{"id":82861,"date":"2026-05-18T11:31:07","date_gmt":"2026-05-18T15:31:07","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/apnaorg.com\/wp\/columns\/general\/harking-back-baoo-rasheed-the-missing-lascar-from-khziri-gate\/"},"modified":"2026-05-18T11:31:07","modified_gmt":"2026-05-18T15:31:07","slug":"harking-back-baoo-rasheed-the-missing-lascar-from-khziri-gate","status":"publish","type":"columns","link":"https:\/\/apnaorg.com\/wp\/columns\/majid\/harking-back-baoo-rasheed-the-missing-lascar-from-khziri-gate\/","title":{"rendered":"HARKING BACK: Baoo Rasheed: the missing \u2018lascar\u2019 from Khziri Gate"},"content":{"rendered":"<table width=\"80%\" border=\"0\" align=\"center\" cellpadding=\"5\" cellspacing=\"3\">\n<tr>\n<td>\n<p align=\"center\" class=\"style5\"><span>HARKING BACK: Baoo Rasheed: the missing &lsquo;lascar&rsquo; from Khziri Gate<\/span><\/p>\n<div align=\"center\" class=\"style4\">\n<p class=\"style6\"><span>By Majid Sheikh <\/span>      <\/p>\n<p align=\"left\" class=\"style7\"><span><em>Dawn, Aug 2, 2015           <\/em>        <\/span> <\/p>\n<p class=\"style7\">\n<p align=\"center\">\n<\/div>\n<p>This is a story  I have, off and on, pursued over the last ten years. Finally I am able to write  a column, brief as it is, about the &lsquo;missing boatmen&rsquo; of Khziri Gate.  Interlaced is the amazing story of Baoo Rasheed and Jonathon Rush.<\/p>\n<p>The year was 2005 and I was visiting Haji Sheikh Mubarak Ali, at  his Tehsil Bazaar shop. He has provided me amazing clues to the most curious  stories of the Lahore of old. During his customary tea session he said: &ldquo;Sheikh  Sahib why do you not investigate the mystery of Baoo Rasheed, whose great  grandson lives in Kashmiri Gate. They say that when the Sikhs collapsed he was  taken away by the Company because he was an expert boatman&rdquo;. Now this was a  mystery that I could not resist, and so over the years I have worked on it when  time and location allowed.<\/p>\n<p>A visit to the house then pointed out by the late Haji Sahib  proved fruitful, and I managed to meet Hajjan Bibi, as she was called, and  whose age nobody knew. She could barely walk, but she was mentally alert. She  was the great grand-daughter of Baoo Rasheed the boatman. &ldquo;I have been told by  my elders that he piloted huge ships in the broad river Sindh and sometimes in  the endless seas. He used to return home once in two years with strange gifts,  and a lot of money&rdquo;. She went on: &ldquo;My grandfather was his youngest son. Then he  never returned. Not even the Company Bahadar knew where he had gone. They kept  saying he was a &lsquo;lascar&rsquo;. What that meant nobody knew. That is all I know&rdquo;.<\/p>\n<p>During the conversation it was clear that a number of boatmen  who lived in the walled city and worked the Khziri Gate ferry landing on the  River Ravi. It seems he was hired by the East India Company (EIC) to ferry to  Lahore goods, guns and ammunition from their huge ships standing at Punjnad  near Multan. The Company forces were then fighting the last of the battles with  the dying Sikh Empire. Lahore was already in British hands and so they were in  effective control.<\/p>\n<p>The EIC was known to hire cheap Indian sailors for their ships  that moved cargo between Europe and India and even up to China. A lot of their  ships had over half the crew being Indian. In the Punjabi boatmen they found  expert rough water handlers, and soon these Punjabis were much sought after.  The first Indian, mostly Bengalis, had reached London and Liverpool as early as  1617, when the Indian population then was recorded as being nearly 10,000, all  lascars who had been abandoned by the Company during the period ships were  being reloaded. The word &lsquo;lascar&rsquo; is derived from the Persian &lsquo;lashkar&rsquo;. Why it  was used for sailors is a mystery.<\/p>\n<p>It might interest the reader to know that it was an Indian  sailor who helped Vasco da Gama in 1498 to reach India at Calicut from the East  African coast where Sindhi and Punjabi sailors among other Indians were known  to trade. That sailor, so research tells us, was a Sindhi sea pilot by the name  of Ibn Majid. Mind you we know that one of the sea pilots who helped  Christopher Columbus reach the Americas was also an Indian. The Portuguese were  masters of the seas in that age and with the British competing they were always  on the lookout for good cheap sailors. Amazingly, European sailors had a very  high sickness rate, and would often desert when in India.<\/p>\n<p>Armed with this story about Baoo Rasheed my research now needed  further explaining. During my own research at Cambridge I happened to read a  new research doctoral thesis by Ceri-Anne Fidler of Cardiff University on the  &lsquo;lascars&rsquo; of India. This led me to visit the India Records Office, which has  the complete original record of all ships and sailors that landed at, or left  British ports. Also are other reports, as well as health status reports, of the  sailors on these ships.<\/p>\n<p>It is amazing that in another research by Nicholas B. Dirks on  &lsquo;lascars&rsquo; (Princeton, 2001, pp180) he points out that &ldquo;the EIC after  considerable experience preferred Punjabi sailors, even though they had no sea  touching their land, for the simple reason that they were the least  superstitious and were very hardy&rdquo;. Armed with considerable information I  returned to the India Records Office and started my search for Baoo Rasheed and  other sailors from Lahore&rsquo;s walled city in the period 1846 to 1896, a 50-year  stretch that allowed me a period where enough information would be available.  On my second visit I chanced on a lead that saw Baoo Rasheed&rsquo;s name in a  register.<\/p>\n<p>On a ship MS Chenab a crew of six Punjabis changed ships and  agreed to work for an East India Company cargo ship docked at Multan in 1852,  that ship being &lsquo;MV Australian&rsquo;. This ship headed for China with a consignment  of opium, and then headed back and picked up indigo and cotton and landed at  Liverpool on May 12, 1852. Among the three names that stand out, with origin  being &lsquo;Lahore&rsquo; are Allah Bux, Abdul Rasheed and Shamshad Singh. They are  described as &lsquo;lascars&rsquo; and the EIC refused to pay for their expenses while at  Liverpool. I am assuming that they were forced to stay back, and I could be  wrong.<\/p>\n<p>From this point onwards no record of Baoo Rashid (assuming Abdul  Rasheed is our &lsquo;Baoo Rashid&rsquo; in the first place) is seen in shipping records  that I have been through, and been through very briefly in terms of research. I  must point out that the record is so large that it would take a year or so to  trace our man. But then as if by instinct I decided to check out the &lsquo;ancestry  register&rsquo; at the Liverpool Town Hall, and there as if waiting for me was Abdul  Rasheed. The entry is a marriage entry (trust a good sailor to find an anchor)  with Miss Annette Bristow, daughter of Arthur and Elizabeth of Poplar Lane off  Cumberland Street. I immediately rushed to the &lsquo;Maps Section&rsquo; and found an old  Liverpool &lsquo;street map&rsquo;, and there was Cumberland Street and at one edge was  Poplar Lane.<\/p>\n<p>Here we have an amazing change of name for their son is named  &lsquo;Johnn Rushe&rsquo;, and when I checked out the children of our little &lsquo;Johnn&rsquo; we  have the name changing to &lsquo;Rush&rsquo;. As we proceed, thankfully the record has been  computerised, and amazingly the fourth generation moved to London and is  recorded as being in the construction business, and, it seems, is well off. It  seems the family is totally English in racial terms. Among his ancestors is  Jonathon Rush and he works as a stock broker.<\/p>\n<p>There was no point in tracing the family of Baoo Rasheed &lsquo;the  lascar&rsquo;. The tip given by the late Haji Mubarak Ali of Tehsil Bazaar has ended  on a happy note. What happened to his wife and children in Lahore is another  story, and one best left alone.<\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\" class=\"style2\">&nbsp;<\/p>\n<\/td>\n<\/tr>\n<\/table>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>HARKING BACK: Baoo Rasheed: the missing &lsquo;lascar&rsquo; from Khziri Gate By Majid Sheikh Dawn, Aug 2, 2015 This is a story I have, off and on, pursued over the last ten years. Finally I am able to write a column, brief as it is, about the &lsquo;missing boatmen&rsquo; of Khziri Gate. Interlaced is the amazing [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"featured_media":0,"template":"","columnist":[4085],"class_list":["post-82861","columns","type-columns","status-publish","hentry","columnist-majid"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/apnaorg.com\/wp\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/columns\/82861","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/apnaorg.com\/wp\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/columns"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/apnaorg.com\/wp\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/columns"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/apnaorg.com\/wp\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=82861"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"columnist","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/apnaorg.com\/wp\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/columnist?post=82861"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}