robin_reala 5 days ago

In 1928 he conducted the funeral service of Sayaid Ali, an elephant keeper at London Zoo who had been murdered in his bed by a rival elephant keeper. The service was held at Waterloo station, after which the coffin was taken on the Necropolis Railway to the Muslim section of Brookwood Cemetery.

History is often stranger than fiction. The Necropolis Railway is definitely worth a read if you haven’t heard of it before: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/London_Necropolis_Railway

  • Loughla 5 days ago

    >to prevent both mourners and cadavers from different social backgrounds from mixing

    It's always fascinating reading about England's very complicated social class system. Other than the aristocracy being rich, does this still hold up today? Is there still inherent benefit from being a traditionally upper class family, even if they don't have generational wealth still?

    • tengwar2 4 days ago

      The closer you get to London, the more it matters.

      Money is not central to the system: it is possible and even common to be in one of the middle classes with virtually no income. However this may not work for the upper class since lack of money would preclude taking part in many social occasions.

    • mellosouls 4 days ago

      Yes. For example 2 prime ministers of the last ten years were educated at the same school (Eton).

      Whatever its actual merit and financial requirements for attendance, it is a symbol of aristocracy and class.

      That it is (and similar institutions are) still massively over-represented in the life paths of the Great and Good is telling.

    • throaway2501 5 days ago

      you bet there is

      • Loughla 5 days ago

        Can you provide some examples?

        • flir 4 days ago

          I consider myself a pretty egalitarian dude. That accent still makes me stand to attention internally. I hate it. (And I haven't had much exposure to it in real life, so I suspect it's because its baked into our media landscape).

          • b800h 4 days ago

            The problem with egalitarianism is that it leads to chaos, as we're now seeing in the UK. The old system was better.

          • quickthrowman 3 days ago

            That accent’ is received pronunciation, I’m guessing?

            • flir 3 days ago

              The public school accent I'm thinking of is a notch plummier than RP.

  • gpderetta 5 days ago

    ah, yes, good old Necropolitan Line. I first learned about it in "The Fuller Memorandum", a Laundry Files novel by cstross.

    • wrp 5 days ago

      The Necropolis Railway also features in the Basil Copper novel Necropolis (1980).

  • Maken 5 days ago

    At the time the largest cemetery in the world, Brookwood Cemetery was designed to be large enough to accommodate all the deaths in London for centuries to come, and the LNC hoped to gain a monopoly on London's burial industry.

    There is something amusing about how incredibly ambitious they were, yet they completely missed the mark on how many people would live (and die) in London in the following centuries.

FooBarBizBazz 5 days ago

> Khalid performed the ceremony over the Channel with Gladys taking the name Khair ul Nissa.

"Khair ul* Nissa"?! This cannot be a coincidence? That was also the name of a young Hyderabadi noblewoman who married the earlier English convert to Islam, James Achilles Kirkpatrick** [1][2]. It caused controversy in Hyderabadi society at the time, but after Kirkpatrick's death, it became widely(?) seen in England as having been a devoted relationship and a very romantic story. IIRC it was Thomas Carlyle who said Kirkpatrick had "scaled walls for" Khair un Nissa. So I will guess that Gladys had heard that story.

[1] https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/James_Achilles_Kirkpatrick

[2] Dalyrumple. White Mughals.

* Shouldn't that be "un"?

** How good is that name?

rossng 5 days ago

> In 1928 he conducted the funeral service of Sayaid Ali, an elephant keeper at London Zoo who had been murdered in his bed by a rival elephant keeper.

This sentence begs for an entire blog post of its own.

  • kombookcha 4 days ago

    Yeah, very curious about how there is this calibre of high stakes drama and intrigue among 1920s elephant keepers.

n4r9 4 days ago

The name "Sheldrake" seems to coincide with colourful characters! The only other instances I know of are the Sheldrake family consisting of:

* Rupert, biologist turned crank scientist.

* Merlin, science populariser.

* Cosmo, musician.

palmfacehn 5 days ago

James Brooke becoming the monarch of Sarawak is another interesting case.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/James_Brooke

  • teruakohatu 5 days ago

    Very interesting, I had not heard of the Brookes but the last crown price died here in New Zealand in 2011, being a an heir to a biscuit fortune. There was actually a connection between Sheldrake and the Brookes family.

tetris11 5 days ago

oh wow, I live just round the corner from there. I guess I'll go check out if there's still a mosque there

  • zwischenzug 5 days ago

    So do I!

    • moomin 5 days ago

      There’s a mosque on North Cross Road but that’s only about 35 years old.

zabzonk 4 days ago

So long as it is not Dunwich.

icodar 5 days ago

[dead]

  • lucozade 5 days ago

    From the article

    Gladys, who had previously converted to Catholicism and Christian Science, had firm ideas about how her conversion to Islam should go. She wanted it performed ‘on no earthly territory’ so in 1932 she chartered a plane to fly from Croydon to Paris and Khalid performed the ceremony over the Channel

    So yes, she was already investigating religions and this appears to have been her idea.

    • InfiniteLoup 5 days ago

      The article goes even futher:

      “I particularly wanted to become a Moslem in an aeroplane” she is quoted as saying to a journalist who was on the flight with her, “so that I might be as far from earth and as near to heaven as possible.”

      Sounds rather like a case of main character syndrome of a bored socialite than that she needed much persuasion to convert.

  • dzdt 4 days ago

    I suspect you have a different notion of what conversion meant than Gladys did. For you it seems to be about internal beliefs; for her it was about external declaration, ceremony, and recognition. Likely beliefs had very little to do with the whole thing.