Roughly about 15 years later, a similar crowd was addressed in a free India, by the first Minister of Education Abul Kalam Azad, who asked them to "resist the urge to leave for Pakistan" as Delhi burns with post-partition violence.
Such incidents that were integral to the formation of India as we see her today, however, have seldom found mention in archival documents of the mosque, let alone in mainstream history lessons.
Penned by Mrinalini Rajagopalan, assistant professor at the department of History of Art and Architecture at University of Pittsburgh, 'Building Histories: The Archival and Affective Lives of Five Monuments in Modern Delhi' chronicles events that "break apart the linear historic timelines" of these structures.
"Azad's words are meant to remind his fellow Muslims their immutable claim to Delhi as well as independent India.
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The book has been divided into five chapters, each dedicated to one monument.
Each chapter makes the reader travel in time, as the author builds the narrative around a particular moment in the monument's history.
"The book tells the history that did not make it to the institutionalised narrative of these monuments. It tells how these monuments got activated in unexpected ways, how they became central to many important events in the history of India," Rajagopalan said.
Rajagopalan went on to share another popular narrative associated with the Purana Quila.
"According to legends, the fort sits atop the ancient city of Indraprastha, mentioned in the Hindu epic 'Mahabharata'. In his designs for New Delhi, Edwin Lutyen planned to create an access from the Purana Quila, or Indraprastha, to the Viceroy's Palace linking the empire of the past and the empire of the present," she said.
However, the legend still finds its place in the fort's institutionalised history.