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Travel Guide » Asia » Murud-Janjira
Explore: The World | India
Murud - Janjira
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(Maharashtra)


Right for this Fortress Town

For those innocent of the Konkan coastline, the road to Murud-Janjira is tarred with temptation. As the road veers off from under the Pune Expressway, shaking off mobile connectivity somewhere around Panvel, losing FM airwaves at Nagaon, the traveller stumbles onto that ultimate truth it pays to be on the right side of the road. Every now and then, signboards pop up, bridging the distance and luring the uninitiated into the seductive charms of Goa. The trick is to hold out till that final outpost 80 km on from Mumbai, where the road branches with finality. Left, you turn for Goa, right Murud-Janjira.

Murud, when it rises 4 hrs and 160-odd km later, does so unexpectedly. Almost hesitantly, it hoists itself up from behind a curtain of betel and coconut plantations, which have shielded Murud from craving eyes for long stretches. And you almost flinch, struck by the glint of the sea, the blinding expanse of white sand and in the distance, like a raging warrior, the ruins of a fortress.
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To See & Do
Murud was the last outpost of the Siddis of Janjira, fierce warriors who hailed from Abyssinia in far-away Africa. The remains of their rule are scattered all over the town, so history buffs can spend an enjoyable weekend in discovery. Those who believe a thing of beauty only gets better with age can follow the history buffs to said ruins. Others, for whom the sea and the creatures who frolic on the sands near it are things of joy forever, can head for the coves along Murud and Nandgaon beaches.

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Padmadurg Fort
  Now spliced into three by the relentless battering of time, Kasa Fort, as it is known today, is the original Padmadurg Fort. Shivaji's heir Sambhaji built it as a reply woefully inadequate to Siddi Johar's Janjira Fort. Spread across 8 1/2 acres, this sea fort is inaccessible for the greater part of the year, opening its gates only with permission from the Mumbai Port Trust, or in winter, when the sea is gentler on those who dare cross it.

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Ahmedganj Palace
  Also out of bounds is the estate of the Siddi Nawab of Murud. Laid across 45 acres, Ahmedganj Palace is the home of the present Nawab, Siddi Mehmood Khan, and holds within its grounds a mosque and the remains of the previous two rulers. Siddi Ahmed Khan and Siddi Muhammed Khan. Rashid, the caretaker of the palace, refuses access into the palace grounds. Come with a letter from the Nawab, he says. In the dank recesses of his office, which must have seen much revelry in brighter times, he pulls out frayed ledgers pointing out entries in English, Marathi and a now-dead language called Mori (a form of Portuguese Creole spoken by a small community in Korlai.) After much beseeching, he allows us a glimpse into the life of the last Nawab. The investiture and marriage ceremony of Nawab Sahib Siddi Muhammed Khan, 1933, read the fading gold letters on an album burdened by memory, whose photos he allowed us to behold. The Nawab greeting Colonel Wilberforce-Bell, special agent of the governor general; another of him aboard the SS.

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Chandravati
  Also lost, like the Mori language, are the inscriptions on the 500-year-old tombs of some of the early Siddi rulers in Gol Gumbaz, 4 km south of Murud in Khokri. What survives is the legend of a secret that they carried with them to their graves. Folklore has it that untold wealth lies within the silence of the tombs spelling death or madness to the grasping seeker unless he is able to read the Koran backwards without pause or repetition; a treasure secured by the word of god. Evidently, no one has as yet performed a successful recitation or excavation.

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Murud Beach
  Murud Beach is a joy to behold, all 1.75 km of it. Flanked by rocky outcrops, its sands are white, and firm under the feet. Although there are no warning signs, watch out for the danger zone at the far left of the beach. It has been marked by two poles with saffron flags fluttering on top.

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Garambi Falls
  A good place to drench yourself is at the 100-ft high Garambi Waterfalls, 4 km from Murud. The waters of this cascade are supposed to be the purest in Maharashtra, so you can drink from them as well. Garambi Dam, built by Nawab Sir Siddi Ahmed Khan, used to be called the Victoria Jubilee Water Works. It supplies water to all of Murud but ironically not to the Ahmedganj Palace anymore.
Content Source: 
Outlook Traveller
Contributed by: 
Saira Menezes
  
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