Rewa’s chequered past: A princely state with an unfortunate legacy of White Tigers
![Gambar](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjK7VzVV7Kj6QMVTaPKKvq3vE_wTC4uVRh3R27xlim3cQxOtY15DICooPUtKahq70ax92JrNxC0gYHGXLivtfKlwS1of0XguMLO9N5SMbwAUWFiIZDfvtHLwFaZzMFeTtBoDdO8QD-N23Pd/s1600/Rewa-114545.jpg)
Under the veneer of Rewa’s insipid “dusty little Indian town” feel is a treasure trove of forgotten history and an intriguing past that has comfortably faded into oblivion. At first glance, I couldn’t understand what made Madhya Pradesh Tourism send me this way, to this obscure place with nothing remarkable in sight. Little did I know that I was actually being sent down the rabbit hole of vanished stories. Painted entrance of Rewa Fort Rewa is a little town in northeastern part of Madhya Pradesh and the erstwhile capital of Baghelkhand region in the past and Vindhya Pradesh in modern times, which was later merged into Madhya Pradesh. Today, you would be hard pressed to find anything evocative of the past glory but there are several mute witnesses in the form of crumbling and dilapidated ruins within the maze of modern constructions that tantalize you with the lure of a secret. A dilapidated section of the fort with a view of an oddly placed urinal, symbolizing the weird l...