Love is unconditional and there are some people who go to unbelievable lengths to prove this. Back in the day, emperor Shah Jahan built one of the seven wonders of the world, Taj Mahal, in memory of his wife Mumtaz Mahal. Little do many know that there was one modern-day 'Shah Jahan' living among us.?Faizul Hasan Qadri, a retired postman pulled off a similar feat by building a mini Taj Mahal for his wife.?
Constructed on 5,500 sq ft in the once-obscure village of Kaser Kalan in Dibai tehsil, the cement and brick structure built by Qadri might not equal the Taj, but ut was built for love.?
Qadri, who lost his wife of 57 years, Tajamulli Begum, to throat cancer in 2011, spent his entire life's savings and sold some of his land to build the Taj replica on her grave.
The village residents, at first amused by the grand announcement by the frail, old man who could barely walk without the support of a stick, later fondly nicknamed him 'Shah Jahan of the poor' as they saw the monument take shape, reports the TOI.?
Mohd Aslam, Qadri's neighbour, told TOI, "Qadri will be remembered as a modern-day Shah Jahan. He wanted to be buried next to his wife and the village will fulfill his last wish on Saturday. He brought good name to our village, we owe him that."
The octogenarian, who had no children of his own, had donated four bighas to UP government for construction of a girl's college near his mini Taj.
He was once offered financial assistance by then UP CM Akhilesh Yadav to complete his monument which he had refused. Speaking to TOI in 2015, he had said, "I am scripting a poor man's love story. I don't know whether my Taj Mahal will be as famous as Shah Jahan's but I know that people can see it for free."
Waqf board chairman Z A Farooqui, however, did not confirm whether the body would now be responsible for upkeep of the mausoleum. "I cannot confirm that the building is registered with the board. We will go through the records," Farooqui said.