nana Saheb’s
fate and the whereabouts of his treasure remain among the most enduring
mysteries from the British era.
9. The Ghost Village of Kuldhara
Lying 20 km to the west of Jaisalmer,
the ghost town of Kuldhara was a prosperous town of Paliwal Brahmins a
few hundred years ago. Until one
fatal night, when all its 1500 residents left the village without a
trace. No one knows exactly why but according to legend, they left the
village to escape from the evil ruler Salim Singh and his unjust taxes,
and while leaving, they left a curse on the area. It is also said that
anyone who tries to stay in the village dies a brutal death and, till
date, Kuldhara remains uninhabited.
10. Chapatti Movement
The bizarre and enigmatic distribution of chapattis throughout
the country during the revolt of 1857 remains an inexplicable mystery
till today. Though recent studies have theorised that the circulation of
chapattis may have been an attempt to deliver food to people
afflicted with cholera, the evidence is inconclusive about the actual
purpose of the Chapatti Movement. Only one thing is accepted unanimously
by historians – the mysterious chapatti deliveries definitely created an atmosphere of restlessness that was particularly disconcerting to the British in 1857.
11.Netaji Subhash Chandra Bose’s Disappearance
Netaji Subhash Chandra Bose’s death is still shrouded in secrecy and
the various conspiracy theories surrounding it make it even more
mysterious. What happened after Netaji’s flight took off from Taipei to
Tokyo? This has been one of the greatest mysteries of free India. A few
years after Bose’s disappearance, there was speculation that he had
returned to India and was living in disguise as a sadhu in North India.
Although no such claim could ever be substantiated, the theory
resurfaced with the news about Gumnami Baba, a revered saint of Faizabad
in Uttar Pradesh, who many people believe was Bose himself.
12. Untimely Death of Lal Bahadur Shashtri
Lal Bahadur Shastri’s sudden demise, barely two years after his
taking over as the Prime Minister of India, took place in a foreign
country. This is the first time in modern world history that something
like this had happened. He died due to cardiac arrest under suspicious
circumstances in Tashkent in 1966, giving rise to reports of dark
conspiracies behind his death. Dark blue spots and cut marks on his body
at the time of death raised doubts but, mysteriously, no
post-mortem was ever conducted and no official documents about the death
were ever made available to the public.
13. The Reincarnation Of Shanti Devi
The reincarnation case of Shanti Devi, a girl born in a little-known
locality of Delhi, was the first widely acknowledged and thoroughly
documented one in India. The details Shanti Devi had given to her
present family and teacher about her old house and members of her family
in her previous life were all confirmed in intricate detail. It was
also investigated by a committee of prominent citizens appointed by
Mahatma Gandhi, who accompanied Shanti Devi to the village of her
past-life recollections and recorded what they witnessed.
14. The Yogi Who Lives On Nothing
About 200 kilometers from Ahmedabad, in a place called Ambaji, lives a frail octogenarian ascetic, popularly known as Chunriwala Mataji. A
brush with spirituality at the age of 11 years made Prahlad Jani a
devotee of goddess Amba and he claims that he was blessed by the goddess
who gave him the superhuman strength through an elixir, which drops
through a hole in his palate. In 2003, a scientific research study was
conducted on him by a medical research team of twenty-one specialists in
which he was continuously monitored by video, but the investigations
failed to explain the powers of Jani who claims to have gone without food and water since 1940.
Fantastic
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