Delhiwale: This way to Sir Syed Road
Having undergone many alterations, it looks like an assortment of miscellaneous structures, one of which is Beauty Bonanza Makeup Store.
As part of our ‘Walled City dictionary’ series that chronicles every Old Delhi locality.

Our Dilli has no dearth of books for those who have a taste for old buildings. Published in 1846, Sir Syed Ahmad Khan’s illustrated Urdu classic Asar-al-Sanadid (Relics of Past Things) was the first comprehensive archaeological appraisal of the Capital’s monuments. An affluent Shahjahanabad resident whose grandson (Syed Ross Masood) inspired the principal character (Dr Aziz) of EM Forster’s A Passage to India, the scholarly Khan personally visited each monument, where he would diligently take notes as his aides helped him measure every column and dome.
The wider world knows Sir Syed more for his connections to another city—he was the founder of Aligarh Muslim University, and lies buried in Aligarh. But Sir Syed was first a Delhiwalla. He was born (1817) in this city, and grew up in a gali later named after him.
Sir Syed Ahmad Road, close to the extinct Golcha Cinema, starts with a bike showroom, which was formerly a post office. It flows along the tiny stores of Faiz Bazar, past a municipal-run school for girls with a wall listing “free facilities” for students. A new multi-storey soars up ahead—shops on the ground level, a gynaecologist’s clinic on the first, and apartments on the upper levels. The bulky concrete structure is like a fragment of suburbia airdropped into an old quarter.
Otherwise, behind the dense layers of shop hoardings, street poles, and dangling power cables are walls that have witnessed a lifetime of heat waves, sandstorms and monsoons. One cobwebbed edifice has locked windows as tall as Amitabh Bachchan. Two mosques and a temple too mark the lane. Durga Mandir’s doorway arch is sculpted into marble leaves; next to which sits Jagdamba Prasad, a seller of marigold flowers. Opposite is Munna Bhai’s remarkable stall for fresh tamarind, one of the few places in the Walled City that also stocks mulberries during their brief season. The hand-painted banner has the assuring words:
Doosre ki cheez ko dekhkar pareshan na hona,
Khuda tumhe bhi dega, hairan na hona.
(Don’t be upset by noticing others’ property,
Don’t be surprised, God will give you too.)
The true poetry of the street, though, is extracted by reading aloud the names of its businesses: Daily Essentials, Suhag Bangles, Karma Footwear, Kohli Bros Dry Cleaners, New Kohli Bros Dry Cleaners, Alvi Dental Clinic, Blue Ribbon Bakery, Hemraj Namkeens, Fashion Star Boutique, God’s Glory Public School, IFC (Indian Fried Chicken) Pizzatreat—the last stands at the last point of the gali. Its owner, Muin, points: “This was Sir Syed’s house.” Having undergone many alterations, it looks like an assortment of miscellaneous structures, one of which is Beauty Bonanza Makeup Store.
ABOUT THE AUTHORMayank Austen SoofiMayank Austen Soofi is a writer-snapper trying to capture Delhi by heart.
Stay updated with all top Cities including, Bengaluru, Delhi, Mumbai and more across India. Stay informed on the latest happenings in World News along with Delhi Election 2025 and Delhi Election Result 2025 Live, New Delhi Election Result Live, Kalkaji Election Result Live at Hindustan Times.

E-Paper


