Heritage Alerts December 2011
Elephants are frequently being electrocuted in Orissa and the government has sought to fix live wires with Central funds not meant for such an exercise, a request questioned by Central officials as well as conservationists
Funds under the Compensatory Afforestation and Management and Planning Authority (CAMPA) are meant for conservation of wildlife and forests. The funds are collected in the first place from organisations, government or private, which have diverted forest land. The Orissa government has now proposed to use these to fix electrical lines because private power companies say they cannot afford it. The government has decided to urge the Ministry of Environment and Forests to clear Rs 20 crore from the state CAMPA fund.Orissa, which has almost 80 per cent of all elephants i
eastern India, has seen 110 of them killed by electrocution in the last 11 years
The Wildlife Society of Orissa, an NGO, surveyed low-hanging lines in Dhenkanal district, where a large number of elephants live, and found these sagging at 147 locations. A list was handed over to the government two months ago
Orissa’s four power distribution companies (WESCO, SOUTHCO, NESCO and CESU) have been citing lack of funds to repair the lines
Principal chief conservator of forests Priyanath Padhi told The Indian Express that a decision has been taken to request the MoEF for permission to use CAMPA funds, though he is not sure if it is a feasible idea. “As the energy department has said the distribution companies can’t repair the lines, we are thinking if we can use CAMPA for that. But the MoEF has to take the decision,” he said.
MoEF officials say it would be a bad idea. “We will soon take a decision on Orissa’s proposal, but using CAMPA funds for works of private power distribution companies would send out a wrong signal. Tomorrow the Railways might ask for CAMPA funds to prevent killing of elephants by speeding trains,” said an official in the CAMPA division
CAMPA funds comprise collections from industries and government organisations for diversion of forest areas to non-forest purposes. The core principle is that CAMPA funds would be given back to state governments for undertaking measures to conserve the forests and wildlife and to mitigate the impact of such diversions. Orissa got Rs 270 crore in 2009 and 2010 and is expected to get another Rs 250 crore this year
Members of the National Board of Wildlife have questioned the request. Former NBW member Belinda Wright, executive director of Wildlife Protection Society of India, said, “If CAMPA funds are essentially paybacks by corporates, how can it be given back to them? To benefit the environment you are taking on one hand. Handing over the same to those people to benefit wildlife and the environment would be wrong.
Another NBW member, Biswajit Mohanty, said if the MoEF gives approval, this would open the gates to all other private companies. “If the companies don’t have the money to repair their electricity lines, simply cancel their licences,” he said
The National Board of Wildlife is expected to meet in December to discuss the rise in elephant electrocutions in Orissa. Additional director general (wildlife) in the MoEF Jagdish Kishwan, also in charge of Project Elephant, said, “It’s sad. We are really concerned about the deaths and have written several letters to the Orissa government.
Indian Express, 1st December 2011
No alcohol, cigarettes and sex. No reading and writing. Even talking and praying not allowed . The regimen would drive most people to despair in a day but, surprisingly, it's finding more and more converts in the city. Part of the 10-day initiation into the Buddhist practice of Vipassana, the strict routine teaches people to selfobserve and understand their nature.
Experts say the quest for solace amid stressful routines is making people try not only Vipassana but other ancient Buddhist practices like Soka Gakkai as well.
It's a surprising resurgence for Buddhism in the country 2,500 years after its inception. "We run four centres in Delhi, and each month about 500 people enroll in the course. Two years ago, the figure was between 250 and 300," says Prem Chauhan, secretary, Vipassana Centre Dhamma Sota. Even youngsters are now drawn to it, he says.
"Vipassana is all about concentration , self-control and reining one's thoughts. And apart from breaks for breakfast, lunch, and evening tea, participants spend the rest of the day meditating," says Chauhan. For those who cannot cope with the rigours of Vipassana, Soka Gakkai is a less challenging alternative. Derived from Nichiren Buddhism of Japan, it involves chanting the mantra 'Nam-myohorenge-kyo ' and has over the years made its presence felt in Delhi.
"It's all about being in rhythm with the universe and worshipping the law of universe - what you give is what you get. You can't change the karma you were born with, but through chanting and changing your actions, you can reduce your negative karma," says Afsana Kapoor, who started chanting 14 years ago. "If I change as a person, everybody around me also changes," she adds.
Samara Mehra began chanting about 10 years ago, when her daughter fell ill during the class 12 board exams. "Before I started chanting, I had heard that Soka Gakkai is very empowering," she says. Mehra chanted for her daughter everyday through the boards - about one month - and even during each exam. "I would sit outside the centre and chant for the three hours that the exam lasted. She did very well and scored 85% overall," says Mehra.
Believers chant individually, in one-on-one sessions, in groups with other people, and once a month hold meetings where they share their experiences with each other. "We meet and talk about how chanting has helped us overcome difficult situations. It's about spreading happiness and giving each other support, especially when somebody is going through a tough time," says Kapoor.
It's a way of living, not a religion , she adds, so the question of religious conversion doesn't arise. "Along with chanting, I also read Gayatri Mantra and Bhagvada Gita. There are many Sikhs, Hindus, and Muslims who also chant," says Kapoor.
Jyoti Kumar started chanting back in 2000, and over the years her faith has remained steady. "Chanting is about self-empowerment , and not about worshipping deities With chanting, I can feel the strength within me to overcome obstacles," she says.
Freelance stylist Mitali Anand had a similar ex perience. "I started chanting be cause of financial troubles, and al though they didn't disappear, gained the strength to take them in my stride," she says.
Many others neither chant nor meditate but consciously integrate the tenets of Buddhism - to refrain from lying, stealing and intoxica tion; to show compassion for other beings; to live a life of moderation - into their daily lives.
"Buddhism is growing as a faith in every stra tum, because people are looking for a way out from the stress they face It's not a blind faith - you have to reason before taking action - and I think people are drawn to it be cause it's based purely on logic," says Ashok Wangdi, trustee, Asoka Mission.
Priya Arora, 26, says Buddhism helped her cope with the pressures of her job as a marketing execu tive. "By the end of the day I would feel mentally and physically drained. A few months ago I start ed reading a simple book on the teachings of Buddha, and by fol lowing those principles I have be gun to feel more at peace than ever before," she says.
Times of India, 1st December 2011
To mark 100 years of Delhi, a nine-day food festival ‘Dilli ke Pakwan’ — from December 3 to 11 — will have century-old vending outlets in the Capital rustling up authentic street food and delicacies. The festival will have emporium hub, Baba Kharak Singh Marg, coming alive with food stalls, cultural programmes and traditional handicraft stalls
The nine-day fest organised by the Delhi Tourism promises to give Delhiites a taste of the intangible heritage of the city. The décor of the place is being meticulously planned, officials said. The emporiums and the trees dotting the street will all be lit up and as visitors walk in, 100 chairs — symbolic of the 100 years of Delhi— will be lined up at the entrance. Old film posters depicting scene from yesteryear Delhi will also be put up to create an old world charm
Managing Director, Delhi Tourism, GG Saxena told Newsline, “The traditional food of Delhi is inextricably linked to the intangible heritage of the city and in an effort to showcase this, the nine-day food festival will have some of the century-old outlets — mostly from Chandni Chowk — offering authentic street food and other delicacies unique to Delhi. On the occasion of Delhi’s centenary year, this festival will be a treat for tourists as well as Delhiites.
Delhi Tourism has been in talks with several vendors who have been specialists in street food and delicacies for over a century now. Some of the vendors who have confirmed to take part in the fest so far are Ghantewala halwai and Daulat ki chaat, two vendors from Paranthewali Gali, Bikanerwala. There will be stalls of traditional Indian fast food and Mughlai delicacies.
Stalls with traditional handicrafts will also be set up and artisans will hold demonstrations on pottery and bangle-making. Mehendi artists, sketch makers and artists who specialise in rice engravings will also set up stalls. The street will be abuzz with cultural shows, folk dance and music performances all day. Officials said that Wizcraft, an event management group, has been roped in to organise the shows
The celebrations, right before Delhi turns 100 on December 12, will help in creating awareness about Delhi’s heritage. “As Delhi prepares to apply for UNESCO’s Heritage City tag, such events will help in showcasing and celebrating the intangible heritage of the city,” Saxena sa
Indian Express, 1st December 2011
SGreater Flamingos, which fly thousands of miles from Siberia to breed in the warm marshes of the Khadir region in Kutch, are landing into a death trap. In the past 10 days, at least 400 of these graceful birds have been electrocuted by high tension cables near their breeding grounds.
D K Sharma, chief conservator of forests, admitted to at least 130 deaths, but locals and ornithologists have been recording much higher numbers. The flamingoes have landed in record numbers this year, with one estimate putting their strength at five lakh, the highest ever.
D K Sharma, chief conservator of forests, admitted to at least 130 deaths, but locals and ornithologists have been recording much higher numbers. The flamingoes have landed in record numbers this year, with one estimate putting their strength at five lakh, the highest ever.Experts said the deaths were taking place at night, when the birds disturbed by passing vehicles would fly straight into the wires. The 220-400 kilowatt cables can kill a human being instantly.
Bharat Jethawa, census coordinator for Asian Water Birds, said, "It is difficult to estimate the number of deaths, but I saw dead flamingos at three or four places during a recent visit."
This is the second instance of mass electrocution of the birds in Gujarat this year. In June, a large number of flamingoes were similarly killed in Bhavnagar. The dead birds became an easy meal for stray dogs in the area.
Experts said the problem had grown in recent years. In their recently published study titled 'Flamingo mortality due to collision with high tension electric wires in Gujarat', ornithologists Anika Tere and B M Parasharya mapped seven sites in Kutch, Bhavnagar and Jamnagar where high tension cables run close to flamingo sites.
Jugal Tiwari of the Centre for Desert and Ocean said birds of prey like harriers also contribute to the deaths by creating a flutter in flamingo colonies, leading to the birds flying into the cables.
"I have suggested that the cables should be insulated with rubber coating to protect the birds," Tiwari said.
The forest department has
written to the state
government's energy
department, asking for the
cables to be either
insulated or put underground
at places where they run
close to flamingo breeding
grounds.
Times of India, 1st December 2011
Jessica Douglas Home has curated an exhibition of pictures her grandmom had shot on her extensive travels through the Indian subcontinent. Ektaa Malikreports
It’s been an eventful 100 years since she was last here. She was 23 in the autumn of 1911 and at that age, she witnessed history being made. She was perhaps impressed by the regal splendour or the sheer magnanimity of the event happening in front of her, but she was hooked. As a result, she took copious notes, photographed what she thought was important, little knowing that she would be documenting history for generations to come
Lilah Wingfeild had travelled to Delhi for the Royal Durbar and witnessed George V being crowned the emperor of India, and saw the first makings of what we today see as “Lutyen’s Delhi”
What could have been a better homecoming for the young Anglo-Irish beauty — to be brought back to this land that captivated her, by her own granddaughter Jessica Douglas Home. Jessica, a known biographer and artist, has brought back the India that her grandmother saw. She has curated this exhibition using the pictures that Lilah Wingfeild had shot on her extensive travels through the Indian subcontinent. Jessica brings to us her own personal heritage which she inherited from her grandmother
Lilah’s pictures depict a Delhi that was just about to take off. The “Tented City” as she calls it, or better known as Camp, with its conical white tents, own system of telegraphs, railways and transport system. A miniature kingdom in the heart of a bustling empire. The canvas metropolis for 2,50,000 visitors but the city was soon dismantled after the King departed
The pictures bring to fore the two main attractions — the military might and the grandeur of the princely states. Both these things were known to be pledged in fealty to the crown. The manner in which royal military welcomed the King and Queen would have left any British Lord awed. The week-long preliminary festivities took an almost climactic turn on December 12, the day when the King was crowned as the Emperor of India. The royal pavilion flanked by soldiers from every possible corps of India
The exhibition also showcases the various other places that Lilah had travelled to. It’s a different India. An India where she sat on the ground near Khyber Pass and had her meals. The rough terrain some how poetically complementing the fair maiden
The Imperial Hotel in New
Delhi serves as the perfect
place to stage this “the
second Homecoming” for Lilah
Wingfeild. With its rich
historical past and regal
surroundings, Lilah would be
happy to be back here, with
her granddaughter for
company
The Pioneer, 1st December 2011
Lilah Wingfield, 23, an Earl’s daughter arrived in Delhi in late November 1911 to attend the Royal Durbar to mark the shifting of the Capital of British India from Calcutta to Delhi.
She took pictures with her Kodak — on display at The Imperial till Thursday — of 13-year-old boysrecently made Maharajas, staid British royals, ceremonial elephants, a 25-square-mile Tent City, monumental ruins, and, most of all, the occasion that it gave Delhi’s new masters to size up their subjects. And vice versa
The young aristocrat, as the pictures show, did the royal trail well. Her favourite photograph “was the one she took of the 13-year-old Maharaja Sumer of Jodhpur in his carriage during the State Entry — 7th December 1911. They had become friends on the ship to India — he waved to her from his carriage,” says her granddaughter and artist Jessica Douglas-Home, who is in Delhi for the centenary celebration
The princesses were at that
time off-bounds, “but she
did become a good friend of
the Begum of Bhopal”. The
city Lilah saw has changed,
but places like the Chandni
Chowk, notes Douglas-Home
retain the similarity. “But
many of the ancient palaces,
monuments, beautiful temples
have been blocked by new
housing.”
Hindustan Times, 1st December 2011
Chief Election Commissioner Dr. S. Y. Quraishi narrates the story of Old Delhi at a lecture organised by INTACH
“Kanmailiya”, “saqqa”, “tongawallah”, “warq beaters” and calligraphy are words slowly fading away from the dictionary of Delhi, but Purani Dilli-wallasstill remember how these and several other things were an integral part of the traditions of Old Delhi
ETIQUETT
“Eating with a spoon was
looked down upon, and not
considered good etiquette.
In fact, people would not
wipe their hands after
washing them because it was
believed that impurities
from the cloth would enter
the food,” said Chief
Election Commissioner S. Y.
Quraishi, sharing similar
existing and forgotten
traditions of Old Delhi
He was speaking at a public lecture on “Old Delhi: Living Traditions” organised by the Indian National Trust for Art and Cultural Heritage (INTACH) as part of its campaign for nomination of Delhi to UNESCO's list of World Heritage cities. Dr. Quraishi, whose family has been living in Delhi for around 500 years, narrated the story of Delhi as a “personal account”. He spoke about traditions and practices that have been preserved by the city despite the changes in its appearance
He spoke about the markets, food, culture, language, professions and mingling of cultures that is still evident in Shahjahanabad, Nizamuddin and Mehrauli
Beginning with the marketplaces of Old Delhi, he said that most continue to deal in the same wares as they did years ago. “Dariba was a real scene of culture, not just a market…Khari Baoli was and still is the largest wholesale spice market in Asia, Chawri Bazar is for wholesale paper, Darya Ganj for medical equipment and book publishing, Urdu Bazar is famous for its street food, Nai Sarak for books and stationery, even though some sari trading shops have come up in recent times,” said Dr. Quraishi
He also mentioned the fading and some extinct traditions like “saqqa”, who would distribute cool water in sheepskin, “kanmailiya” or ear cleaner, who was extremely important for travellers who would want their ears cleaned of dust and sand accumulated along the way
“Poetry was a full time profession,” said Dr. Quraishi, reciting poetry of greats like Mir Taqi Mir and Ghalib, who belonged to Delhi. “Poetry was, in fact, not confined only to the poets. Hawkers, “saqqa”, “dhobi”, everyone indulged in some form of poetry. More importantly, it was not a preserve of the Muslims alone,” he added. He also spoke about the Urdu language, which was an integral part of the culture of the city
Dr. Quraishi also brought out the “mingling and closeness of communities” in Old Delhi. “Monuments of five religions stand shoulder in Old Delhi,” he said. The Digambar Jain Temple, which is the “oldest Jain temple in Delhi”, the Gauri Shankar Temple, Sis Ganj Gurdwara, Sunehri Masjid and the Central Baptist Church, are testimony to unity that has existed in the city since centuries
DIVERSE FESTIVAL
The diverse festivals
celebrated in the Walled
City, and the famous Old
Delhi food which is still
sought after, was also
mentioned. Dr. Quraishi
agreed that the Delhi Metro
had helped put Old Delhi
back on the culture map of
Delhi, especially the
variety of food available in
the by-lanes
He also spoke about the
“tehzeeb” and culture that
people took pride in.
“The“ugaldaan”, “paandaan”
or spittoon, which people
carried with them were a far
cry from the present day
situation, where every
several walls in the city
seem to be splashed with
“paan” stains,” he added.
The CEC then spoke about the
sports and recreational
activities that Old
Delhi-wallahs indulged in,
some of which are still
practised, while others
like“chaupar”, animal
fights, “kabootarbaazi”
(pigeon fighting) are slowly
dying out
He ended the talk by taking
the audience through
pictures of the Anglo-Arabic
School where he had studied,
the original building of St.
Stephen's College, the
Hardayal Library (which was
renamed from Hardinge
Library), Ghalib's house in
Ballimaran and Old Delhi
railway station, which
despite being an
architectural “eyesore”, is
still an essential part of
Old Delhi
The Hindu, 1st December 2011
The holy city of Amritsar (meaning pond of nectar), derived its name from the sarovar that surrounds the beautiful Golden Temple.
The town, which can undoubtedly be mistaken for a dusty small city by first-time visitors, is amongst the most popular pilgrim centres for Sikhs. Not only does it attract the local Indian travellers but it is certainly a part of the ‘places to visit’ list of foreign tourists also.
The sense of purity that one experiences inside the gurudwara premises is unforgettable. The magnificent Golden Temple and other gurudwaras situated in various corners of this small town gives it an apt name — Guru ki nagari.
This historic city was once known as Ramdaspur after the name of the fourth Sikh Guru who founded the city. In 1947, after the Partition, the state of Punjab was one of the worst hit areas and was divided into parts out of which few went to Pakistan and the rest remained with India making Amritsar a border city.
Amritsar is a mix of old heritage and recently developed township areas. As soon as the name of the city comes into one’s mind, what people are reminded of is the world heritage site of Harminder Sahib. The clean water, the pure surroundings and the beautiful carvings on the top of the main hall are most attractive features of the gurudwara.
Though the Golden Temple is certainly the most striking feature for the tourists, a first-time visitor can explore many other interesting things too.
Amritsar is a good idea for a weekend getaway as it is easily accessible both by railways and airway. You just need a couple of days and you can surely see new places, eat traditional Punjabi dhaba cuisine and shop a lot.
Apart from Harminder Sahib, the other sacred place in the city is Mata ka Mandir, a must-visit for tourists seeking religious experiences. This place has small tunnels and caves that one needs to go through to reach the main place of worship. It is believed that women who want to get pregnant come here to pray for their future.
The other important temple is the Durgiana temple named after goddess Durga and its structure is similar to the Golden Temple. Some people even call it a replica of the Sikh gurudwara.
A place of historical and patriotic interest is the Jallianwala Bagh. The massacre hit park looks like just another garden but has a lot of patriotic value. The wall with bullet marks, the well where people jumped to save their lives, the museum and memorial offer glimpses of the struggle that our forfathers went through to give us a free country.
Another important place that tourists love is the Indo-Pak Wagah border. It is just about 5 km from Attari, which is the last Indian station for the Samjhauta Express. This is the main border between the two countries and is just about a few kilometres from the main city. Hired taxis take passengers to the border in the evening when a special drill takes place at sunset by the border guards of both countries. People from both sides come to see the drill and the atmosphere is filled with patriotism. The retreat ceremony at the border is a must watch.
Amritsar is a combination of good food, great tourist places and not to forget, traditional Punjabi outfits and juttis. A weekend in the city can surely be a rejuvenating break.
The Asian Age, 2nd Dec 2011
The rare book, Views in the Himala Mountains, that captures the legendary James Baillie Fraser's expedition to become the first ever European to reach the Gangotri, has now been reproduced in its entirety. By Ektaa Malik
James went on to be the first ever European to cross the Jumna and the Bhagirathi Valleys and reach the Gangotri — the legendary source of the Ganges, very mythical in its appeal.
Mountains have a sense of comfort about them. They stand sturdy, solid to the touch. They stand tall conversing with the skies, in defiant splendour. In India, their importance is of epic proportions. Many peaks in the Himalayan Range are said to be the abode of the gods. It’s no wonder that many have tried to scale these peaks, enchanted by the challenge or just fascinated by the journey.
Mountains have a sense of comfort about them. They stand sturdy, solid to the touch. They stand tall conversing with the skies, in defiant splendour. In India, their importance is of epic proportions. Many peaks in the Himalayan Range are said to be the abode of the gods. It’s no wonder that many have tried to scale these peaks, enchanted by the challenge or just fascinated by the journey.
It was the year 1815 when two brothers set out to explore these stately environs. James Baillie Fraser hailed from Scotland, and after trying his hand unsuccessfully at trade in Guyana, he came to India. He tried business here but finally gave in to wander lust, his true calling. He travelled to Delhi, to meet his brother William, whom he had not met for 16 years. At that time, William Fraser had been appointed a political agent with the British Forces for the war with the Ghurkhas.
After the War ended the two brothers embarked on a sojourn, disguised, wearing the clothes of the local Ghurkhas to unveil the world of the snow capped peaks and find out where the mighty Ganges originated from. In the middle of the expedition, William was called back for his official duties. But James carried on. He travelled with his sketchbook in hand, capturing the changing topography. The acute observations made by James Frazer later served to be the stepping stones to cartography in Asia.
The paintings and sketches of James Frazer are life like in detail. James went on to be the first ever European to cross the Jumna and the Bhagirathi Valleys and reach the Gangotri — the legendary source of the Ganges, very mythical in its appeal. His paintings and sketches recreate the mystique that’s tantamount to the Himalayas. The illustrations succeed in transporting one back almost 250 years.
The paintings not just render a vivid sight of mountain scenery, but also showcase glimpses of mountain life and culture prevalent in the Himalayan region. A lone semi clad ascetic stands on the banks of a river, his hands folded as he pays his respects to the life giving river. The colours range from the golden red hue of the sky at sunrise, to the pearly blue of a gurgling stream. Every aquatint has a fragile, ethereal feel to it. Maybe it is, for the world that existed 200 ago is now no longer present.
These extensive travels and explorations then resulted in the glorious volume titled Views in the Himala Mountains published in the year 1820 by Rodwell and Martin, London. This volume contained 20 of the most captivating hand coloured engravings by James Fazer and W Havell, an artist from Calcutta who was roped in by Frazer to engrave the illustrations for the book. The book is now a collectible item, and till date remains one of the most noteworthy works to be ever done on the Himalayas.
Views in the Himala Mountains is now reproduced in its entirety, in the original format with additional text from Robert Hutchinson, an expert on the said region. While a foreword comes from William Dalrymple.
The book is now available again, and was launched at the Imperial Hotel by Dr. Karan Singh in the National Capital. Speaking at the launch, William Dalrymple highlighted the relationship that the two brothers had with India. “They broke all stereotypes of colonial rule in India. William was a scholar of Persian, and a great friend of Ghalib’s. James painted India as he saw it, and fell in love with it. Both the brothers did not eat meat, and did not drink alcohol; such was the impact of this country and culture on them,” says the celebrated author.
Elaborating on the contribution of the Frazer Brothers, Robert Hutchinson says “The two brothers made the discovery of Gangotri, and all they had in the name of equipment was a small compass. The works of James Frazer set the tone for the further explorations Indian temples. It’s Frazer who first describe Lakhamandal and the Temple of Bheem in his works. James’s amateurism was perfectly accurate .The sketches are a precise account of his many travels”.
Some of these paintings have been a part of the rich heritage collection that is present in the Imperial Hotel. These paintings are now also part of the reproduced volume of the book. The works of James Baillie Frazer are still on display at The Imperial adding to its rich aura that’s seeped in history.
The Pioneer, 2nd Dec 2011
At first glance, a pork-fat eating contest and a vintage World War II motor rally do not seem to belong together. But visit Nagaland during the first week of December, and you might just catch all this and more at the ongoing 11th edition of the annual Hornbill festival at the Kisama village near Kohima.
The weeklong festival kicked off on Thursday with all the 16 tribes of the state coming together to showcase their art and culture. A new attraction to this year's edition is the Literature Festival, which will feature books on Nagaland and books written by Nagas. The festival is named after a bird that is revered by the Naga community as a whole.
With the lifting of tourist restrictions of Protected Area Permit this year, more tourists are expected to visit the insurgency-hit state. The festival budget too was increased by Rs.50 lakhs and is now Rs. 2 crore. "We have seen a rise of about 10% in the number of tourists we get every year. Last year we had more than 10,000 tourists during the Hornbill week," says I. Himato Zhimomi, commissioner and secretary, Nagaland.
An average seven events every day cover a range of activities like greased-pole climbing competitions, chilli-eating contests, cultural performances, rock concerts and also a film festival. A "Night-Bazaar" concludes the events of each day. "Morungs" or dormitories/hostels of each tribe have set up enclosures and stalls with houses and machaans made of bamboo in the Kisama village - each reflecting the style of living of that tribe.
The Times of India, 2nd Dec 2011
The Cabinet Committee on Economic Affairs on Thursday gave the green signal to the proposed third phase of cleaning the 22-km stretch of Yamuna river passing through Delhi. The Japan International Cooperation Agency (JICA)-assisted Yamuna Action Plan (YAP) Phase III project in Delhi was approved under the Centrally sponsored scheme of National River Conservation Plan at an estimated cost of Rs 1,656 crore.
The project will be implemented on 85:15 cost sharing basis between the Government of India and the Government of NCT of Delhi for a period of 7 years. Under the YAP III, it is proposed to rehabilitate the damaged trunk sewers to maximise utilisation of the available sewage treatment capacity with the Delhi Jal Board (DJB) and modernise its Sewage Treatment Plants (STPs) in three catchment areas of Delhi, namely Okhla, Kondli and Rithala.
“The project includes construction of a new state-of-the-art STP in place of old 136 MLD STP at Okhla and equip them with tertiary-level treatment facilities to achieve treated effluent quality of 10 mg/1 for Biochemical Oxygen Demand (BOD) and Total Suspended Solids (TSS) so as to improve the water quality of river Yamuna,” a statement issued by the Government said on Thursday. The project will be implemented by the DJB under the supervision of the Department of Urban Development, Delhi government. The Indian Express, 2nd Dec 2011
Kazhugumalai, rife with Jain sculptures, is a treasured document to the existence of an ancient unique culture. Shubashree Desikan
It is not every day that you get a chance to spend a leisurely afternoon in a place steeped in history, art, architecture and lore.
My visit to Kazhugumalai with a group of artists was one such rare, prized coming together of the above factors. Kazhugumalai is not more than 25 km from Kovilpatti in Thoothukudi district of Tamil Nadu. The object of focus in this town is a rocky hill with a large number of Jain sculptures on top and an eighth century Pandya temple, Vettuvankoil, situated halfway up the hill.
At the approach to the hill was a bridge over a canal. During the monsoon, water would flow over the bridge and the whole area would be green, but that day, in September, the sun was gloriously up and the smooth hill glowed, striped and daunting like rock tigers. Steep steps had been cut that went right up to the top. We took the other, circuitous route that went first to Vettuvankovil and then sloped more gently upwards.
Pandya architectureA careful study of the vimana shows many differences. Shiva is shown playing an udukkai or drum, and not with a veena as in the former. Perumal, or Vishnu, is shown with Chandra and Surya on either side, with the latter accompanied by the consorts. A traditional pattern is followed with respect to the direction faced by these gods, for instance Shiva faces east. Also, the three-tier structure, with eight sculptures in the first tier is typical of Pandya architecture. The Pillayarpatti temple and the one at Tirupparankundram are Pandya temples built in this style.
There is a story told of a father and son, sculptors working on this temple. The father was sculpting the rock at the top, while the son who was sitting at the bottom of the hill, listened to the sound of the chisel travelling downwards and following it, made a sculpture that was of extraordinary beauty.
Lore has it that the father slew the son in a fit of jealousy, thereby giving the temple its name, Vettuvankovil, “temple of the one who cut”. Bloodcurdling, but that is the way of folklore.
We then followed the pathway to the top of the hill where a beautiful banyan tree casts its shadow over a row of Jain tirtankaras, frozen in time.
Setting a date on sculptures is a very tricky job and depends much on the interpretation of history. A deep insight into the culture and times is required. According to Pa Ramachandran, sculptor and scholar in Asiatic studies, the Kazhugumalai Jain sculptures must have been sculpted during 8-10 century CE. The statues of Parsvanatha and Adinatha, which are similar to the work in Vettuvankovil, must have been built during the time of Pandya ruler Parantaka Nedunjadaiyan in the eighth century and the rest, over a period of time in the ninth and tenth centuries, during the time of Parantaka Viranarayanan.
Kazhugumalai is also important because it holds many inscriptions that shed light on the prevalence of Jainism in the Pandya country. There is a belief that Jainism was rooted out from the Tamil country in the sixth century by Saivism and was revived much later on by the digamber saints who came from North India. However, the Kazhugumalai sculptures bear evidence that it continued to exist in the Pandya regions in the 8th to 10th centuries.
Religious harmony
The proximity and diversity
of the Jain sculptures and
Vettuvankovil show that the
two religions may have
coexisted, while still not
interfering with each other.
Also, the indigenous and
independent nature of this
religion is evidenced by
inscriptions that state that
there were many women
teachers and saints. This is
not practice in the form
which came from the North at
a later period. So the
Kazhugumalai site is a
treasured historical
document to the existence of
a whole unique culture.
We spent about four hours
there. A family came to pray
at the Ayyanar temple
erected there. As we feasted
on ragi stew, which one of
our friends had brought,
using the fallen leaves of
the banyan as plates, the
family collected some
firewood and made up a stove
on which they cooked pongal
to offer their deity. It was
an experience that would
stay in our minds until much
later.
The Hindu, 4th Dec 2011
On December 10,1934, unfamiliar patterns, hues and styles of Indian art met the condescending eyes of the West for the first time at the London Art Exhibition at New Burlington Galleries, with around 500 works by artists like VS Adurkar and Mukul Dey, among others. “Hindu art,” noted one British art critic, “is almost wholly conventional in form and expression and beautiful in spirit, but it naturally became wearisome to Western eyes by repetition, sentimentality, distortion of form and monotonous colour.” Typical of that era, the patronising attitude of the West helped little. The exhibition, nevertheless, made a significant mark in the history of Britain. “The arrival of Indian art in Britain showed that Indian art could be seen from an aesthetic point of view, rather than simply as an anthropological study,” points out Susheila Nasta, principal investigator of the extensively researched project “Beyond the Frame: India in Britain, 1858-1950”, that focuses on the long, yet little-known, history of India’sontribution to the UK, in the form of art, sports, politics, literature, army and so on.
A collaborative effort of the British Council, UK’s The Open University and National Archives of India, “Beyond the Frame” is a compilation of articles, photographs and letters. “The project centers around socio-political, cultural and intellectual contributions that Indians made to Britain during this period, which is also known for the largest Asian migration to Britain,” says Nasta. Penny Brook, Lead Curator of the India Office Records in London, adds, “This is possibly the first time that material from National Archives of India and British Library has been compiled.” The display in the exhibition is divided into sections like ‘arts and intellectual life’, ‘sports’ and ‘activism and politics’, among others. While one can see heavy influences of intricate art of Gwalior, Khajuraho and Konarak in the1910-11 drawings of the British sculptor Jacob Epstein, information on Indians occupying high posts in Britain is also available in form of official records and photographs. Twenty-four-year-old Abdul Karim, for instance, was Queen Victoria’s secretary and adviser. The early 1920s saw Indian dancer Uday Shankar — inspired by Ajanta caves for his performances — partner with Russian ballerina Anna Pavlova at the Royal Opera House in London. British kitchen also saw significant influences, especially through Mulk Raj Anand’s book Curries and other Indian dishes (1932), and BBC radio’s Indian broadcaster, Venu Chitale, who offered Indian cookery lessons. “The fact that Indians brought with them multiple visions of modernity is interesting,” says Nasta. She points out that several discoveries were made while researching for the exhibition. When English poet, Wilfred Owen died in 1918, tucked in his pocket was a paper penned with verses of Rabindranath Tagore’s Geetanjali. The page is now on display at the British Council.
The exhibition at the British Council and National Archives is on till December 5 and 30, respectively.
The Indian Express, 4th Dec 2011
Bouncing in an auto-scooter on the pot-holed roads of the purana shahar of Hyderabad, inhaling thick black exhaust fumes while arguing with the paan-spitting driver about what he wanted to charge, I wondered: what would bring a firangi back, again and again and again, to this place?
Jean-Baptiste Tavernier (1605-89) is a little different from the other firangis I have written about in this series. He was a firangi in the literal sense – a French visitor to India. But unlike Thomas Coryate, Augustin Hunarmand, or Thomas Stephens, he didn’t die here. What he did do, however, was to keep coming back, as the title of his celebrated travel narrative The Six Voyages of Jean-Baptiste Tavernier (1676) makes clear. In particular, he kept coming back to Golconda, the kingdom in the Deccan ruled by the Qutb Shahi dynasty. I visited Hyderabad, the Golconda capital founded by Muhammad Quli Qutb Shah in 1591, to find out why.
Like Tavernier, I am a serial visitor to India. But in an age of jet airliners, luxury hotels, and air-conditioned cars, travel means for me something quite different from what it meant for Tavernier. We tend to associate travel with a welcome respite from the rigours of work. But the original meaning of “travel,” derived from “travail” and the French verb “travailler” (to work), tells a different story.
In the seventeenth century, one had to work particularly hard – and at substantial risk to one’s life – to reach India from Europe. If you took the long sea route (as did Stephens), you faced the possibility of shipwreck, piracy, and scurvy. If you travelled overland on the Silk Route (as did Coryate and Hunarmand), you were likely to encounter bandits and all manner of deadly illnesses. And in India itself, you had to reckon with intense heat on top of everything else. To travel once from Europe to India, and live to tell the tale, meant you were lucky. To travel half a dozen times meant you were mad – or driven by a passion bordering on love.
Jean-Baptiste Tavernier caught the travel bug early: he probably inherited it from his father, a Protestant refugee from Antwerp who mesmerised his son with absorbing tales about faraway lands. In his teens, Tavernier roamed around Europe, but he hungered to see more exotic places. Between 1631 and 1633, he journeyed to Asia, getting only as far as Isfahan in Persia before returning to Paris. His next journey was from 1638 until 1643, during which he visited Golconda for the first time. Upon returning to France, he stayed only a few months. His third voyage, from 1643 to 1649, took him all the way to Java, with lengthy stays again in Golconda. His subsequent trips (1651-55, 1657-62 and 1664-68) also featured Golconda prominently in their itineraries.
The author donned Hyderabadi aristocratic attire for a photo-op at the Chowmahalla Palace. Tavernier would have approved
So what kept bringing Tavernier back to the Deccan?
The obvious answer is heera: diamonds. Golconda was famous for its diamond mines; virtually every major diamond at the time – including the Koh-i-Noor – is supposed to have come from them. The mines may be fallow now, but to this day Hyderabad remains a clearing house for precious jewels and pearls, available in the throng of bangle stores in the old city’s Laad Bazaar. Tavernier was fascinated by the size of the Golconda diamonds, which he describes at length in his travel narrative. The profit motive certainly loomed large for him: the money he made from selling Golconda diamonds to both Mughal and European kings not only helped bankroll his ourneys but also made him fabulously wealthy. He was, by the 1660s, rich enough to buy a castle in Switzerland, and the French King Louis appointed him a baron.
Yet the prospect of financial gain was clearly not the only reason that Tavernier kept coming back to Golconda. With the capital he amassed, he could have easily paid middle-men to do the dangerous work of travelling to India and purchasing diamonds. Something else must have kept tugging him back. A quick look at his biography suggests another possibility: in the 1660s, by which time Tavernier was in his late fifties, he was still a bachelor, against the will of his family. Indeed, one wonders if the short durations of his stays at “home” in Paris were prompted by family pressure on him to marry; every time a potential bride was brought for his inspection, he seems to have been on the next boat or caravan to India. Did business take precedence over romance? Or did he have a love in Golconda?
Tavernier doesn’t mention love in his writings. But he demonstrates a surprising amount of knowledge about the prostitutes and courtesans of Hyderabad. He notes, without any hint of moral condemnation, that the city boasts an unusually high number of “public women” – 20,000 by his reckoning. And he is impressed by how they ply their trade in concert with toddy-retailers, who get potential customers in the mood for love. At first glance, the Hyderabad of 2011 could not be more different. In this city where Shi’a is the dominant Muslim sect, there are few traces of “public women.” But there are countless women in public: although many are clad in full black chador and hijab, they shop unfettered in the streets of the old city. To this extent, they are in the tradition of their seventeenth-century ancestors, who – as another French visitor, Jean de Thevenot, observed in 1666 – moved through town with “great Liberty.” Maybe Tavernier was attracted, temperamentally and even sexually, to this liberty.
Item girl? In an extraordinary painting by Nicolas de Largillère, Tavernier looks more like a languorous Bollywood item girl than a rugged traveller
Or maybe it wasn’t Hyderabad’s women but its men who attracted him. Tavernier makes a point of saying that “All the people of GOLCONDA, both men and women, are well proportioned, of good stature, and of fair countenance.” This is no mere ethnographic observation: he seems to have spent a lot of time looking at Indian men, their bodies, and how they comported themselves. He was particularly fascinated by the sumptuous dress of rich Indian gentlemen; after receiving from a Mughal aristocrat a gift of khil’at (clothes as a token of imperial favour), he insisted on wearing turban and flowing robes everywhere he went – as depicted by Nicolas de Largillère in an extraordinary painting where Tavernier looks more like a languorous Bollywood item girl than a rugged traveller. With my travelling companion, I too donned Hyderabadi aristocratic attire for a photo-op at the Chowmahalla Palace (the former abode of the Nizams). Tavernier would surely have approved. And asked me where I got my necklaces.
Tavernier did finally marry, between journeys in 1663. But within a year he had fled for yet another trip to India. Whether or not he had another love interest in Golconda, he seems by this time to have fallen deeply in love with its culture, including its food. He praises in particular a Hyderabadi whitefish that he calls “smelt.” I wasn’t able to identify what it was, but I feasted at the Jewel of Nizam restaurant on a tasty dum ki machli, its fish seasoned to perfection and accompanied by a dessert of khubani ka meetha (sweet stewed apricots) and supaari.
Tavernier was equally starry-eyed about the design of Golconda’s cities. What we now call the old city of Hyderabad was then still a new metropolis; Tavernier marvelled at the famous Charminar in the city centre as well as Hyderabad’s wide boulevards and bridges, which probably looked much more impressive a mere fifty years after their construction than they do today. He was also dazzled – as was I – by the old Golconda fort, the huge walled hill-city hewn from the granite boulders that everywhere dominate the Deccan landscape. First built in the thirteenth century, it was substantially upgraded by the Qutb Shahi rulers before its destruction in 1687 by Aurangzeb. Even in its current ruined state, it is a haunting wonder.
The culture of Golconda owed much to the rule of the Qutb Shahis. Indeed, Tavernier couldn’t have felt as comfortable as he did in Hyderabad without the unique cosmopolitan world the Qutb Shahis had fostered there. Golconda’s immensely cultured ruling dynasty was of Persian origin, blended with Arab and Turkish – a heritage reflected in the distinctly western Asian designs, so different from Mughal architecture, of the Qutb Shahis’ magnificent tombs next to Golconda Fort. And the Qutb Shahis also invited, for purposes of trade, huge numbers of Europeans into Hyderabad. As Thevenot wrote, “there are many Franks in this city,” and by this he meant firangis of many nations: Portugal, Holland, and England as well as France. Vestiges of Golconda’s cosmopolitan culture remain in modern Hyderabad where signs are written in four languages – Telugu, Urdu, Hindi and English.
TEven in the days before Tavernier’s death in 1689, at the ripe age of 84, he was probably still dreaming of Golconda. The heera-wallah died in Russia, on one last expedition; rumour has it he was trying to make his way back to India.
The Hindustan Times, 4th Dec 2011
The 10-odd monuments scattered inside the Delhi Golf Club are like pieces of one puzzle. To begin with they are mostly out of bounds and one needs special permission from the Club authorities to enter the premises. Of course knowing a member helps, and this also means that not just tourists, even many Delhiites are unaware of the existence of these medieval structures. Also, the golf course is perhaps the only site where one can see the remains of all the seven cities of Delhi. Most of these monuments are grand but anonymous tombs — indicating gaps in the documentation of the city’s architectural history.
The only monument where you don’t need permission is the Lal Bangla—a set of two tombs built in red sandstone right at the entrance of the Club and visible from the flyover. Built in 1779-80, these Late Mughal structures have square rooms at their centre, smaller square rooms at diagonals with oblong halls between them, and domes at the centre of square roofs. The one near the entrance seems older with a square room on a raised platform. Both have the layout of larger tombs around central chamber but are small in size. Nearby is the Late Mughal double storey gateway with a central pavilion and domed chhatris.
There’s a debate regarding who lies buried in Lal Bangla. One possibility is Lal Kunwar, the wife of Aurangzeb’s grandson Jahandar Shah who ruled between 1712 and 1713. The other is that the two graves inside are those of Lal Kunwar, the mother of Shah Alam II (1759-1806), and daughter, Begum Jahan. The mystery behind the identity of the royal lady has remained a puzzle for the last two centuries. Visible from the clubhouse is Sayyed Abid’s tomb with octagonal exterior and square interior. The person buried inside was a companion of one of Jahangir’s generals, Khan-e-Dauran Khwaja Sabir Nusrat. The tomb was built in 1626-27. Another octagonal plan tomb— an 18th century one—is also visible from the Archbishop Makarios Marg. Known as the Bagichi tomb with towers, chhatris, arches with vaults, red and crème interiors and inside dome decorated in geometric patterns, this is a unique structure where chhatris are imposed on towers. There’s also a brick masonry mosque near this tomb.
Of all the various
ruins—from Tughlaq to Mughal
era—the one that stands out
is the Barakhamba. A Tughlaq
tomb with unnamed grave, it
was built in the 1450s. It
is perhaps the only medieval
monument that has central
bay, vaulted bays with solid
monolithic columns, and
sloping pillars that support
lofty arches.
The Indian Express, 4th Dec 2011
From the Phoenix Boat Jetty in Port Blair, a boat ferried us to Ross Island, the erstwhile administrative capital of the British in the Andaman and Nicobar Islands. The island conjured up gory visions of the dreaded kalapani punishment meted out to convicts by British rulers in pre-Independent India
A penal settlement was established on the island where hardcore criminals were thrown alongside political prisoners and freedom fighters. One could imagine the times when chained prisoners were compelled to do hard, menial labour. Some of them committed suicide due to inhuman treatment meted out by the then superintendent.
Escorting us around, our guide explained to us how convicts were left in the open, under the trees, with the surrounding dark sea and sky for company. Thus, the island was known as Kalapani or black water punishment.
The place lost some of its prominence after the Cellular Jail came up at Port Blair, but it continued to be a centre of British power until the Japanese occupied it in 1942, during the Second World War. When the Japanese forces vacated Ross Island in 1945, it was re-occupied by the British and the penal settlement was abolished. In the course of its chequered history, Ross Island suffered during the Japanese occupation and the earthquake of 1941. Currently, the island, with its gruesome history, is a distinctly eerie and rather sad place, but worth a visit.
It was once British India’s sentinel in the Bay of Bengal, originally developed under the British as the residence of the chief commissioner. It is named after Captain Daniel Ross, who was the marine surveyor of the Indian Navy from 1825 to 1840. At the entrance, I saw concrete bunkers, a legacy of the Japanese who had occupied it during the Second World War. The crumbling buildings and fast growing tropical forests are what greet visitors to Ross Island. I spotted chital (spotted deer) and peacocks gamboling amidst the foliage and a few darted across our path. They were introduced to these islands almost a century ago by forester Sir Henry Farrington.
Roaming amidst the crumbling colonial splendour of the island was a sheer delight. I was transported into a strange world of ramshackle edifices overtaken by dense tropical foliage. It was difficult to spot a single, undamaged structure on this 200 acre island. Above all, every building and wall supported a huge tree, its roots forming intricate patterns on the walls. A few small blackboards bearing cryptic signs such as ‘Printing Press’, ‘Barracks’, ‘Club’ indicated what the buildings had originally served as.
Huge boilers were lying around, rusting in the spray of the sea. The roof of the laundry had fallen in and the walls of the shop run by an Indian were covered by spreading roots of wild trees.
A coconut palm grove occupies the once fashionable tennis court, adjacent to the ‘Club’. I saw small blackboards along the footpath indicating the invisible landmarks. I chanced upon a derelict building with an indication outside — ‘Club House’ and later on a swimming pool area, now all covered with moss, weeds and undergrowth. Above all, most of the buildings and walls supported enormous trees, its roots forming intricate patterns on the walls. You can distinctly make out the ballrooms and the swimming pools. The renovated ‘Bakery’ was once used to offer loaves, buns, cakes, croissants and many other delicacies of those times.
Strolling around the island, I discovered that even in the early 19th century, the British knew how to live life well. A winding path and steps led us to the old hospital, and the barracks, the churches, the magazines, residences, gardens, the officer’s club, and the non-commissioned officer’s mess. I could see the last glimpses of Imperial grandeur in the Italian tiled courtyard within the dilapidated chief commissioner’s residence, which was patterned on Windsor Castle.
South of it, on a hilltop, stand the crumbling remains of an Anglican church which has survived the onslaught of tropical creepers and vines. This Presbyterian Church was built of stone and the windows had frames made of Burma Teak. The glass panes behind the altar were made of beautifully etched stained glass from Italy. The quality of the wood was so superior that it survived the vagaries of the weather for over 100 years. A small structure south of the church was built to accommodate the parsonage. Some of the grave sites are still visible, haunted with memories of babies born to die in a few days.
The island is officially
still under the jurisdiction
of the Indian Navy. A small
museum of the Indian Navy,
Smritika, has a good
collection of old records
and brings alive the past of
the hoary island. The small
museum by the cafeteria has
interesting old photos. The
island is open from dawn to
dusk, except on Wednesdays.
There are ferry services
from Phoenix Bay.
The Deccan Herald, 4th Dec 2011
As Delhi completes 100 years as the national capital this December 12, the art fraternity celebrates the centenary and commemorates the undying spirit of Delhi with an exhibition titled “Celebrating 100 years of Delhi” starting from December 9 at Hotel Claridges, Surajkund.
The exhibition evokes nostalgic memories and represents the cultural heritage of Delhi with intaglio prints, pen and ink drawings and paintings by artists including Aruna Vasudev, Alka Raguvanshi, Tejinder Khanda, Vikram Kalra.
“With such an extended history, Delhi can claim to be the longest serving capital in the world. The whole idea is to give a magnificent visual treat to the younger generation on how Delhi came into being,” says curator Kiran K. Mohan.
The exhibition also showcases realistic artworks of a few contemporary artists who have made Delhi their home. Basically from Amritsar, artist Tejinder Kanda shares his 22 years’ connection with the city through his paintings. “My works depict the lanes of Paharganj. I find these old lanes, havelis with Mughal style windows and doors very fascinating. It’s the real India, which has kept its old traditional values, charm and energy intact.”
Seconds artist Vikram Kalra, whose pen and ink sketches series titled, ‘Shahjahanbad — a journey through Old Delhi’, has drawings of Chandni Chowk, old monuments and life around it. “I have always been inspired by Mughal architecture. I imbibed this from my father. We used to go to old Delhi together. My artworks aim to make people aware about the city’s rich culture and heritage,” he sums up.
The exhibition is on till
December 23
The Asian Age, 5th Dec 2011
Preserving the rich archaeological and cultural heritage of Dogra rulers in Jammu and Kashmir is proving to be a daunting task for the Omar Abdullah-led coalition Government.
Despite submitting detailed project reports (DPR) prepared by INTACH- the leading consultants in the field of art and cultural heritage — to the Indian Government, the State Government has nothing much to boast of in its report card.
Official sources said, “Against the projected demand of approximately Rs 300 crore required for Mubarak Mandi Heritage complex till date the Centre has released a paltry sum of Rs 3 crore against sanctioned amount of Rs 4.37 crore to carry our renovation and restoration work of High Court Complex and Army headquarter building.
Mubarak Mandi heritage complex houses Royal palaces of Dogra rulers and heritage buildings built by Maharaja Gulab Singh, Ranbir Singh,Pratap Singh and Hari Singh. The oldest building in the royal complex dates back to 1824.
After 1947 the complex was utilised by the State Government for housing Government offices, secretariat buildings and High Court complex.
The royal buildings were vacated after they were declared unsafe for public use. Since then these buildings were facing the complete neglect by the successive State Governments as none conceived a conservation project to restore its glory.
The massive earthquake on October 8, 2005 also devastated portion of the royal buildings and alarmed the State Government authorities to devise a comprehensive conservation project.
After lot of activism and public pressure the State Government had set up a Mubarak Mandi Heritage Society (MMJHS) in 2006 with the sole objective of restoring the pristine grandeur of royal buildings.
Ironically, the heritage society, located in one of the unsafe building is yet to find a safe accommodation for itself to carry out its day-to-day activities.
The Executive Director of the Mubarak Mandi Jammu Heritage Society, AK Sharma, told The Pioneer, “After INTACH submitted its DPR we had received a sum of Rs 3 crore for High Court complex and Army headquarter building from the Centre. The Archaeological Survey of India had carried out the renovation or restoration work but at present the conservation work in the Mubarak Mandi heritage complex is completely on hold in the absence of receipt of money.”
Sharma said, soon after the receipt of next installment of money we would be able to carry out the conservation work on ground zero. He said under the circumstances we cannot fix any time line of the project.
Official sources said, we are hoping to start the work on the project before the end of the financial year. Though, the 13th Finance Commission has recommended an award of Rs 50 crore for the conservation project but the State Government is yet to receive its first installment to expedite the renovation work.
In addition, the State Government is also expected to get a lions’ share of Rs 25.42 crore from the Ministry of Tourism for its mega project consisting renovation work of four heritage buildings but is still awaiting formal sanction.
Meanwhile, strong opposition to the proposal of leasing out residential palaces of Royal families as per the Vision plan of INTACH to leading hoteliers for conservation, preservation/restoration and operation of heritage hotel has also made matters worse for the State Government as it is finding it difficult to fill the gap and arrange money for the conservation project.
Official sources said after
constituting the heritage
society The Indian National
Trust for Art and cultural
heritage (INTACH), entrusted
with the responsibility of
preparing a vision document,
had submitted proposals to
the tune of Rs 232.92 crore
to renovate. After including
the cost of conservation of
basements and other
buildings the total cost of
the project was pegged at Rs
296 crore (approximately).
The Pioneer, 5th Dec 2011
While the unveiling of a memorial to Banda Singh Bahadur in Punjab garnered much attention, few people know that there is another memorial in Mehrauli to this brave soldier
On November 30 this year, the Punjab Chief Minister, Prakash Singh Badal unveiled a memorial to mark the 400th year of the victory of the Sikh forces under Banda Singh Bahadur over the Moghul Governor of Sirhind, Wazir Khan. Spread over ten acres, it cost over Rs. 12 crores. While some see the timing of the Kahnuwan Chhambh memorial to Chhota Gallughara as a run-up to the coming elections, others feel that the memorial was long overdue as it commemorates the holocaust suffered by the Sikhs during the reign of the decadent Moghuls. One however wonders why the memorial to Baba Banda Singh in Mehrauli, Delhi, was not made part of this lasting tribute to the General whose exploits have become part of 18th Century history.
As of now there is a rugged, nondescript building near a post office in Mehrauli which gives the impression of a fortress near the site where Banda Bahadur was executed. Banda was originally a yogi who was also a magician. When Guru Gobind Singh, the last of the Sikh Gurus, visited Nanded in Maharashtra, he was accosted by a yogi, who tried to prove that he was superior in performing supernatural feats. His name was Madho Das and some regarded him as a man who could perform miracles. Madho Das tried his best to overcome the guru, but all his efforts came to naught. Acknowledging defeat, he prostrated himself before Guru Gobind Singh as his banda or slave. The guru lifted him up and embraced him. Madhu Das then became a Sikh and came to be known as Banda Singh. The guru sent him all the way to Punjab where, along with other soldiers of the Panth, he fought against those who were persecuting the Sikhs.
In 1709, a year after the death of the guru, he launched his campaign, taking over from Bhai Mani Singh, the high priest. He and his Tak Khalsa of 40,000 men subdued a vast part of Punjab after defeating the Governor, Wazir Khan. Eventually, Emperor Bahadur Shah I, the successor of Aurangzeb, himself led the royal forces, mobilised in Delhi, against him and Banda had to retreat to the fort of Lohargarh, and later to the hilly tract. From there he made lightning raids on the Moghuls and repulsed all their attacks for five years. At last his valiant force was surrounded by the Moghul troops and he had to surrender in December 1715. He was brought to Delhi on the assurance that he would be treated well.
However the promise was not kept by Emperor Farrukhsiyar who put him in an iron cage. Form March next year his followers began to be executed. Within seven days hundreds of them met their death with a smile on their lips. Among them was a boy of eight, who sacrificed his life like the Sahibzadas, the sons of Guru Gobind Singh, who were martyred by the tyrannical Moghul ruler of Sirhind. This boy however was the son of Banda Bahadur.
Eventually Banda Bahadur's turn came and he was taken in a procession around the Qutab Minar. Farrukhsiyar asked him what sort of death he preferred and the brave Banda replied the type of death the emperor himself wished to die. Banda was at first tortured and then killed. More than 250 years after his martyrdom a shrine was erected in Mehrauli. Few know its history and most people just pass by taking it for another gurdwara. But the place needs better appreciation and a better memorial.
It is hoped that after the
inauguration of the Baba
Banda Singh Bahadur Jangi
Yadgaar at Chappchiri
battleground in Mohali, the
Punjab government would turn
its attention to the
neglected Delhi shrine to
the yogi-turned-saint.
The Pioneer, 5th Dec 2011
While the unveiling of a memorial to Banda Singh Bahadur in Punjab garnered much attention, few people know that there is another memorial in Mehrauli to this brave soldier
On November 30 this year, the Punjab Chief Minister, Prakash Singh Badal unveiled a memorial to mark the 400th year of the victory of the Sikh forces under Banda Singh Bahadur over the Moghul Governor of Sirhind, Wazir Khan. Spread over ten acres, it cost over Rs. 12 crores. While some see the timing of the Kahnuwan Chhambh memorial to Chhota Gallughara as a run-up to the coming elections, others feel that the memorial was long overdue as it commemorates the holocaust suffered by the Sikhs during the reign of the decadent Moghuls. One however wonders why the memorial to Baba Banda Singh in Mehrauli, Delhi, was not made part of this lasting tribute to the General whose exploits have become part of 18th Century history.
As of now there is a rugged, nondescript building near a post office in Mehrauli which gives the impression of a fortress near the site where Banda Bahadur was executed. Banda was originally a yogi who was also a magician. When Guru Gobind Singh, the last of the Sikh Gurus, visited Nanded in Maharashtra, he was accosted by a yogi, who tried to prove that he was superior in performing supernatural feats. His name was Madho Das and some regarded him as a man who could perform miracles. Madho Das tried his best to overcome the guru, but all his efforts came to naught. Acknowledging defeat, he prostrated himself before Guru Gobind Singh as his banda or slave. The guru lifted him up and embraced him. Madhu Das then became a Sikh and came to be known as Banda Singh. The guru sent him all the way to Punjab where, along with other soldiers of the Panth, he fought against those who were persecuting the Sikhs.
In 1709, a year after the death of the guru, he launched his campaign, taking over from Bhai Mani Singh, the high priest. He and his Tak Khalsa of 40,000 men subdued a vast part of Punjab after defeating the Governor, Wazir Khan. Eventually, Emperor Bahadur Shah I, the successor of Aurangzeb, himself led the royal forces, mobilised in Delhi, against him and Banda had to retreat to the fort of Lohargarh, and later to the hilly tract. From there he made lightning raids on the Moghuls and repulsed all their attacks for five years. At last his valiant force was surrounded by the Moghul troops and he had to surrender in December 1715. He was brought to Delhi on the assurance that he would be treated well.
However the promise was not kept by Emperor Farrukhsiyar who put him in an iron cage. Form March next year his followers began to be executed. Within seven days hundreds of them met their death with a smile on their lips. Among them was a boy of eight, who sacrificed his life like the Sahibzadas, the sons of Guru Gobind Singh, who were martyred by the tyrannical Moghul ruler of Sirhind. This boy however was the son of Banda Bahadur.
Eventually Banda Bahadur's turn came and he was taken in a procession around the Qutab Minar. Farrukhsiyar asked him what sort of death he preferred and the brave Banda replied the type of death the emperor himself wished to die. Banda was at first tortured and then killed. More than 250 years after his martyrdom a shrine was erected in Mehrauli. Few know its history and most people just pass by taking it for another gurdwara. But the place needs better appreciation and a better memorial.
It is hoped that after the
inauguration of the Baba
Banda Singh Bahadur Jangi
Yadgaar at Chappchiri
battleground in Mohali, the
Punjab government would turn
its attention to the
neglected Delhi shrine to
the yogi-turned-saint.
The Pioneer, 5th Dec 2011
While the unveiling of a memorial to Banda Singh Bahadur in Punjab garnered much attention, few people know that there is another memorial in Mehrauli to this brave soldier
On November 30 this year, the Punjab Chief Minister, Prakash Singh Badal unveiled a memorial to mark the 400th year of the victory of the Sikh forces under Banda Singh Bahadur over the Moghul Governor of Sirhind, Wazir Khan. Spread over ten acres, it cost over Rs. 12 crores. While some see the timing of the Kahnuwan Chhambh memorial to Chhota Gallughara as a run-up to the coming elections, others feel that the memorial was long overdue as it commemorates the holocaust suffered by the Sikhs during the reign of the decadent Moghuls. One however wonders why the memorial to Baba Banda Singh in Mehrauli, Delhi, was not made part of this lasting tribute to the General whose exploits have become part of 18th Century history.
As of now there is a rugged, nondescript building near a post office in Mehrauli which gives the impression of a fortress near the site where Banda Bahadur was executed. Banda was originally a yogi who was also a magician. When Guru Gobind Singh, the last of the Sikh Gurus, visited Nanded in Maharashtra, he was accosted by a yogi, who tried to prove that he was superior in performing supernatural feats. His name was Madho Das and some regarded him as a man who could perform miracles. Madho Das tried his best to overcome the guru, but all his efforts came to naught. Acknowledging defeat, he prostrated himself before Guru Gobind Singh as his banda or slave. The guru lifted him up and embraced him. Madhu Das then became a Sikh and came to be known as Banda Singh. The guru sent him all the way to Punjab where, along with other soldiers of the Panth, he fought against those who were persecuting the Sikhs.
In 1709, a year after the death of the guru, he launched his campaign, taking over from Bhai Mani Singh, the high priest. He and his Tak Khalsa of 40,000 men subdued a vast part of Punjab after defeating the Governor, Wazir Khan. Eventually, Emperor Bahadur Shah I, the successor of Aurangzeb, himself led the royal forces, mobilised in Delhi, against him and Banda had to retreat to the fort of Lohargarh, and later to the hilly tract. From there he made lightning raids on the Moghuls and repulsed all their attacks for five years. At last his valiant force was surrounded by the Moghul troops and he had to surrender in December 1715. He was brought to Delhi on the assurance that he would be treated well.
However the promise was not kept by Emperor Farrukhsiyar who put him in an iron cage. Form March next year his followers began to be executed. Within seven days hundreds of them met their death with a smile on their lips. Among them was a boy of eight, who sacrificed his life like the Sahibzadas, the sons of Guru Gobind Singh, who were martyred by the tyrannical Moghul ruler of Sirhind. This boy however was the son of Banda Bahadur.
Eventually Banda Bahadur's turn came and he was taken in a procession around the Qutab Minar. Farrukhsiyar asked him what sort of death he preferred and the brave Banda replied the type of death the emperor himself wished to die. Banda was at first tortured and then killed. More than 250 years after his martyrdom a shrine was erected in Mehrauli. Few know its history and most people just pass by taking it for another gurdwara. But the place needs better appreciation and a better memorial.
It is hoped that after the
inauguration of the Baba
Banda Singh Bahadur Jangi
Yadgaar at Chappchiri
battleground in Mohali, the
Punjab government would turn
its attention to the
neglected Delhi shrine to
the yogi-turned-saint.
The Pioneer, 5th Dec 2011
While the unveiling of a memorial to Banda Singh Bahadur in Punjab garnered much attention, few people know that there is another memorial in Mehrauli to this brave soldier
On November 30 this year, the Punjab Chief Minister, Prakash Singh Badal unveiled a memorial to mark the 400th year of the victory of the Sikh forces under Banda Singh Bahadur over the Moghul Governor of Sirhind, Wazir Khan. Spread over ten acres, it cost over Rs. 12 crores. While some see the timing of the Kahnuwan Chhambh memorial to Chhota Gallughara as a run-up to the coming elections, others feel that the memorial was long overdue as it commemorates the holocaust suffered by the Sikhs during the reign of the decadent Moghuls. One however wonders why the memorial to Baba Banda Singh in Mehrauli, Delhi, was not made part of this lasting tribute to the General whose exploits have become part of 18th Century history.
As of now there is a rugged, nondescript building near a post office in Mehrauli which gives the impression of a fortress near the site where Banda Bahadur was executed. Banda was originally a yogi who was also a magician. When Guru Gobind Singh, the last of the Sikh Gurus, visited Nanded in Maharashtra, he was accosted by a yogi, who tried to prove that he was superior in performing supernatural feats. His name was Madho Das and some regarded him as a man who could perform miracles. Madho Das tried his best to overcome the guru, but all his efforts came to naught. Acknowledging defeat, he prostrated himself before Guru Gobind Singh as his banda or slave. The guru lifted him up and embraced him. Madhu Das then became a Sikh and came to be known as Banda Singh. The guru sent him all the way to Punjab where, along with other soldiers of the Panth, he fought against those who were persecuting the Sikhs.
In 1709, a year after the death of the guru, he launched his campaign, taking over from Bhai Mani Singh, the high priest. He and his Tak Khalsa of 40,000 men subdued a vast part of Punjab after defeating the Governor, Wazir Khan. Eventually, Emperor Bahadur Shah I, the successor of Aurangzeb, himself led the royal forces, mobilised in Delhi, against him and Banda had to retreat to the fort of Lohargarh, and later to the hilly tract. From there he made lightning raids on the Moghuls and repulsed all their attacks for five years. At last his valiant force was surrounded by the Moghul troops and he had to surrender in December 1715. He was brought to Delhi on the assurance that he would be treated well.
However the promise was not kept by Emperor Farrukhsiyar who put him in an iron cage. Form March next year his followers began to be executed. Within seven days hundreds of them met their death with a smile on their lips. Among them was a boy of eight, who sacrificed his life like the Sahibzadas, the sons of Guru Gobind Singh, who were martyred by the tyrannical Moghul ruler of Sirhind. This boy however was the son of Banda Bahadur.
Eventually Banda Bahadur's turn came and he was taken in a procession around the Qutab Minar. Farrukhsiyar asked him what sort of death he preferred and the brave Banda replied the type of death the emperor himself wished to die. Banda was at first tortured and then killed. More than 250 years after his martyrdom a shrine was erected in Mehrauli. Few know its history and most people just pass by taking it for another gurdwara. But the place needs better appreciation and a better memorial.
It is hoped that after the
inauguration of the Baba
Banda Singh Bahadur Jangi
Yadgaar at Chappchiri
battleground in Mohali, the
Punjab government would turn
its attention to the
neglected Delhi shrine to
the yogi-turned-saint.
The Hindu, 5th Dec 2011
It's been a 100-year race and the outcome is absolutely poetic. Delhi, completing a century as capital of India, is once again its largest and most populous city, ahead of Bombay, Calcutta and Madras - all hand-reared products of the Raj.
But a hundred years ago, few would have put their money on Delhi. Its sunset started in the 18th century, turning into one interminable night after the events of 1857, when the British systematically avenged themselves upon it.
Delhi in 1911 was still a scarred city. Meanwhile, younger rivals were thriving . Bombay, Calcutta and Madras were already the country's three biggest cities, with Bombay touching the million-mark . Delhi's erstwhile subject-cities - Lucknow and Hyderabad - had outgrown it too. Delhi lagged in literacy and medical facilities - only 3% of the population could read English. Few foreigners were drawn to it (Meerut had 2,162 while Delhi had 992). Its economy was heavily agrarian, and modern trades like power generation and news publishing had few takers.
As a city, Delhi was way behind its time. For example, one of the occupational heads in the 1911 census is: "Toy, kite, cage, fishing tackle etc makers, taxidermists etc”. The listed products symbolize a medieval-decadent lifestyle. Bombay with 979,445 people had only 61 workers in this trade, while Delhi had 230 for its 232,837 residents.
All that is history. A
century on, 1911's has-been
city is happening like never
before
The Times of India, 10th Dec 2011
The birth of New Delhi was announced on December 11, 1911. Exactly a hundred years later, through essays and luxurious images, Delhi: Red Fort To Raisina charts the journey of India’s pre-Mughal and Mughal capital to the British Raj’s new capital that would become the city that it is today. An exclusive preview:
1820
The Qutb Minar
By the Agra artist
Latif, c. 1820. Standing
72.5 metres tall, the
minaret was begun by Qutb
al-Din Aibak in 1198 and
completed by his successor
Iltutmish in 1215. In this
view Latif concentrates on
the damage done to the
stonework.
British Library, london
1835
The Jama Masjid
By the artist Mazhar Ali
Khan, c. 1835-40. The scene
is drawn from the rooftops
of the bazaar to the north
called the Bazar Kilhih and
focuses on the north gate of
the mosque.
Victoria and Albert Museum, London
1840
The Faiz Bazaar
By a Rajasthani artist,
c.1840. The view is taken
from the chowk at the
beginning of the Faiz
Bazaar. The procession
heading towards the Delhi
Gate suggests that this is
of the emperor on his way to
his country palace at the
Qutb Minar
Private collection, courtesy Francesca Galloway, London
1858
Jain Temple
Photograph by Felice
Beato, 1858. The Sri
Digambar Jain Naya Mandir
has been rebuilt many times.
The doorway to it is dated
to 1807. It is situated
between Chandni Chowk and
the Jama Masjid.
Victoria and Albert Museum, London
1858
Lahore Gate
Photograph by Robert and
Harriet Tytler, 1858, taken
from the inside. The Lahore
Gate had been where the
commandant of the fort,
appointed by the British,
resided.
British Library, London
1890
The Shrine of Nizamuddin
Auliya
Photograph by GW Lawrie
& Co., 1890s. The hangings
make for a most striking
pattern round the shrine.
British Library, London
1911
The Tis Hazari Railway
Station
This rail line
anticipated the Metro, being
one of several small
stations built to link the
venue of the 1911-1912
Coronation Durbar, extending
from Kashmiri Gate to
Azadpur.
Bates and Hindmarch, Private Collection
1952
Plaza Cinema
Most of the cinemas of
British New Delhi had
European names. Cecil de
Mille’s film The Greatest
Show on Earth, running at
Plaza when this picture was
taken, was released in 1952.
Press Information Bureau, New Delhi
1926
North and South Block
Photograph taken from
the Government House.
Despite the apparent mess,
the vista along Kingsway
(now Rajpath) is clearly
visible.
British Library, London
The Times of India, 11th Dec 2011
New Delhi, as we know it today, is not just the legacy of Lutyens and Baker. Several other architects have also provided yeoman services in its making. Vivek Shukla profiles some of the Capital’s glittering artworks and their little known creator
As this is the centenary year for New Delhi, one feels sad that apart from Sir Edwin Lutyens and, to some extent, Herbert Baker, the contribution of other architects in designing the new Capital has largely been ignored. Admittedly, Lutyens and Baker designed buildings like President House, Parliament House, South Block and North Block, but the likes of Robert Tor Russell, E Montague Thomas, Walter George and Joseph Allen Stein have also provided yeoman services in the making of New Delhi
Can you think of New Delhi without Connaught Place (CP)? Unthinkable. But, who is interested to know the genius who built it? He was Robert Tor Russell. CP was to be originally designed by WH Nicholls, the chief architect to the Government of India. He planned a central plaza based on the European Renaissance and classical style. Nicholls, however, left India in 1917. With Lutyens and Baker busy working on bigger projects, it was eventually on Russell, chief architect to the Public Works Department (PWD), to designed CP
“Prior to its construction, the CP area was a ridge covered with kikar trees inhabited by jackals and wild pigs, where residents of Kashmere Gate and Civil Lines visited during the weekends for partridge hunting,” says Lala Narayan Prasad, 89, head of the IP college governing body
Russell designed CP as a double-storied complex — commercial establishments on the ground with residential area on the first floor. He created Inner Circle, Middle Circle and Outer Circle, along with seven radial roads
According to Sanjay Khanna, director of the Kailash Nath Projects Pvt Ltd, whose family built several buildings in and around the area, “When the construction work of CP was on, the Government decided to have the New Delhi Railway Station to be built inside the Central Park. Russell rejected the proposal as impractical. Later, he himself suggested the nearby Paharganj area as the ideal location for Railway Station. Russell always wanted that in the middle of CP, there should be park where shoppers and others could relax
Apart from CP, Russell also designed the Eastern and Western Courts, Teen Murti House, Safdarjung Airport, National Stadium and over 4,000 government houses later built in areas like Lodhi Road. Quite a reticent person, Russell left for England in the mid-1940s and started doing his private practice. He passed away in the 1970s
Walter George, too, did not get his due. It was he who designed Regal Cinema, Sujan Singh Park and the St Stephen’s College buildings. Regal was the first cinema hall of New Delhi, besides being perhaps the first theatre to have a balcony space. George created the balcony space so that couples could enjoy the movie without any hassle. Regal Cinema is supported by a series of pillars. The space between each pillar contains a private box
George also designed Hotel Ambassador, which was opened in 1945. It was a favourite among travellers from across the world. It had a night club, ‘Jewel Box’, where “men had to wear tuxedos and women had to be dressed in tailcoats”. He was also responsible for establishing the first training facility for architects in north India. The Department of Architecture came into existence as part of the Delhi Polytechnic at Kashmere Gate in 1942. Later, it turned into the School of Planning and Architecture
It goes to the credit of Henry Medd for designing a few wonderful churches in New Delhi. Medd was barely 23 when he joined the office of Lutyens. Later he worked under the watchful eyes of Baker for a extended period of 12 years between 1919 and 1931. He was Chief Architect to the Government of India between 1939 and 1947
Admittedly, Medd did not design any official building, but his class was very much evident in the imposing Cathedral Church of the Redemption and the Sacred Heart Cathedral. He designed both these churches. He is said to have helped Baker a great deal in finalising the finer details of the Council House (now Parliament) and secretariat buildings (North and South Blocks)
Medd belonged to the Lutyens’ school of architecture, which was reflected in the design of the two churches. Though the exterior of the churches is ordinary, with red sandstone roofing, the interior has small recessed openings that filter the sunlight
And, has anybody heard of Montague Thomas and his work? This little known architect built the Delhi Legislative Assembly, also known as Vidhan Sabha. He built this building much before Lutyens and Baker began his work in the country. Originally built in 1912 to hold the Imperial Legislative Council and subsequently the Central Legislative Assembly (after 1919), till the newly constructed Parliament House was inaugurated in 1927, this building also houses the Old Secretariat with a long front line and two lateral structures — the portion facing the Alipore Road curving gracefully in the centre like a half moon. There are two minarets at each end and small towers decorate these corners with placid domes
According to historian RV Smith, “After transfer of the Capital to Delhi, the temporary secretariat building was constructed in a few months’ time in 1912 where old Chandrawal Village stood. The semi-circular, cream-coloured secretariat building had the privilege of housing the central legislature from 1913 to 1926. This building also set a style for bungalows that came up later. The first sitting of the Legislative Council was held at the Chamber in Old Secretariat on January 27, 1913. The first convocation of the University of Delhi was held here on March 26, 1923. The Old Secretariat presently houses Vidhan Sabha.”Post-Independence, Joseph Allen Stein designe
some of the finest buildings in the capital. The American architect decided to adopt the country and went on to design some of the finest buildings during his close to half-a-century stay in India. He created landmarks buildings like the India International Centre (IIC), the American International School, the Unicef building, the India Habitat Centre (IHC), the Ford Foundation, Triveni Kala Sangam and a host of other buildings in various parts of the Capital
Stein was a master of building materials, and in almost all his buildings he left the construction materials exposed. Those lucky enough to work under his watchful eyes say that he went into the minutest details. He never imposed his ideas on his juniors and colleagues
Stein believed in using building materials in their original form. He never covered stone with plaster
When stones were not available for the India Habitat Centre (IHC), he went to the kilns to order Lakhori and Mughal bricks. Stein integrated landscapes into his structures for the India International Centre (IIC) as he took inspiration from the Lodhi Gardens next door and gave the building both an inner and outer courtyard
Ram Rahman once wrote about Stein: “He and my father, Habib Rahman (an equally noted architect), became friends during their Calcutta days. Both of them moved to Delhi in the 1950s. Here, Stein set up his private practice and my father joined the central public works department. Both would spend every weekend exploring every ruin and village. This was a living discovery of the great Sultanate architecture of Delhi... Both developed a fascination for the traditional Delhi architecture and its effect on Stein could not be more clearly evident than the way he conceptualised and created the India International Centre.
The materials Stein used for IIC were local stones, cast concrete jalis, and blue and green ceramic tiles as highlights — definitely an inspiration from the Sultanate architecture which Stein had learned to love and admire through his weekly explorations
It is said that Stein was among the first modern architects in the country to introduce jalis in buildings. He used them at IIC and Triveni. Also, one needs to look at the roof of the IIC auditorium. It is unique, as it is composed of pre-cast-shaped elements. The outer part is built with Y-shaped pieces, ensuring enough light and air get into the building
IHC was Stein’s last and perhaps the best work. Every part of the building speaks a different language. One can enjoy different moods at different places. The environment in the courtyard gives a feel of freshness. Stein planned the building in such a manner as to have a clean look. And, IHC stands out in energy efficiency. The interesting blue sunshade provides a cooling effect. The trees also help maintain a wonderful synergy with nature
In a country where
politicians, irrespective of
their standing or ideology,
always look for an
opportunity to give new
names to areas, roads, parks
and building to please their
political masters, it is
surely asking for the moon
to honour a great architect
and have a road named after
him. But, I believe, Lodhi
Road is one such landmark
which should be renamed as
Stein Road — for the sheer
mind-blowing work this
American-born architect
rendered here till he passed
away in 2001
The Pioneer, 11th Dec 2011
Museums have for long recorded the tangible heritage of a city ; the bricks and mortar with which the city was built. But can a museum capture the idea of a city , or its memories ? Can a museum capture the life of a city in transition ? This is precisely what an ambitious new project sets out to do.
In a possible first for India , a group of scholars , academicians and researchers from the Centre for Community Knowledge (CCK) at Ambedkar University Delhi have embarked on the Citizen's Memory Project , a digital archive of the lives of the people of Delhi and the oral history of the capital.
The project will tie up with the Delhi Museum, which will be housed in the Dara Shikoh Library, a historical monument that lies within the campus of Ambedkar University. While the project will focus solely on the capital , it has drawn on researchers from across the country and has ramifications for the rest of India as well. While Delhi is often perceived as a city of kings and monuments , the Citizen's Memory Project aims at archiving the lives of the a a m a d m i, of the villages that are part of the metropolis and the several cities that were built and rebuilt to form the Delhi we now know .
"Among those interviewed for the project is a gentleman approaching the age of 70, who recalls his grandfather's stories of how, during the Revolt of 1857, ancient volumes from the Dara Shikoh library lay scattered on the streets of Delhi. His grandfather was a child during the Revolt , so this is, in essence , a child's memory of 1857," says Surajit Sarkar , a consultant at the CCK and part of the project.
"We are thinking of setting up kiosks at Metro stations , where people can come up to us and recount what they remember of the city . Older people can recount what their parents and grandparents remembered of Delhi. When they die, the knowledge of a couple of generations dies with them ," says professor Vijaya Varma , advisor planning at Ambedkar University.
The Citizen's Memory Project will involve a digital archive which can be accessed online by the public , anywhere in the world. "We do not believe in the bank vault model of archiving data . We want it to be accessible to everybody ," says Varma.
The archive will include a recording of interviews with people , aswell as visual material: pictures , photographs , music and various other facets of the popular culture of the city . "We are ready to help digitize old family photographs and letters that people may have , provided they allow us to put the digital version of these artifacts on our website," says Varma.
The information, though, will have to be verified, either with the help of photos or historical records, and not simply hearsay. For instance, in the case of the gentleman whose grandfather recalled the desecration of Dara Shikoh's library during the Revolt, there are historical references that such an incident occurred, says Sarkar.
In a bid to understand
the history of Delhi, the
project will also record the
history and memories of
Ambedkar University, which
shares a campus with three
other institutions and has
been an incubator for
several educational
institutions in the
past."TheKashmereG ate area
where the university is
located has historically
been a hub for education ,
which in turn has drawn
several people to the city,"
says Sarkar
The Times of India, 11th Dec 2011
The Delhi Durbar, an opulent ceremony, announced the transfer of seat of power from Calcutta to Delhi. We bring you excerpts from The Pioneer, December 191
The reception in the royal camp was a brilliant scene. The shamianas, which go from the great pavilion in which the investiture will be held tomorrow, cover an enormous area and yet they were densely packed last evening, between there and 4,000 persons being present
The ceiling cloth and side walls were draped in light blue and white, the colours of the star of India. Scores of gilt poles rose in support of the flat canvas roof and there are electric lights which glow with intense brightness. The lighting ensured that perfect effect be given to any gathering where full state is observed, and where high officials, chiefs, military officers etc were all in full dress while the ladies were wearing their most handsome costumes. At the further end of the pavilion was the place reserved for Their Imperial Majesties, who were accompanied by their suite. The King Emperor was in the full dress of an Admiral of the Fleet with the Star of the India ribbon and numerous other stars and orders. The Queen Empress wore a pearly white dress of brocaded satin, a high diamond tiara with heavy ropes of pearls around her neck, while the corsage blazed with diamonds. Nothing was lacking to give an air of stately magnificence to the scene about Their Imperial Majesties who graciously conversed with various ladies and gentlemen presented to them
Elsewhere in the pavilion, the crush was so great that movement except at very slow pace was impossible and one could not readily see all the persons of distinction present. But now and again were distinguished a chief, resplendent in rich attire and with jewels of rare value upon him, some well-known military officer with his orders and medals or an eminent councillor of state in court dress. A hum of conversation filled the tent and the many officials and others whose names had appeared in the Honours’ Gazette were centres of congratulations. Although the time fixed for the reception was half-past nine the difficulty experienced in handling the traffic, nearly all that pertaining to motor cars, was extreme. The reception lasted until after 11 o’clock, Their Imperial Majesties towards the close passing among their guests and making a circuit of the shamianabefore retiring
HOW THE ROYAL
ANNOUNCEMENT WAS RECEIVE
The announcement regarding the transfer of the seat of the Government of India from Calcutta to Delhi, with the other changes affecting the two Bengal and Assam, has not yet lost its character of surprise. It was a state secret kept with singular fidelity both at Home and in India, and its revelation by the King Emperor himself at the Durbar yesterday was therefore all the more dramatic. His Imperial Majesty’s announcement just before the close of the great ceremonial could of necessity be heard only by those in the vast amphitheatre within reach of his voice, and so it happened that many left without being aware of the momentous decision that had been made public. Printed copies of the Proclamation message proclaiming the boons, and the announcement regarding the change of capital, were distributed as soon as the Durbar had been closed and these were eagerly read by all into whose hands they fell. There had, it is true, been rumours that the partition of Bengal was to be reversed and a governor-in-council to be appointed to rule over the reunited provinces, but not one single suggestion had sprung from the most fertile imagination that Delhi was about to replace Calcutta as the imperial capital of India. Yesterday morning, a vague rumor spread that something surprising would be published to the world, but there was an intangibility about this report, and it didn’t raise public expectancy to a high pitch. Everyone’s interest was centred in the Durbar ceremonial, which was expected to be, as it proved, unparalleled in magnificence and impressiveness. The exaltation of Delhi as the scene of the Coronation Durbar, with Their Imperial Majesties throned in state in the presence of a multitude of people, was recognized and accepted as befitting its past history, but we did not foresee that the city was to remain supreme above all others in India, and that once more it was to become an Imperial capital. Perhaps when the dispatches in which the case for the changes is fully disclosed have been digested, the weighing of arguments may be calmy undertaken. Each day should bring us news from Home and from India outside Delhi, and this will be awaited with intense interest
HIS MAJESTY’S REPLY TO
DELHI
MUNICIPALITY
The King Emperor replies as follows: The Queen Empress and I thank you most heartily for the kind sentiments of welcome and goodwill to which your address gives expression. A few months ago we feared lest the occasion of our visit to India might be marked by a serious scarcity due to a period of unusual drought, thus causing a grievous calamity to the large majority of my Indian people, whose prosperity so closely depends upon an abundant rainfall and upon the produce of agriculture. I am thankful that the scarcity has been restricted in extent and that, owing to better communications and the extension of irrigation, famine today is no longer so dreaded as in past generation
I am glad to know that in other directions, the agricultural position of India has improved. The cultivator has always been patient, laborious and skillful, though his methods have been based upon tradition. The resource of science have been brought to bear upon agriculture and have demonstrated in a very short time the great results that can be secured by its application not only in the actual improvement of the land but in dealing with the disease of live-stock, and also with those insect pests which are such formidable enemies of the tiller of the soil
If the system of cooperation can be introduced and utilised to the full, I foresee a great and glorious future for the agricultural interests of his country
We greatly appreciate the successful efforts made to beautify and prepare your city for our visit. At the same time, I know how during the past 20 years you have not neglected sanitary reform. Steady progress with your drainage system has had most happy results and the supply of pure water which you have secured has fully justified its heavy cost in the immunity thereby given from cholera and other epidemic disease. The unusual freedom from malaria which Delhi has enjoyed this year is, I understand to be ascribed largely to the clearance and drainage of the Bela, by which a jungle swamp has been converted into an extensive park
I most earnestly trust these lessons may be more universally understood and utilised to ensure the better health and greater safety of my Indian subjects. The remedy for protection from those terrible visitations of plague, malaria and cholera must be sought in the action of the people themselves and their leaders in cordial cooperation with the scientific efforts of the authorities
Considerable progress has been made by research and by the study of local condition as to the cause of these scourges, but much remains to be done above all in the education of the masses, teaching them to understand and adopt precautions dictated by elementary hygienic and domestic sanitation for their protection and welfare
We have looked forward with keen pleasure to the prospects of revisiting your ancient and famous city which your address reminds us has been the scene of events memorable in the history of this country and some of them intimately associated with my house and throne. In future it will be bound to us by yet closer ties. The traditions of your city invest it with a peculiar charm. The relics of bygone ages that meet the eye on every side, the splendid palace and temples which have resisted the destroying hand of time, all these witness to a great and illustrious past
In seeking a most central spot for the seat of the Government of India, these tradition and characteristics conduced in no small degree to the decision which I have so recently announced that from this time forward Delhi shall be the capital of our Indian empire, the same time, I wish to bear testimony to the cars with which the Government of the Punjab during the 50 years since Delhi was incorporated in that Province have developed this beautiful city while doing their utmost to preserve its historic monuments and thus preparing the city of Delhi for its restoration to its former proud position of the capital of the Indian Empire
This change will necessitate considerable administrative rearrangements , but I am assured that the Imperial City may anticipate from the Imperial Government a care for its ancient monuments and a solicitude for its material development by no means less than the provincial city of Delhi has in the past received from the provincial Government. I pray that this Empire of which Delhi is now the Capital may ever stand for peace and progress, justice and prosperity and that it may add to the traditions of your city still brighter chapter of greatness and glory.
THE GARDEN PARTY AND
PEOPLE
FETE
“And oh! If there be an Elysium on earth, it is this, it is this.” So sang the Persian poet of old, and Shah Jehan the magnificent, when he built his exquisite hall of private audience in the Delhi Fort, engraved the lines upon the wall in letters of gold. They came back to one with irresistible force this afternoon, as one strolled beneath the tees in the lovely gardens with the fountains playing all around and saw the happy throng of English and Indian guests wandering about, with the marble halls and pillars of the palace as a background for the scene. Bands discoursed sweet music from various corners of the lawn... today’s party was the finishing touch to the Durbar, and if any note was wanting from the Durbar ceremonial it was supplied today. Yesterday we saw the Emperor in might and majesty, awful in splendour and power, proclaiming his authority and announcing in person his royal will, which all men must obey. Today in no less splendour he kept high revel and his court was gay indeed. He was the great Moghal. In the surpassingly lovely hall of his predecessors he showed himself to his guests, and from the Musammam Burj he let the people gaze upon his august presence as his predecessors were wont to do
In these halls and on these lawns once Shah Jehan walked. Perhaps with the lovely Mumtaz Mahal, while maybe Dara Shikoh and Aurangzeb played as children round the Nahri Bihist, the steam of paradise, in the garden Round this court in those days gathered chivalrous Rajputs adventurous Pathans and stalwart Hindustanis. Occasionally a wandering Englishman was graciously received and gazed in wonder on the fairy halls, never dreaming that one day the descendant of his king would stand as Emperor where the peacock throne glittered
Today the scene has been revived with greater splendour than ever before. The peacock throne alas! has gone but the owner of the Koh-i-Nur was here. To compensate for the lost jewels was a gathering of all races, such as Shah Jehan could never summon together. Never before have chieftains from Bhutan and Sikkim, Gurkhas from Nepal, Tamil and Telugus from the south which the Moghals never could subdue, mingled at Delhi in the Emperor presence with Rajputs and Muslims Mahrattas, it is true, used at times to make salaams, but with suspicion and enmity in their hearts. Today their princes and officers were there yielding to none in burning loyality and devotion — for when has an Emperor ever had a more loyal feudatory than the present Scindia or than Kolhapur, the direct heir of Shivaji to take but two manes from all the Maharattas now gathered at Delhi
Their Majesties arrived at 3.30 pm. The processional route taken was over the Ridge to Alipur Road and thence through Kashmir Gate into the city and so by Elgin Road to the Lahore Gate of the Fort. The roads were lined by the infantry of the 3rd and 7th divisions, the 10th and 17th Cavalry the royal Berkshire Regiment and the 33rd Punjabis from the Delhi garrison, 350 Imperial Service Cavalry and 2700 Imperial Service Infantry. Lt General Pearson and Lake commanded sections of the route up to Lahore Gate; while Lt Colonel H King was in command of the troops in the fort. The units of the 3rd and 7th divisions bearing “Delhi” as a battle honours had each detachment of one officer and five men at and on the Kashmir Gate
The procession to the fort was, therefore, made with fitting military display, the royal carriage being escorted by the 1st king Dragoon guards and the 8th cavalry while the governor general carriages had an escort also from the 1st Dragoon Guards and the 11th Lancers
The highland light infantry and 25th Punjabis furnished a guard of honor between the Naubat Khana and the Dewan-I-Aam. It may here be said that the return journey of the royal party was made by motor and a reduced number of troop were left to line the route. This thoughtful arrangement afforded relief to the regiments who have had hard work on the ceremonial occasions of the week
THEIR MAJESTIES BEFORE
THE
PEOPLE
The King Emperor wore staff uniform, namely a blue frock coat (military), The Queen Empress wore a dress of flowered heliotrope. The Imperial Majesties moved freely about the garden among their guests and visited the loan exhibition in the Museum, which has been situated In the palace building known as the Mumtaz Mahal on the roof of which had been erected the temporary apartments, whence purdah ladies were enable to view the function. After spending some time in this manner, Their Imperial Majesties retired and donned their crowns and imperial robes. Then they entered the lovely marble balcony of the Musammam Burj and granted the darshan or appearance before the people assembled on the Zer Jharokha below. But the fretted sides of the balcony did not permit of a sufficiently expansive view, and after a few minut
Their Majesties quitted the Burj and passed to the open platform between the building from which the Burj project and the Rang Mahel from this another uncovered balcony project from the line of the fort walls over the Zer Jharokha. On this had been placed the solid silver thrones covered with gilding and upholstered in crimson velvet. There Their Majesties took their seats. The staff retired discreetly to the adjoining building and only the princely Indian pages remained in attendance on the Emperor and Empress. At first the pages stood behind the thrones, but the King Emperor feared that this would blur the spectacle for the crowds below and he made the pages stand on each side. Afterwards turning with a pleasant smile he bade the boys be seated behind him. Thus the two crowned and robed figures were left in isolation for the people to feast their eyes upon
The sight was as
impressive as could well be
imagined, and below dense
crowds advanced in two
parallel columns, banners
held aloft proclaiming from
what district or tahsil each
group hailed. Slowly they
advanced and then wheeled to
the right and left. Each
sect was to be distinguished
by the colour of its pagris,
and blocks of colour passed
in succession. From the
whole mass rose a roar of
cheering such as I have
never heard from any Indian
crowed before. The Durbar
itself provided no more
magnificent scene, the
Emperor and Empress on the
walls above, the moving
volume of people below, and
enthusiasm seemed to reach
its climax. For well nigh
three quarters of an hour
the Emperor and Empress sat
there, a sight which no one
present can ever hope to see
surpassed. A historian who
was also a poet might do
justice to the impression
created. Perhaps the
coloured bioscope may give
the rest of the world some
idea of it, but mere words
in cold black and white are
impotent, and in any case
the electric atmosphere can
never be reproduced. It was
all magnificent. Presently,
Their Imperial Majesties
left the thrones and
returned to the
Dewan-I-Khas. The sun set
and illuminations and
fireworks brought to a close
a ceremony in which was
omitted no point that could
lend splendour and no detail
that could add to its
effect. Thus was completed
what was begun at the Durbar
The Pioneer, 12th Dec 2011
More than pomp and frolic
100 years
of glory
In the winter of 1911, Delhi
was just another dot on the
political map of British
India, a modest provincial
town and small commercial
centre still recovering from
the scars of imperial
retribution after the 1857
uprising. On December 12,
1911 the city hosted the
Delhi Durbar - the biggest
tamasha of the British Raj -
near Burari. Though Calcutta
was the capital of British
India then, Delhi had hosted
two Durbars before, in 1877
and 1903. It was, however,
the first time that the
royal couple, King Emperor
George V and Queen Mary, was
present at the coronation
celebration
A city of tents, with a railway network of its own, had come up over an area of 25 square miles in the northwest part of Delhi, to be called Kingsway Camp later. Apart from the presence of the royal couple, the Durbar was special for another reason. It was here that King George V announced the shifting of the Capital of India from Calcutta to Delhi, a decision known only to the top echelons of the British regime till then.
As the Durbar ended, the long task of building an imperial capital began. The government machinery, however, shifted to the new Capital by March 1912. A temporary capital with modest buildings came up at Civil Lines, including a circuit house, council chamber and office of the Commander-in-Chief.
Edwin Landseer Lutyens, known for designing country houses in England, was entrusted with the job of planning the new city. Along with his old friend Herbert Baker and a team of architects, Lutyens set about the task of finalising a site for the new capital.
The new capital was supposed to come up at the site where the Durbar was held and a foundation stone was laid by George V.
Lutyens found the site swampy and prone to flooding, apart from being too 'flat and boring'. He roamed around Delhi's countryside and finalised the area near Raisina Hills. Its undulating surface meant the buildings would be built at a height, making them imposing. The area was largely uninhabited except for villages such as Malcha.
After the proclamation of Delhi as the new capital, it took 20 years of planning and construction for New Delhi to come up. The axis of the city was formed around the three grand buildings - Government House (Rashtrapati Bhavan), Secretariat and Council House (Parliament House) - at one end and the All-India War Memorial (India Gate) at the other end of the central vista.
On February 10, 1931,
Viceroy of India Lord Irwin
inaugurated New Delhi at 11
am. The decision to shift
the Capital of India changed
the course of Delhi's
history. But in the two
decades it took to build the
Capital, the fate of British
Empire itself had changed.
By 1931, a transition of
power was imminent and
within 16 years, New Delhi
was going to become the seat
of power of an independent
India.
The Hindustan Times, 12th Dec 2011
The political and cultural seat of many empires over the centuries, Delhi will add another chapter to its glorious history on Monday, marking 100 years of its re-emergence as India’s capital. It was on December 12, 1911 that then Emperor of India, George V proclaimed Delhi as the capital of the British Raj, shifting from Kolkata, thereby returning to the city its lost glory.
The centenary of the establishment of New Delhi will be marked by year-long celebrations that are being planned by the Delhi Government and other cultural agencies like the Indian Council for Cultural Relations. Special souvenirs will be released, and specially planned exhibitions showcased as well. A book on the history of seven cities of Delhi and detailing the account of how the present city was built would be launched by Chief Minister Sheila Dikshit.
Besides, a photo exhibition capturing the city of monuments will be among a series of events that Government agencies have lined up to mark the centenary celebrations. Though there will be no official ceremony to mark the occasion, Dikshit will release the book in the evening.
‘Dastann-e-Dilli’ — an exhibition on the city, will be also inaugurated by her and Lieutenant Governor Tejendra Khanna on Wednesday. The exhibition will chronicle the culture of Delhi — from its ancient days to the modern period — where both heritage sites and modern-day buildings co-exist. The year-long celebrations will kick off in January when the Ministry of Culture has lined up a number of events that will showcase the rich cultural heritage. Delhiites have already began celebrating the centenary year of their beloved city, thronging in large numbers to a food festival at Baba Kharag Singh Marg.
The ‘Dilli Ke Pakwan Festival’ brings the very soul of Delhi’s culture, street food to the people with a variety of kebabs, kulfi and other mouth-watering delicacies.
The foundation stone for the building of a new city in Delhi was laid by King George V and Queen Mary at the site of the Delhi Durbar at Kingsway Camp on December 15, 1911 and New Delhi, as it is called, took shape from the architectural brilliance of Edwin Lutyens and Herbert Baker.
Christening an idenity
Do you know that Rajpath
that overlooks the
magnificent Rashtrapati
Bhavan was once called
Kingsway? It is not Rajpath
alone that has over the
years been renamed in
Lutyens Delhi — once the
capital of the British
empire — but several other
English names in Rajdhani
Dilli have made way for
Indian ones.
As the Indian Government set about making Delhi its capital, many roads were named and renamed after leaders of modern India, in the process of erasing the memory of the British empire. Rajpath, the ceremonial boulevard of the country that runs from Rashtrapati Bhavan through Vijay Chowk to India Gate, right up to the National Stadium, was once called Kingsway.
Likewise, the Motilal
Nehru Marg, which houses the
likes of the Chief Minister
of Delhi, was once called
York Road when Edwin Lutyens
started building New Delhi
in 1912. New Delhi, the
capital of the modern India,
turns 100 tomorrow and a lot
of things have changed in
the city, the names of roads
being just one of them. Teen
Murti Marg, that houses the
Nehru Memorial Museum and
Library, was once known as
Roberts Road and the present
day Rafi Marg was Old Mill
Road.
The Pioneer, 12th Dec 2011
Eco-engineering and wildlife experts have stressed on the need for green structures and preventing habitat loss to allow wild animals, especially elephants to travel through wildlife corridors. This is vital to mitigate the damage caused to wildlife and environment by habitat fragmentation and also to lessen the rising human-wildlife conflict in the Terai region of Uttarakhand.
These views emerged at the international conference on eco engineering for connecting wildlife corridors organised in Dehradun on Sunday by Tiger Protection Group and Wildlife Savers Society in association with Uttarakhand forest department.
Speaking as the chief guest of the event, the Vidhan Sabha Speaker Harbans Kapur said that the growing conflict between humans and elephants in the State is a cause for serious concern.
Expressing hope that the conference would come up with important recommendations for addressing this problem, he said that the State Government would follow these recommendations while stressing that the State and Central Governments need to work together with all stakeholders to resolve this issue.
Professor and Chair of
the Centre for Ecological
Sciences, Indian Institute
of Science, Raman Sukumar
said, “About 400 people die
annually in India due to
human-animal conflict.
Habitat fragmentation and
degradation is a major cause
of this conflict which can
be mitigated by enabling
unrestricted movement of
elephants and other wild
animals in wildlife
corridors. However, various
factors like the bio
diversity of forest areas
linked by a corridor and the
size of the area have to be
considered while taking
measures for consolidating
such corridors.
The Pioneer, 12th Dec 2011
A legislation enacted
by the Union government to
protect the monuments of
historical importance
threatens the very
livelihood of people at the
places it seeks to conserve.
The opposition to The
Ancient Monuments and
Archaeological Sites and
Remains (Amendment and
Validation) Act, 2010 has
become more vehement and
vociferous at the historical
places in the State.
The Act, which came into
force on March 31, 2010,
prescribes stringent
restrictions on construction
activities around historic
monuments. The law declares
the monuments as protected
areas and forbids any new
construction in a radius of
100 metre from the boundary
of the monuments.
All properties – residential
and commercial, private and
public, sites and roads in
the 100-metre radius - fall
within the prohibited area.
No permission will be
granted even for
renovation/repair of the
existing buildings in the
the prohibited area. The law
provides for two years’ jail
term and a fine of Rs one
lakh in the event of any
violation. The officer who
allows such construction
faces three-year jail term
and a fine of Rs one lakh.
The Act defines the area in
200-metre radius of the
prohibited area as
‘Regulated Area’
constructions and repairs
are allowed in this space,
subject to prior permission
from the competent
authority. While borewell
could be sunk only for a
depth of three feet,
permission should be
obtained to dig an open
well. Given the rapid
depletion of groundwater,
the yield in a 3-feet depth
borewell is anybody’s guess.
Authority constituted
National Monuments Authority
has been constituted to
grant sanctions for
constructions in the
Regulated Area. The
Archaeological Survey of
India (ASI) has its circle
offices in Bangalore and
Dharwad. A No Objection
Certificate from the
authority is a prerequisite
before proceeding with any
construction in the
Regulated Area. Relevant
documents pertaining to the
site/building along with the
plan should be submitted to
the authority, which
forwards them to the ASI.
The latter, in turn,
scrutinises the application
and conducts a spot survey
with the assistance of
Indian National Trust for
Art and Cultural Heritage
(INTACH) and submit a report
to the Authority.
The Authority may grant
permission at its discretion
and the rule that no
permission within stipulated
period implies deemed
permission is not
applicable. The Authority
has the power to withdraw
the permission in the event
of breach of conditions
imposed by it while granting
such permission.
The paraphernalia to
facilitate effective
enforcement of the Act is
yet to be set up. A separate
bylaw needs to be drafted
for each monument and
consultancy offices are yet
to see the light of the day.
Poor and shelterless used to
face the brunt of ‘eviction
drive’ from monuments till
now and the new Act has
titled the balance. The
hotels and guesthouses which
have sprung up on the
periphery of the protected
monuments are now in the
line of fire.
The new legislation has
created a piquant situation
for the residents of cities
and towns where the
protected monuments are
located.
While people residing in
their houses for eons are
now prohibited from
renovating or repairing
their ancestral abode, those
who have purchased sites in
the recent years cannot go
in for any construction.
Apparently, there would be
no buyers for their
‘protected properties.’
There are also allegations
that real estate mafia is
making hay by suppressing
the true facts. The officers
in charge of enforcing the
law are in a fix. The owners
of the sites/houses on whom
notices are served, raise
‘valid’ points.
They ask the authorities
either to acquire their
properties paying
compensation or allow them
to go ahead with the
construction.
“People some times try to
assault us. We are in a
dilemma – whether to enforce
the law or to empathise with
them,” an officer said. The
Act has ‘impacted’ the
residents of Bijapur more
than anyone else. The
authorities are not granting
sanction even to repair the
houses damaged in the 2009
deluge.
Experts too have voiced
their concern over the
feasibility of enforcing the
Act. They opine that it is
practically impossible to go
by the legislation and
suggest that properties in
the radius of 50 metre of
the protected monuments be
acquired instead of the
zoning scheme with several
restrictions.
The British had enacted a
law for preservation of
historical monuments in the
year 1914. The legislation
was amended from time to
time and the act amended in
1958 was in force.
The not-so-stringent law and
its lax enforcement had led
to unbridled encroachment of
places of historical
importance. The demand for a
new law gained momentum
during the preparations for
Commonwealth Games in Delhi
when attempts were made to
demolish historical
monuments to put up some
constructions for the sports
extravaganza.
The relocation challenge
Karnataka has an estimated
530 protected monuments of
which around 80 are in and
around Bijapur. The City
alone is home to 65 such
structures and any
enforcement of the Act in
letter and spirit means
shifting of 80 per cent of
the population out of the
town. The 11.5-km wall of
the compound said to have
been constructed during the
regime of Adil Shahi dynasty
has almost collapsed. The
wall now stands for only 2.5
km. However, the new law
applies to the entire length
of the monument.
Historical monuments are
located in the heart of
towns and cities at various
places in the State. Tipu
Sultan Palace and the fort
wall near Vani Vilas
Hospital near the busy KR
Market in Bangalore too are
protected monuments. The
situation is no different in
Bidar, Gulbarga,
Srirangapatnam, Mysore,
Hampi, Aihole, Pattadakal
and Chitradurga. Giving
effect to the Act will
certainly result in
large-scale displacement of
people at all these places.
There has been a growing
demand for suitable
amendment to the law and
granting exemptions in
respect of places with huge
presence of monuments.
The Deccan Herald, 12th Dec 2011
The stringent norms and restrictions imposed by the to The Ancient Monuments and Archaeological Sites and Remains (Amendment and Validation) Act, 2010 has been contested by stakeholders
The
authorities have to strike a
balance between conservation
efforts and public welfare.
In an interview with Deccan
Herald, Dr S V P Halakatti,
Superintendent,
Archaeological Survey of
India, Dharwad zone speaks
about the challenges and
hurdles faced in enforcing
the new regime.
What is the difference
between the earlier law and
the present one?
The law formulated in 1958
lacked specific explanations
and guidelines on
conservation of monuments.
The legislation amended in
2010 is exhaustive.
It lays down the mandatory
distance between a private
property and a protected
monument, the procedures to
allow construction activity
in the vicinity, the quantum
of punishment for
encroachment of monuments
and the role and
responsibility of the
officials in charge. The Act
provides for a separate
bylaw for each monument. It
also states that prior
permission from competent
authority should be obtained
before taking up any
construction in the
prohibited area. Any breach
will be considered as a
criminal offence.
What is the system in
place in the State to
monitor the enforcement of
new law?
The Archaeological Survey of
India has set up two
authorities to sanction or
refuse permission for
construction near the
protected monuments in the
State.
The Bangalore Circle is
headed by the secretary to
Kannada and Culture
Department and the Dharwad
circle is headed by regional
commissioner, Belgaum.
We only recommend the
proposals and the final
decision rests with the two
authorities. A
national-level body of the
ASI is the next authority.
What problems are you facing
in enforcement of the new
Act?
The primary duty of research
on the monuments has
suffered due to staff
crunch. Dharwad zone has as
many as 300 monuments and we
require 900 personnel to
work in three shifts. As of
now, we have only 140 people
and have requested to fill
up another 652 vacancies.
There is no provision to
appoint staff on contract
basis. Now we have the
additional workload under
the new law.
What is the role of the
State government in
protecting monuments?
We are depending on the
State government for
protection of monuments. We
have to lodge complaint at
the local police station in
case of encroachment/s.
But, sometimes police
hesitate to register a
complaint and we have to
approach a local court. But
we don’t have our advocates
at such places and we are
not allowed to hire private
advocates.
A dedicated protection force
(on the lines of Railway
Protection Force, Central
Industrial Security Force)
is essential to safeguard
monuments. The State
government too should be
given some part of our
responsibilities.
What are the steps taken
to create awareness on the
new legislation?
Our advocates have
interacted with the people
in Bijapur, Bagalkot, Gadag,
Lakkundi, Karwar, Bhatkal
and Haveri.
The Deccan Herald, 12th Dec 2011
After 20 years of construction work, New Delhi was unveiled to the world in 1931. But the spanking new Capital, with its grand buildings and wide vistas, remained a ghost town for almost a decade. The older part of the city, on the other hand, was bursting at the seams. Earlier plans to build the new Capital envisaged a harmony between it and the existing city. This idea, however, was junked with the British determinedly cutting off the mingling of the two except for buffer areas like Paharganj and Daryaganj. What was the city before 1911, had become ‘walled city’ by 1931.
Though the new city had everything chalked out to take care of the needs of an imperial government, it lacked life. This is where Connaught Place came into the picture. Work on Connaught Place, New Delhi’s own Piccadilly Circus, began only in 1929, when all the other major buildings were already taking shape. The complex started gaining popularity during mid-1930s.
The contours of New Delhi also changed with the advent of the Second World War in 1939. New industries came up to cater to the needs of war and with it came migrant labourers. Hutments came up near the Secretariat for war time offices. In mid-1940s, housing for government employees also came up in the Lodhi Colony area. Timeline 1932-1969
Independence and Partition acted as a catalyst for Delhi’s drastic change. Nearly five lakh refugees poured into the city, which was not prepared for the population explosion. The refugees moved into every inch of available space and took up any work they could find. Despite odds, the Punjabi spirit was indomitable. The enterprising refugees boosted trade and once settled, the new residents of Delhi stamped their cultural dominance on the city.
The post-Independence era of 1950s also saw a slew of construction activity. The public buildings and mass housing projects that came up in this period gave shape to the New Delhi we know today.
Apart from the challenge of creating infrastructure for New Delhi’s growing needs, there was also a need to create indigenous architecture that would express the progressive ethos of the time. Utilitarian modernism became the template for almost all government buildings built at the time and the acute fund crunch also resulted in the austere façade of these structures.
Post-Independence, the
city also witnessed a
cultural renaissance thanks
to Prime Minister Pandit
Nehru, who took a keen
interest in promoting Indian
classical arts and theatre.
The 1950s and ’60s
inarguably, the defining
decades of New Delhi as the
cultural Capital of the
country, saw the building of
several top class
auditoriums and art
galleries such as Sapru
House and Rabindra Bhavan.
The Hindustan Times, 13th Dec 2011
It was built in 1911 to commemorate the visit of King George V and Queen Mary of England. Today, the Gateway of India, Mumbai, stands testimony to a versatile, colourful city.
The Gateway of India stands
tall on the waterfront.
Little Hormazd liked hopping
on to a boat to ride the
shimmery waters of Mumbai.
He liked sitting on stone
benches, looking at
balloons. Not just any
balloons, but animal-shaped
ones. He has memories of the
“photograph guy,” the
“telescope guy” and the
kulfiwallah. At the
Gateway of India, there was
always something to capture
your fancy.
Years later, south-Mumbai
resident Hormazd, now 27
years old, has grown up to
be a travel buff. The memory
of several boat rides at the
Gateway remains one of his
fondest.
A boat ride is in fact also a link to history. As the name suggests, the Gateway was an entry point for British officers and royalty to arrive at the Bombay harbour. It was built to commemorate the visit of King George V and Queen Mary to Bombay. The wide expanse of its open foyer and the grandeur of the arches made the monument a perfect place for ceremonial events.
Welcome arch
“The British viceroys would
walk through the Gateway for
ceremonies. George Wittet,
an architect, did a
temporary gateway to welcome
them. Prior to that it was a
pagoda, which was
demolished. He then designed
a magnificent amphitheatre.
Work on the Gateway was
completed in 1924. This
monument then became the
icon of Bombay,” says
Sharada Dwivedi,
Mumbai-based historian and
researcher.
As per the records, the first major event that took place at the Gateway was the passing of the First Battalion of the Somerset Light Infantry. They were the last British troops to leave India after independence. The ceremony was conducted on February 28, 1948.
Even today celebrates ‘Navy Day' at the Gateway with music, operations and colourful pageantry. This yearly event carries much sentimental valur for Ms. Dwivedi.
“Prior to independence,” she says, “the place was popular for performances by bands. Post independence it was a venue for people to get away from their congested city homes and get a breath of fresh air.”
Landmark
The monument has a towering
arch of approximately 26
metres in height. Yellow
basalt and reinforced
concrete were used for the
construction of the
structure. The
Indo-Saracenic style
architecture used in late
19th century in British
India itself reflects the
amalgamation of cultures
giving a Gothic appeal and
using elements from
indigenous styles of
architecture.
At the top of the monument there is a central dome and the façade and the arches have intricate latticework reminiscent of Moghul architecture.
Attacks
Much of the old-world charm
can be found at the Gateway
in the boats and catamarans
that still ply at the
harbour. The decorated horse
carriages that line along
the pavements and the iconic
Taj Mahal Palace and Tower
hotel complete the setting.
In the 21st century however,
the monument has seen two
terror attacks. A blast
which took place in 2003 and
the 26/11 attacks at the Taj
in 2008. Heavy barricading
therefore is a reminder of
modern times. The area
around has been decorated
and parking has been
regulated. However for
old-timers like Ms. Dwivedi,
the renovation is a major
put off. “They replaced the
ledges with cement concrete.
They could have used stone.
I don't like the new plaza.
It's a heritage site, but
you have booking offices
blocking the view of the
statue and the monument till
you are near it. Plus, they
destroyed a lot of trees,”
she rues.
The dead structures infused
with history may change with
the passage of time. But the
ferries, the water and the
pigeons that give people
company have remained the
same.
The Hindu, 13th Dec 2011
The city with innumerable legends may have officially turned 100 on Sunday but its birthday celebrations sit in the warp and weft of this season’s cultural calendar. A hundred years have rolled by since the British made a declaration on December 12, 1911, when, at the coronation ceremony of King George V and Queen Mary, the King announced the shifting of the Capital of the British Raj from Calcutta to Delhi.
Despite some scepticism about commemorating what was essentially a colonial decision, the Capital’s birthday got many groups of enthusiasts interested. They argue about the idea of Delhi like writer Sunil Khilnani did about the idea of India — that the sum is bigger than its parts. One of them is Pramod Kapoor, founder of Roli books, who released Delhi: Red Fort to Raisina, edited by curator JP Losty and with writings by Union minister Salman Khurshid, conservation architect Ratish Nanda and publisher Malvika Singh. The book traces the journey of Delhi from the making of Red Fort to the making of New Delhi at Raisina Hill. Kapoor will also display paintings and photographs from the book at the Indira Gandhi National Centre for the Arts, in an exhibition that will begin on December 15. “It will follow the format of the book, which includes artists’ depiction of Shahjahanabad, life in the old city, colonial view of Delhi and eye-witnesses accounts of Delhi,” he adds.
Comprising 110 works, the highlights include the 1846 watercolour, Panorama of Delhi from the Lahore Gate of the Red Fort, by Mazhar Ali Khan. The panorama from the top of Red Fort’s Lahore Gate is “like a satellite image,” points out Kapoor. It captures the details of architectural landmarks, from Jama Masjid to the Ridge and the narrow streets of Chandni Chowk. Giving a glimpse of the city as it was before the Mutiny of 1857 is the Map of Shahjahanabad by a Delhi Cartographer.
That was in the last century. In the past decade, Delhi-based artist Vikram Kalra too walked the by-lanes of old Delhi holding his sketchbook. In the exhibition titled, “From Red Fort to Raisina Hill” at the India Habitat Centre, he depicts buildings around Raisina Hill, belonging to the Mughal period and the British period, from 1800 to 1911. These include the Residency building, Flagstaff tower, James Skinner’s haveli, Nicholsan’s cemetery, British Commander-in-Chief’s house (now Teen Murti Bhavan) and the Old Secretariat (now the Vidhan Sabha). “I’ve tried to capture the details, including Hindu motifs like the lotus, cows and elephants used by Edwin Lutyens and Herbert Baker in the North and South Blocks,” says the artist.
Delhi of the past is also the theme of the exhibition “Timeless Delhi” organised by the Indian Council for Cultural Relations. To be displayed at Azad Bhavan from December 14, it will compromise photographs of Raja Deen Dayal among others. “There have been several transitions in Delhi in the last 100 years. Celebrating the city through cultural activities seemed most apt,” says Suresh Kumar Goel, director general of ICCR, that has also lined-up other festivities, including a dance performance by Shovana Narayan and a thumri recital by Dr Kumud Jha Diwan.
Lest “pastness” becomes a
repetitive leitmotif, among
the other exhibitions there
is one with contemporary
interpretations too. Nine
artists are part of the show
titled “Celebrating 100
Years of Delhi” that is on
at The Claridges, Surajkund,
till December 23. “I asked
the artists to commemorate
Delhi through their work.
It’s their tribute to
Delhi,” says curator Kiran
Mohan.
The Indian Express, 13th Dec 2011
The star-shaped Hoysala temple at Somnathpur is a favourite with tourists. Hema Narayanan is spellbound by the architectural wonder that the Keshava temple here is.
There must be a reason why Karnataka is called the cradle of stone architecture. Perhaps it’s because of the peerless stone wonders seen here, eloquent reminders of a fertile heritage. It is said that there are three forms of visual art: Painting is art to look at, sculpture is art you can walk around, and architecture is art you can walk through.
I am sure you have looked at art, and walked around art, but have you walked through art in the form of architecture? Well you can, by walking the corridors of the temple of Somnathpur by the Cauvery.
Just one step into the temple courtyard, and the first glance of this fine illustration of style and perfection stunned me – it can emerge only out of deep devotion for architecture, I thought.
How else would they carry on their mastery at making stones speak, for generations? And it is true; this temple is the third exquisite creation of the Hoysala dynasty, after the renowned temples at Belur and Halebidu. Known as the Keshava (or Chennakeshava) temple of Somnathpur, it was built in 1268 AD by architect Somnath, under the reign of King Narasimha III.
Thankfully, it did not undergo destruction like the other two temples did and has been well preserved till date. I have heard bedtime stories of the great Indian epics of Ramayana and Mahabharatha from my grandparents, but witnessing these scenes narrated via stone carvings at Somnathpur was incredible and unexpected. It is one thing to possess power and time and another to use them in a way that the Hoysalas did.
They pursued architecture when they were a major power in South India and their reign was noted for its peace and a leisurely life; hence encouraging talent of all kinds. The artisans were encouraged to have a healthy competition and were allowed to sign their names below their creations as an incentive, something unheard of before their times. Result? They have left behind wonders made of stone, for many generations to witness.
Representative of its ag
Though lesser known among the Hoysala temples, the Somnathpur temple has much superior architecture. It is representative of the age as it showcases an unbroken view of the period’s style. Western tourists and Indian visitors throng Somnathpur making it is widely admired.
The sight of the temple is spellbinding; it is located in the middle of a large courtyard surrounded by an open verandah, which contains 64 cells. Celebrated army commander Somnath who designed this temple has adhered to the typical Hoysala style architecture – it has a mini cosmos with scenes carved on the walls. The guide pointed to the gods, goddesses, dancing girls, musicians, gurus and a variety of animal depictions
Perhaps the Hoysalas have a deep liking for star-shaped structures – this temple is three-celled and star-shaped, with the main cell facing the east. Three distinctly carved towers identical in design and execution surmount all three cells. How could they make them identical, when there were no moulds or tools available then?
I slowly took in the architectural marvel of the outer walls. And why not, when these walls were an art connoisseur’s delight? Standing on a three-feet-high raised platform, the temple is supported at angles by figures of elephants facing outwards. Many railed parapets run the whole way round the shrine. Starting from the bottom, there are friezes of beautiful sculptures of swans, caparisoned elephants, charging horsemen, mythological beasts and scrolls.
Turreted niches with small images of lions separate them. Themes from the Indian epics and the Bhagavata had me captivated. As many as 194 idols have been carved: Lord Vishnu and his incarnations, Brahma, Shiva and Indra adorn the walls as powerful gods; while the goddesses took the rest of the place. Beautiful carvings of Saraswathi and Durga depicted as the goddess of learning and Mahishasuramardhini (slayer of the demon Mahisha) respectively can make you believe that stone walls here can speak if you listen carefully.
Striking feature
For one, this temple is perfectly symmetrical and some of its special features include:
Seven animals sculpted into one figure; one of the layers has a palm-sized figure depicting seven animals - body of a pig, trunk of an elephant, mouth of a crocodile, eyes of a monkey, ears of a cow, tail of a peacock and paws of a lion.
A paper could slide underneath a pillar – one of the temple’s pillars allowed a piece of paper to slide from underneath, one side to the other. Rare carving of Lord Brahma – not many temples in India have an idol of Brahma (part of the cosmic Trinity) in the form of a carving; and Somnathpur temple is one of them.
Signature of sculptors carved on the outer walls and pedestals. Close to 40 carvings had the name of Mallitamma – must have been the master craftsman!
Finally, the missing idol – the temple has three sanctums, which once housed carved idols of Keshava, Janardhana and Venugopala. But today, the idol of Lord Keshava is missing, while the other two adorn the sanctums in their original form.
Think of what it would have taken the architects of that period to carve 16 different ceilings in stone, each ceiling depicting different stages of a blooming plantain. Or the outer walls of Somnathpur, which contain elaborately carved sculptures of the deities of the Hindu pantheon? And if one is keen to know the history of this temple, an inscribed black stone slab, in old Kannada script at the entrance, says it all.
All my day was spent gazing in rapt attention at this stone sanctuary. Pt Jawaharlal Nehru in his book ‘Discovery of India’ wrote, “there is a stillness and everlastingness about the past, it changes not and has a touch of eternity.” And to me, it seemed as if Somnathpur was saying that eternity grows here.
How to get there...
By air: Bangalore is the nearest to Somnathpur (140 km
By rail: Mysore is the nearest station (40km
By road: Buses from Mysore (60 km), Bangalore (130 km) and Srirangapatna
Where to stay..
It is best to stay at Mysore and travel to Somnathpur.
Other information
There are very few good
restaurants in Somnathpur.
Carry food along. Nearby
places to see: Srirangapatna
and Talakad
The Deccan Herald, 13th Dec 2011
Once the cynosure of all
eyes, they now stand
defunct, mere reminders of a
rich past. This is the story
of fountains at key traffic
intersections (or circles)
in Mysore. They are defunct
for a major part of the
year, barring a few days
during Dasara. During the
reign of the Wodeyars,
however, they were tourist
spots.
They continued to draw
attention a few years after
the abolition of princely
rule, but not any more. A
circle near Lansdowne
building, another heritage
building that still stands,
was the first circle to
boast of a fountain.
The Elgin fountain was an
exquisitely carved structure
with sculptures of fish
adorning the five corners at
the bottom and birds in the
middle portion of the
fountain. A toy adorned the
top of the fountain. Water
spouting from the top of the
toy was a sight to behold.
However, it had to pave way
for the statue of Nalwadi
Krishnaraja Wodeyar after
the demise of the ruler in
1940. It’s the same circle
that later went on to become
popular as K R Circle.
Then, there was another
fountain at Hardinge Circle,
the entry point to Mysore.
The fountain here was
decorated with lights of
different colours. This was
a major point of attraction
in the City. The main
purpose behind these circles
was to soothe the mind of
whoever came to the City.
The location of the circles
was also planned in such a
way that they welcomed
visitors at the City’s entry
points. While Elgin was at
the intersection of Sayyaji
Rao road, another at
Hardinge was at the centre
of six gates connecting the
City from different sides.
There was also another in
front of the City railway
station. No sooner did one
came out of the station, did
one catch a glimpse of the
fountain. The fountain at
Elgin was later shifted near
Central Prisons Mysore, the
road that connects Mysore to
Bangalore.
For a brief period, the
fountain was shifted to
another place near Sujata
Hotel, but was shifted back,
closer to the jail. The
fountain that comes alive
only during Dasara along
with others, still stands.
Though the circle is named
after the veteran Kannada
actor Rajkumar, it’s known
as Fountain Circle.
The fountain at Hardinge
also stands, but the lights
have now disappeared. It was
the same fountain that
served as the perfect model
for a similar facility
recreated at Brindavan
Gardens at KRS. However, the
only difference at KRS was
the music, making it a
musical fountain.
The fountain near City
railway station was later
shifted to Government
Ayurvedic Hospital Circle.
The Moulana Abdul Kalam Azad
Circle at the end of Sayyaji
Rao road that connects
Nelson Mandela road to
Bannimantap also has a
fountain.
The fountain at N Madhava
Rao circle in Agrahara was
the first circle that was
built during the modern
period of Mysore, during the
70s. The fountain here,
built with box-like
structures on either sides,
has an idol of Lord Shiva on
the top. However, like the
rest of the fountains in
Mysore, this one has lost
its charm
The Deccan Herald, 13th Dec 2011
The Partition and the influx of refugees changed the contours and demography of New Delhi. It was during 1950s and 60s when several housing, institutional and public buildings came up in a city that was still grappling with the huge burden put on it. It was only by the 1970s that the Capital settled down and south Delhi truly came into its own. Areas like Hauz Khas, Green Park and South Extension came up at this time. The markets in South Extension and Greater Kailash had a more modern look and were patronised by the ever increasing populace of south Delhi.
Many people, who were residing in the walled city till then, also moved into newly developed areas like Greater Kailash I and II and Safdarjung Enclave.
It was the ninth Asian Games held in New Delhi in 1982 that almost brought the Capital into the 21st century. The landmark event changed the city's landscape and skyline. In the run-up to the 16-day event, New Delhi saw the construction of modern flyovers, wide roads and state-of-the-art stadiums that propelled the city's growth by a decade. The Games also brought colour televisions into Indian drawing rooms.
With its ever increasing population and expanding boundaries, the Centre decided to gift Delhi the status of statehood. Delhi got its own legislative assembly and its first elected government was chosen in 1993. Delhi, however, still has a multiplicity of authorities and the fight for full statehood continues.
The 1980s and 90s also saw the emergence of satellite towns like Noida and Gurgaon. In the next few decades, these two suburbs would not only absorb the pressure on Delhi's infrastructure but also come into their own. While the city kept expanding, going beyond its boundaries, it was the Delhi Metro that integrated Delhi-NCR. Starting with a small corridor in 2002, the Metro now has a network of 190 kms and growing.
From being rocky, barren
piece of land in 1911, a
ghost town in the 1930s and
a staid and sarkari city
till the 1950s, New Delhi
has today become a buzzing
town with its gleaming
Metro, glitzy malls and
multiplexes as well as grand
hotels and restaurants.
The Hindustan Times, 14th Dec 2011
After a series of reports by
TOI on the need to protect
the eco-fragile Mangar area
and adjoining forests in the
Aravalis in Faridabad, the
district administration has
sent a detailed report to
the state headquarters
seeking the conservation of
these areas.
Deputy commissioner Rakesh
Gupta told TOI that the
report highlights the need
to conserve areas in Manger
and 7-8 other villages. "We
have found that these areas
are major water recharge
zones and have ample green
cover. We hope these issues
will be considered by the
apex committee constituted
by the government," Gupta
added.
The committee, headed by the
deputy commissioner,
suggested that this area,
being an important forest
for Faridabad, should be
excluded from real estate
zoning. It is also part of a
wildlife corridor between
Delhi and Rajasthan. Gupta
said that non-forestry
activities would cause major
depletion of groundwater and
could pose a threat to the
water availability in
Gurgaon and Faridabad. The
two districts are largely
dependent on groundwater.
Since the government came
out with a Draft Development
Plan (DDP) 2031 for Mangar
and adjoining villages, the
number of requests for
boring tubewells in the
region has increased
manifold. Land prices have
also shot up. The plan
proposes to allow 22 kinds
of real estate activities in
the Aravalis hills - from
farmhouses to airports.
The committee found that
allowing non-forestry
activities in the green belt
would fragment the hills and
affect the catchment area of
Dhauj Lake. The lake has
been drying up because of
vegetational degradation of
the forest in the catchment
area.
Last winter, a leopard had
got trapped in a farmhouse
in the forest area and was
killed by locals. Further
fragmentation will compound
the man-animal conflict
here, committee members say.
Gupta has reportedly
directed the forest
department that the case for
notifying all remaining
gairmumkin pahar/ Aravalli
Hills/ forest areas in all
villages that are covered in
the DDP under section 4 and
5 of Punjab Land
Preservation Act (PLPA)
starting with Mangar and Kot
village be prepared and sent
to the competent authority
for immediate notification.
The Times of India, 14th Dec 2011
Delhi which now boasts of iconic buildings and magnificent architectural opulence — traversed a long journey to become sort of a microcosm of the entire India. But what was the journey that made Delhi one of the most prominent heritage cities in the world?
As the city celebrates 100 years of its re-emergence as modern India’s capital, a book edited by renowned curator J.P. Losty and containing write ups by Union law minister Salman Khurshid, conservation architect Ratish Nanda and publisher Malvika Singh traces evolution of Delhi from coming up of Red Fort to making of New Delhi at Raisina Hill.
The book, Delhi: Red Fort to Raisina, launched last night at a glittering function by chief minister Sheila Dikshit, features rare paintings, maps and pictures sourced from across the world including from British Museum in London, British Library in London and Bibliothèque nationale de France in Paris.
With essays on different aspects of Delhi’s history by Losty, Khurshid, Nanda and Singh, the book is a lively portrait of Delhi as well as its transition from the old-world charm of Shahjahanabad to a modern city with a new seat of power built on the Raisina Hill.
“Of the 100 years of shifting of the capital to Delhi from Kolkata, I have spent 73 years here. It is a sentimental journey for me,” Dikshit said launching the book in presence of a distinguished crowd including Union ministers P. Chidambaram, Kapil Sibal, Praful Patel and M Pallam Raju.
Khurshid, who wrote an essay on Shahjahanabad in the book and gave its title said, “Delhi is a remarkable city. Delhi means so much to all of us.”
Describing Delhi as “little India”, Khurshid said a lot can be done to enhance beauty of the national capital as there is a Delhi which is hidden. “Delhi is convergence of India. It is a little India.”
Asked why there was no government function to celebrate the occasion, Khurshid said probably government did not want to celebrate as it felt that British had shifted the capital and the decision was taken at a colonial darbar.
“Government feels that it was a Darbar of 1911 and the Darbar actually signified our defeat and subservience to the British. So it is a part of the history that we cannot walk away from but certainly not a part of history that we want to celebrate,” he said.
The paintings and pictures chronicle Delhi’s culturally diverse heritage since Mughal era besides providing a run down about its grand structures, buildings and monuments of the Walled City.
From a view of Chandni Chowk in 1815, panorama of Delhi from Lahore Gate of the Red Fort in 1846 to farewell party to Lord Mountbatten post independence, the book features some of the rare paintings and photographs.
For example, the painting The Jama Masjid From The North is the first drawing that can be associated with topographical artist Mazhar Ali Khan whose studio dominated the production of such views of Delhi in the mid-19th Century.
Similarly the map of Shahjahanabad by a Delhi cartographer in 1846-47 shows little vignettes of important buildings seen in elevation and plan. The Asian Age, 14th Dec 2011
As the Capital vies for UNESCO’s World Heritage City status, even naturalists are now pitching in to trace the uniqueness of its natural history. They have pointed out that Delhi is possibly the second national capital, after Nairobi, to attract the largest number of rare migratory birds.
Birdwatcher and author Bikram Grewal, who has been roped in by the Indian National Trust for Art and Cultural Heritage (INTACH), the heritage body developing the nomination dossier for the Heritage City status, has chalked out a lecture on Friday and a walk for bird watchers and natural history enthusiasts at the Okhla Barrage Bird Sanctuary on Sunday morning. Grewal will trace Delhi’s bird watching history and highlight how the Yamuna has played an integral role in giving birth to a flourishing civilization on its banks.
“ There is evidence that the Yamuna was once home to dolphins and, even today, hosts the largest number of migratory birds. During winters Delhi gets 500 species of migratory birds out of which the Okhla Bird Sanctuary itself has more than 330 spe-cies visiting it,” Grewal told Newsline. “Few know that after Nairobi, Delhi is the second national capital to draw the largest number of migratory birds. Yamuna draws many rare bird species.”
Grewal pointed out that only last week, two new bird species were spotted at the Okhla Bird Sanctuary. “The city continues to draw some of the rarest species and last week bird watchers spotted a white-crowned penduline-tit and a smokey warbler at the sanctuary. This also goes to show that the bird-watching community is active and alert ,” Grewal said. The Delhi Bird Club, set up in 1954 with about 20 members, has now grown to a strength of 4,000. “I revived the club in the 1970s and over the years, several more bird-watchers joined us. Today, the club has scho-olchildren as well as elderly members all of who attend at least two to three walks every week. The good thing is that the city is enthusiastic about its fauna,” he added.
INTACH officials said that
the lecture and the walk are
an effort towards creating
awareness about the city’s
natural history, which is an
essential part of the
tangible heritage of the
city.
The Indian Express, 14th Dec 2011
On the day when the foundation of New Delhi was laid by King George V and Queen Mary at Kingsway Camp a hundred years ago, an exhibition has been opened for the public highlighting the growth of the national capital since then.
Hosted at the Indira Gandhi National Centre for the Arts ( IGNCA), the pictorial exhibition chronicles the evolution of Delhi and its transition from Shahjanabad to a modern city.
Titled 'From Red Fort to Raisinia Hill', the exhibition will be open for public for the next ten days with paintings and archival photographs sourced from all over the world. The exhibition is apanorama of the then Shahjahanabad and the city constructed by the Britishers after their decision to shift capital from Calcutta to Delhi in 1911. The Capital of India had shifted back to Delhi - a Delhi that had been the political capital of many erstwhile empires, manifesting the grandeur, style and graciousness of that time and diverse culture. The exhibition displays pictures of Chandani Chowk, Mirza Galib, Bahadur Shah Jafar, dances presented by Indian artists before British VIPs, railway line laid especially to facilitate construction, upcoming Connaught Place, Viceroy House, Council House, Rajpath, North and South Block, among others.
ome of the iconic displays include images of Ludlow Castle in 1837 - a striking haveli in Chandni Chowk in 1858, the avenue of Chandni Chowk , a portrait of Jama Masjid in 1911 and another one showing the parking space near Jama Masjid comprising only tongas and bullock carts. Some of the later images were that of the Council Chambers foundation (now Rajya Sabha) from 1921 sourced from the Royal British library, foundation stone laying ceremony of the All-India memorial (now India Gate) by Duke of Connaught on February 10, 1921, an aerial way of King's Way (now Rajpath), a rare 1911 photo of the Tiz Hazari railway station and original drawings and architecture designs of Edwin Lutyens and Herbert Baker of the designing of New Delhi.
The exhibition was
inaugurated by Union culture
minister Kumari Selja in the
presence of chief minister
Sheila Dikshit.
Times of India, 16th December 2011
‘Make use of renewable sources mandatory for power generation'
Parliamentarians have sought Prime Minister Manmohan Singh's intervention in reining in mobile operators from misusing subsidised diesel for running mobile towers, which were causing massive environmental pollution
They have urged Dr. Singh to ensure that strong provisions are incorporated in the National Telecom Policy, 2011, currently being finalised, making it mandatory for the use of renewable sources and technologies for power generation to run these towers
On the initiative of NGO Greenpeace, around a dozen prominent MPs from both Lok Sabha and Rajya Sabha have expressed their concern over the increasing exploitation of the diesel subsidy by the profit-making telecom sector and highlighted the need for substantially reducing the consumption of diesel by the sector, especially in their network tower operations
These MPs have also stressed on mandating the public disclosure of emissions and the establishment of the progressive emission reduction plans within the ambit of the newly proposed NTP 2011
The MPs who have written to the Prime Minister as well as Communications and IT Minister Kapil Sibal include Sharad Yadav, Rajiv Pratap Rudy, Raghuvansh Prasad Singh, Rajendra Agarwal, P. Karunakaran, Varun Gandhi, Basudeb Acharia, Tapan Sen, Shripad Y. Naik, R.C. Khuntia, Chandan Mitra and G. Devarajan
In its report “Dirty Talking — A case for telecom sector to shift from diesel to renewable”, released earlier this year, Greenpeace had claimed that the exploitation of diesel subsidy by the telecom sector, as the second-largest consumer, was resulting in an annual loss of over Rs.2,600 crore to the state exchequer annually
Greenpeace has also
written to the government,
asking it to ensure that
telecom companies publicly
disclose the carbon
emissions of their entire
business operation and
establish progressive
emission reduction targets,
besides committing to shift
the sourcing of 50 per cent
of their energy requirements
towards renewable energy
sources and phase out diesel
use in their business
operations by 2015
The Hindu, 16th December 2011
With the Sun Temple as the backdrop, performances that stood out at the Konark Festival were those that capitalised on space utilisation and group dynamics
What with Chinese lanterns decorating trees and buildings lit, from modest beginnings a few years ago to the present throngs, every road seemingly leading to the temple township, the Konark Festival mounted by Odisha Tourism and Cultural Affairs Department has grown beyond recognition. It now encompasses many art disciplines like sand art on the Chandrabhaga beach featuring international artistes, a handloom and handicrafts exhibition and Baldev Maharath's on-the-spot paintings inspired by the classical dance performances on the massive open-air stage with the Sun Temple as the backdrop
Featured daily, Odissi groups, barring Ramli Ibrahim, lured by the ample stage, featured large groups, not allowing movement to flower in all its ambit, though a select professional group filled the space with its energy
Sharmila Biswas' Odissi Vision and Movement Centre, flagging off the festival, contended with opening-day snafus of fluctuating sound balance, music going unheard in places. Despite a meditative, minimalistic Ganesh vandana, “Katha Shoorpanakha”, Sharmila's unique creation, a result of painstaking research into Orissa's narrative traditions, with sahitya recitation by traditional musicians evoking a distinctive regional feel, Gati-vilas and Morchana imaginatively designed to suit mridangam mnemonics, Sharmila's group choreography aesthetics got diluted with too many dancers, a professionally finished batch juxtaposed with another less experienced lot. Shoorpanakha's group rendition, thanks to comparison with the unforgettable duet by Ayona and Saswati, suffered
Aditi Mangaldas' “Unchartered Seas” by Drishtikon Foundation, seeking to fathom the nature of man's eternal search for that higher something (ultimately revelatory, defying description), despite lighting sometimes shrouding the dancers in darkness, triumphed, with the sheer energy and quality of the male and female dancers. Aditi harnesses Kathak's abstract repertoire with suggestive finesse, the quieter interpretative moments built round the poetry of Meera, Kabir, Jalaluddin Rumi and Bhartendu Harishchandra (largely rendered by her), contrasting with the rich group virtuosity, drawing constant applause from an appreciative audience. But vocalist Faraz (music by Shubha Mudgal and Aneesh pradhan) was below par, unable to hold his notes
Mosalikanti Jaikishore's Kuchipudi Art Academy, right from Oothukadu Venkatasubbaiyar's “Ananda-nartana Ganapatim” in Nattai to the tarangam razzmatazz, with Narayana Tirtha's “Alokaye Sri Balakrishnam” depicting Krishna's subjugation of Kaliya and as the butter-stealing charmer (“Navaneeta khanda dadhichora”, Mohanam) was slick, typical of this thinking Kuchipudi teacher/ dancer. Musical accompaniment with wife Padmavani's nattuvangam and G. Srikanth's vocal, complemented the dance effort. Completing the presentation suite were Tillana in Kuntalavarali and the Purandhara Dasa Aradhana in Surutti. Stage entries could have been planned without dancers seen, waiting to enter
Also very neat in its all-Padmanabha homage was the Tiruvanantapuram Mohiniattam troupe under Neena Prasad
Guru Sashadhar Acharya's Serikella Chhau group presented the orthodox repertoire of Jatra ghat, Radha-Krishna, Yodha and poetic creations like Ratri, Mayura and Chandrabhaga. Good music was complemented by excellent shehnai
Unalloyed professionalism characterised Ramli Ibrahim's Sutra Dance Foundation presentation — dance proficiency, group discipline and floor spacing impeccable. Ramli used Sutra colleague Guna's malleable but non-Odissi body (without the torso isolations) intelligently, as the counterpoint other, in dance narration, the individualistic style not affecting group formations. “Vision of Forever” painted bold images, citing Tantric/ Saivite philosophies, in a contrasting complement of opposites, benign /awesome, male/ female. Deities like Matangi, Sodashi and Kamala are totally positive energies and Kamala standing over a corpse and Bagalamukhi seemingly cutting the sadhaka's tongue struck discordant notes. The Bhagavati colours of black and red costume (not what is ritually prescribed for Mahavidhya deities) was visually striking and the ukkutas for the nritta punctuations well recited by Gajendra Panda (whose solo choreography was adapted for the group as announced); Laxmikant Palit's vocal support was non-existent in the higher reaches
Srjan's Bhagavat Gita had Sujata as Krishna teaming up with Ratikant Mohapatra as Arjuna. Known for evocative character enactment, Ratikant's Arjuna, however, lacked the agile movement sweep with masterful warrior tread. Superb lighting stole the show. Ratikant's movement designing, revelling in building round the tribhanga, rarely used the contrasting broad chauka. Music was well-conceived and rehearsed
Suravi's Harihar Sabda, Pallavi and Dhara Sri Radha under Guru Pitambar Biswal, in choreographic ideas needs to evolve beyond predictable formation
Odissi Research Centre's dance drama “Taala Tatwa” disappointed, the unwieldy dancer contingent of uneven proficiency not throwing up any outstanding talent. Guru Durga Charan Ranbir's dance designing seemed indeterminate in the Siva /Ravana encounters — Siva aimlessly flailing arms and Ravana belligerently treading, neither evoking powerful resonances. And the Sapta tala focus got lost in performing to declamatory sabda/ patha music. Preferably, smaller formations exhibiting rhythmic arrangements would have suited
A high reputation preceding Kalakshetra's Bharatanatyam, the audience expected something different from the Margam conventional format. Nandichol and Tillana had exemplary neatness of lines, but the Sreeranjani varnam “Swami nee manam irangi arul taa” with four dancers, albeit finished, doing the same motions rooted to their places, left the audience unmoved. The bold choice of Kamas Javali, featuring two dancers portraying a Mugdha Nayika, got somewhat lost in this large performance space. Sai Shankar's vocal with Haripadman's Nattuvangam led a thin but experienced musical team The Hindu, 16th December 2011
With the Sun Temple as the backdrop, performances that stood out at the Konark Festival were those that capitalised on space utilisation and group dynamics
What with Chinese lanterns decorating trees and buildings lit, from modest beginnings a few years ago to the present throngs, every road seemingly leading to the temple township, the Konark Festival mounted by Odisha Tourism and Cultural Affairs Department has grown beyond recognition. It now encompasses many art disciplines like sand art on the Chandrabhaga beach featuring international artistes, a handloom and handicrafts exhibition and Baldev Maharath's on-the-spot paintings inspired by the classical dance performances on the massive open-air stage with the Sun Temple as the backdrop
Featured daily, Odissi groups, barring Ramli Ibrahim, lured by the ample stage, featured large groups, not allowing movement to flower in all its ambit, though a select professional group filled the space with its energy
Sharmila Biswas' Odissi Vision and Movement Centre, flagging off the festival, contended with opening-day snafus of fluctuating sound balance, music going unheard in places. Despite a meditative, minimalistic Ganesh vandana, “Katha Shoorpanakha”, Sharmila's unique creation, a result of painstaking research into Orissa's narrative traditions, with sahitya recitation by traditional musicians evoking a distinctive regional feel, Gati-vilas and Morchana imaginatively designed to suit mridangam mnemonics, Sharmila's group choreography aesthetics got diluted with too many dancers, a professionally finished batch juxtaposed with another less experienced lot. Shoorpanakha's group rendition, thanks to comparison with the unforgettable duet by Ayona and Saswati, suffered
Aditi Mangaldas' “Unchartered Seas” by Drishtikon Foundation, seeking to fathom the nature of man's eternal search for that higher something (ultimately revelatory, defying description), despite lighting sometimes shrouding the dancers in darkness, triumphed, with the sheer energy and quality of the male and female dancers. Aditi harnesses Kathak's abstract repertoire with suggestive finesse, the quieter interpretative moments built round the poetry of Meera, Kabir, Jalaluddin Rumi and Bhartendu Harishchandra (largely rendered by her), contrasting with the rich group virtuosity, drawing constant applause from an appreciative audience. But vocalist Faraz (music by Shubha Mudgal and Aneesh pradhan) was below par, unable to hold his notes
Mosalikanti Jaikishore's Kuchipudi Art Academy, right from Oothukadu Venkatasubbaiyar's “Ananda-nartana Ganapatim” in Nattai to the tarangam razzmatazz, with Narayana Tirtha's “Alokaye Sri Balakrishnam” depicting Krishna's subjugation of Kaliya and as the butter-stealing charmer (“Navaneeta khanda dadhichora”, Mohanam) was slick, typical of this thinking Kuchipudi teacher/ dancer. Musical accompaniment with wife Padmavani's nattuvangam and G. Srikanth's vocal, complemented the dance effort. Completing the presentation suite were Tillana in Kuntalavarali and the Purandhara Dasa Aradhana in Surutti. Stage entries could have been planned without dancers seen, waiting to enter
Also very neat in its all-Padmanabha homage was the Tiruvanantapuram Mohiniattam troupe under Neena Prasad
Guru Sashadhar Acharya's Serikella Chhau group presented the orthodox repertoire of Jatra ghat, Radha-Krishna, Yodha and poetic creations like Ratri, Mayura and Chandrabhaga. Good music was complemented by excellent shehnai
Unalloyed professionalism characterised Ramli Ibrahim's Sutra Dance Foundation presentation — dance proficiency, group discipline and floor spacing impeccable. Ramli used Sutra colleague Guna's malleable but non-Odissi body (without the torso isolations) intelligently, as the counterpoint other, in dance narration, the individualistic style not affecting group formations. “Vision of Forever” painted bold images, citing Tantric/ Saivite philosophies, in a contrasting complement of opposites, benign /awesome, male/ female. Deities like Matangi, Sodashi and Kamala are totally positive energies and Kamala standing over a corpse and Bagalamukhi seemingly cutting the sadhaka's tongue struck discordant notes. The Bhagavati colours of black and red costume (not what is ritually prescribed for Mahavidhya deities) was visually striking and the ukkutas for the nritta punctuations well recited by Gajendra Panda (whose solo choreography was adapted for the group as announced); Laxmikant Palit's vocal support was non-existent in the higher reaches
Srjan's Bhagavat Gita had Sujata as Krishna teaming up with Ratikant Mohapatra as Arjuna. Known for evocative character enactment, Ratikant's Arjuna, however, lacked the agile movement sweep with masterful warrior tread. Superb lighting stole the show. Ratikant's movement designing, revelling in building round the tribhanga, rarely used the contrasting broad chauka. Music was well-conceived and rehearsed
Suravi's Harihar Sabda, Pallavi and Dhara Sri Radha under Guru Pitambar Biswal, in choreographic ideas needs to evolve beyond predictable formation
Odissi Research Centre's dance drama “Taala Tatwa” disappointed, the unwieldy dancer contingent of uneven proficiency not throwing up any outstanding talent. Guru Durga Charan Ranbir's dance designing seemed indeterminate in the Siva /Ravana encounters — Siva aimlessly flailing arms and Ravana belligerently treading, neither evoking powerful resonances. And the Sapta tala focus got lost in performing to declamatory sabda/ patha music. Preferably, smaller formations exhibiting rhythmic arrangements would have suited
A high reputation
preceding Kalakshetra's
Bharatanatyam, the audience
expected something different
from the Margam conventional
format. Nandichol and
Tillana had exemplary
neatness of lines, but the
Sreeranjani varnam “Swami
nee manam irangi arul taa”
with four dancers, albeit
finished, doing the same
motions rooted to their
places, left the audience
unmoved. The bold choice of
Kamas Javali, featuring two
dancers portraying a Mugdha
Nayika, got somewhat lost in
this large performance
space. Sai Shankar's vocal
with Haripadman's
Nattuvangam led a thin but
experienced musical team
The Hindu, 16th December 2011
Tibetan Rebellion of 1959 brought the Central Tibetan administration of H.H. the 14th Dalai Lama to India, and it was first established at Mussoorie in the Dehradun district in northern India before being moved to its current seat in Dharamsala
Largely well known for its prestigious education institutions The Forest Research Institute, the Indian Military Academy and the famous Doon School, the Dehradun valley was adorned with another feather on its cap when in 2002 his holiness the Dalai Lama inaugurated the world’s largest Buddhist Stupa at the Mindrolling monastery in Clement town
Until a decade back Clement town was a quiet sleepy suburb with the military cantonment in proximity but since then it has evolved into a jostling centre of activity with many educational institutions, hotels and commercial centers. But the place still holds some old world charm with old churches and houses made in the British architectural style. The Tibetan settlement adds a unique flavor to the township altogether and one can sense the change in scenery as one is welcomed by large vertical prayer flags in each courtyard and a frequent maroon robe amidst the passersby
Buddhism flourished in Tibet from the onset of the eighth century and out of the four major schools that developed, the oldest is the Nyingma or the old translation school. Mindrolling Monastery is one of the six major monasteries belonging to this lineage. Mindrolling, pronounced minh-droh-lyng, is translated in Tibetan as ‘the place of perfect emancipation’
Most of the monks arrive in the monastery when they are less than 10 years of age and then starts the rigorous practice of honing the mind and learning the ancient Tibetan texts, Buddhist philosophy along with the ritual chants, dances and the ancient knowledge which has been transferred since the beginning from master to disciple
The Great World Peace Stupa stands within the Mindrolling monastery premises and is surrounded by a neatly manicured and landscaped garden spread in 2 acres of land. It was erected to spread world peace and to benefit all sentient beings and it happens to be the largest Buddhist Stupas in the world. It is a 185 feet tall and 100 feet wide, three storey structure with each floor as a shrine room containing statues of Buddha Sakyamuni and sacred relics. The walls are covered with exquisite and detailed Jataka murals depicting stories from the life of Buddha
On the outside the structure glows in white with windows in primary colours and thick black borders standing out. The Stupa is an architectural marvel in itself and on its façade it has an elegant mural of Maitreya, the future Buddha who, it is believed, will be reborn in the time of decline to bring back the teachings of the Sakyamuni
Dehradun attracts visitors
from all over the world for
its serene scenery and
pleasant weather, and the
Mindrolling monastery is a
must see for the visitors to
experience the grandeur and
be humbled by
The Asian Age, 16th December 2011
From luxurious drapes, panther skins and Greek statuettes to the most intricate and handcrafted interiors, the camps of Indian princes made quite an impression on The Pioneer’s correspondents. A summary of their dispatches
When I wrote to you in
August, I described the
Coronation Durbar area as a
skeleton which would in time
be made beautiful with flesh
and blood. There was then a
great bare plain with dried
grass and much dust,
scratched with camp boundary
lines, and spotted with
half-finished erections of
brick. The two semi-circular
mounds of the Amphitheatre
were bare heaps of earth.
Since then a transformation
has taken place. Everything
is altered and most things
are ready for the great
event.
“Out of the strong came
forth sweetness,” said the
long-haired champion of
Israel, when he found a
swarm of wild bees making
honey in the rotting carcase
of the lion which he had
slain. A similar proverb
might be applied to the
Durbar camps. It is a
delightful experience to
stroll along the Ridge when
the sun is sinking. The
colour in the west gains in
richness from the smoke
ascending from factory
chimneys in Sabzi Mandi.
Then as the light fades and
dies, the electric lamps
begin to show up all over
the camp area. It is a sight
not soon to be forgotten
when the greatest overhead
electric lighting system in
the world comes into play.
The main roads can be
followed by the double lines
of lights, while the various
camps are marked by
clustered groups
The first thing that strikes one is the uniform whiteness and cleanliness of the tents. No soiled canvas is permitted at Delhi. The second impression is the fresh green of the grass in the camp gardens; and the third is the cheerful bright red bajeri of the neat camp roads. Palms and flowers in all directions add to the general brightness. Chrysanthemums are much in evidence, and good use has been made of the blue convolvulus and other pretty creepers to cover boundary palings
H. H. the Nizam’s camp has a luxurious open lounge shamiana in front, with the drawing room or Durbar tent behind it. The prevailing colour in the decoration scheme of the latter is old gold. The carpets are fine specimens of Kashmir work; there are some silk embroidered cushions which would make the most righteous break the tenth commandment, and some large panther skins on the floor set off the upholstering and remind the spectator that His Highness, like his lamented father, is a crack rifle shot. The Maharaja of Mysore is to live at Maiden’s Hotel, which he has rented for the occasion. Consequently his camp is less covered by tents
The Baroda Camp is elaborate and exquisitely finished. The entrance arch is characteristic of Gujarati architecture and is neither crude nor over-elaborate. But the most striking feature of this camp is the good taste with which a colour scheme has been worked out in the decoration of each tent. The roofs and walls are draped with most exquisite silk, and the favourite colours are a soft pink and an artistic grey. The furniture is all in European style to suit the habits of the Gaekwar family, but all the work has been done in Baroda State, and both furniture-makers and upholsterers deserve the highest commendation
But the finest camp of all is that of the Maharaja of Kashmir. As one approaches it the eye is caught by a dark colour in striking contrast to the brightness on all sides. For a moment one thinks that it is gloomy, but on stopping to examine it one soon bursts into raptures of admiration. The whole frontage of the camp is palisaded with the most lovely carved Kashmiri wood work. Each panel is a fretted floral design, grapes on one, pomegranates on another, irises on a third, and so on; each panel is a perfect gem. Nowhere have I seen more superb wood carving and fretting. At night rows of electric lamps (which are drawn back and concealed by day) light up this wonderful palisade. The gateway in the centre is of the same dark-stained, carved wood, but the pattern is only in relief and not fretted through. The gateway roofs are of copper, each point being surmounted by a gilt ball. The camp inside is worthy of its magnificent front. The ceilings of the tents are of quiet toned but very rich silk embroidery and the tent poles are all covered with roughly hammered solid silver, very massive and weighty. The camp is not all pitched yet, and stacks of these silver poles are lying about ready for use. His Highness’s drawing room tent is the most richly decorated apartment it has ever been my lot to see. It must suffice to say that everything in that camp is Kashmiri work at its best
In this wonderful canvas city one passes by, with a mere remark “ordinary” or “not much” camps that anywhere else would be considered the last word in elegance and luxury
Next to Hyderabad comes Patiala. The white and gold gate posts of this camp are surmounted by gilt models of cannon which are quite a good idea and catch the eye at once. There are numerous glass chandeliers which will make a fine show when the electric bulbs are lit up. Some very fine vases took my fancy much. In front of the tent is a red shamiana covering the way to a pavilion in the garden of which all the frame-work is heavily coated with solid silver
Opposite lies the Gwalior camp, which bids fair to be equally gorgeous, but it is not yet sufficiently in order to admit of description. The most striking features at present are the life-sized lions of painted plaster which support each of the gate posts, first cousins doubtless of the British lions, and reminiscent of the fact that Scindia has already borne arms in the quarrels of the British Empire
Beyond that comes Bhopal, a deep narrow quadrangle, the Durbar tent of which is lined with broad vertical bands of blue and yellow. Kapurthala comes next on the right, and here again the quadrangle plan has been adopted, but a new colour scheme is introduced by facing the sides with canvas striped with vertical bands of black and white. It is very effective. Sirmur marches with Kapurthala, and has rendered his camp distinctive by numerous low pillars in the boundary wall, each of which is surmounted by a female statuette in ancient Greek robes, all painted silver. It is pretty in its way, but might not be considered altogether appropriate to an Indian camp
The Benares camp is tastefully simple and resembles those in the European quarter. Travancore and Cochin would seem to have combined to work out one pattern for both their camps. A white latticed paling surrounds them both and looks very well. I believe that both these Princes have determined to live in houses which they have taken in the Civil Lines, for the South Indians are very much afraid of the cold of Delhi, of which they had more than they liked at the last Durbar. I think they are wise, for I must say that it is more than cold in a tent at nights now
In contrast to the Indian patterns, the pattern on the roof of the Bhutan tent has its colours in bold patches of black and red with subsidiary decoration in blue and yellow, both of charming tints. The design is that of a great bird, which might be a Himalayan eagle and might be a Mongolian conception of a peacock. Any way I admire it very much. The camp is surrounded by flags of Bhutia pattern
When one comes to Nawanager one half expects to see a design of golden cricket bats, but His Highness the Jam Sahib has preferred to decorate his green arch with numerous portraits of Their Majesties, and one large one of the King Emperor is an excellent likeness. The Alwar Camp deserves more than a passing word of notice. In place of a central durbar shamiana with living tents behind it, a regular house, to all appearance built in pucca style, has been erected. It has a large pillared porch vestibule, and suites of rooms. All is white picked out with gold, and the walls are topped with imposing battlements are graceful minarettes
The block of Bengal Chief’s
camps is bounded at each end
by an arch across the road.
One would be inclined by
this time to imagine that
all possible designs had
been exhausted, and that
originality in decoration of
arches was no longer
possible. But these arches
are of Uriya design and are
quite unlike anything else.
The decorative scheme is a
jungle view, and it is very
boldly executed. Great tree
trunks and broad leaves are
painted on the sides, while
the heads of tigers and
elephants of generous size
peer through the foliage.
Somewhat curiously, at the
summit the beasts give place
to fishes, one of
conventional shape, one a
shellfish, and two rampant
dolphins. The Uriya
designers are to be
congratulated on their work
The Pioneer, 16th December 2011
Development cannot be at the cost of environment
What do the forests bear? Soil, water and pure air”. This was the resounding cry of those who led the Chipko movement to save the Himalayan forests and terrain from the contractors-developers-politicos cabal, which still managed to bulldoze its way. In present-day Haryana, conservationists, alarmed by the manic development trajectory followed by the State Government, in cahoots with promoters — one of whom figures high up on Forbes’ world’s-richest list while another is an accused in the 2G scam — have launched a campaign to save whatever remains of the mountain range. Coming together under the banner of Mission Gurgaon Development, activists claim that about 100 projects are on the anvil, and a large number of them are meant for Gurgaon, Faridabad and Mewat in the Aravalli zone. They are angry because this region has borne the brunt of frenzied mining and construction work over the past two decades, with massive funding from abroad giving a tremendous fillip to unsustainable development
They are especially concerned that the pristine, protected forest areas of Manger in Faridabad district will now be targeted by promoters, who were earlier stalled by the Union Ministry of Environment and Forests. In the event that the State Government approves the colonisation of this beautiful forested portion of the Aravallis, which have otherwise been rudely plundered and battered, they intend to move court against such devastation, in violation of Supreme Court directives to halt it. In January 2009, the apex court-appointed Central Empowered Committee had recommended banning mining completely, except in some patches. The court also proposed that unauthorised constructions be demolished in Faridabad district
But the building mafia still exercises massive clout, as the latest plans reveal. When the Union Ministry of Environment and Forests and later, the Haryana Forest Department last October refused to clear the European Technology Park in a vast swathe of the Aravalli forest belt in Faridabad district, lobbyists got into action, in a bid to compel policy-makers to fall in line with promoters. This project entailed building of residential colonies and an academic zone over 500 acres. Residents of three villages — Manger, Baliawas and Badhwadi — spearheaded resistance to the scheme, fearing that it would encroach into Mangerbani, the sacred forest, hallowed by the presence of Gadaria Baba, a mystic who lived there over 500 years ago
Mr Harish Mehta, director (Indian affairs), of the Dutch Haryana Business Consortium, had then tried hard to justify the project, with a Memorandum of Understanding having reportedly been signed between the promoters and Haryana State Industrial and Infrastructure Corporation in the Netherlands in 2006. He even threatened that the promoters would take the project elsewhere. But there’s no such luck, as they or other builders are again eyeing Manger and the adjoining areas. What is reprehensible is how HSIDC, under the neo-liberal reforms mandate, has been reduced to functioning as a dalal or agent for promoters though it may choose to dignify its role by calling itself a ‘facilitator’. It acquires land cheap from owners, invoking the public purpose clause in the archaic Land Acquisition Act of 1894, or free public land and hands it over to private operators at nominal cost. This is the sad truth, underlying the meteoric growth of the State.
The Haryana Government’s insatiable hunger for concretisation has gradually led to the ravaging of its fragile eco system, with the Aravalli hills being pitted by relentless mining or simply levelled by dynamite; green spaces and forests disappearing; and ground water and water sources rapidly depleting. This is truly alarming in an arid, drought-prone State, whose greatest need is conserving water and green cover if it is to continue to remain habitable. The decades since economic liberalisation in 1991 have seen Haryana traversing an Alice in Wonderland-course, with sprawling urban and industrial complexes mushrooming, as local denizens forsake traditional agricultural work to encash land, turn builders, brokers and even criminals
While urban growth is certainly necessary and desirable, it cannot be at the cost of environment and farming, which is a long term source of livelihood. An ethical and rational policy framework would have ensured the course of sustainable development. But philistines in power never see beyond their blinkers, working for short term gains. Conservationists have since long been sounding the alarm against the mindless destruction of the Aravallis for development purposes. One of the oldest mountain ranges in the world, and extending from Gujarat through Rajasthan and Haryana, and part of western Uttar Pradesh, it has prevented the desertification of the capital and towns by standing as a barrier against the creeping sands of the western desert. But frenzied mining and construction over the past two decades — ever since uncurbed funds began pouring in from abroad — have resulted in the mountain range disappearing for long stretches in Rajasthan; Uttar Pradesh’s fabled Brajbhumi, associated with the divine Radha-Krishna leela; and Haryana
So far as Manger and its environs are concerned, it is likely that part of the area, earmarked for development, is a forest zone, notified under the Punjab Land Preservation Act. Therefore, the land cannot be deployed for non-forest purposes. Mangerbani, in particular, is a self-regenerating jungle, and harbours diverse wildlife: leopards, jackals, wild hares, mongoose, snakes, exotic birds
Who, in their right
senses, would want to
replace this natural jungle
with a soulless concrete
jungle? The Union Ministry
of Environment and Forests’
Green Tribunal, which spiked
the Renuka dam, proposed by
the Delhi Government, must
intercede to protect the
region
The Pioneer, 16th December 2011
A demand for complete statehood for Delhi resonated at the Hindustan Times New Delhi 100 Conclave on Thursday.
The conclave was attended by Delhi chief minister Sheila Dikshit, writer and diplomat Pavan K Verma, conservation expert AGK Menon, former convener of the Delhi chapter
of INTACH OP Jain and writer Mark Tully. The multiplicity of authorities that govern the city were pointed out time and again as a problem by the speakers who made a strong pitch for giving the city complete statehood
Said Dikshit, "There is nothing here that belongs to us. The police are under the home ministry, the Delhi Development Authority is under the ministry of urban development and the NDMC gets its funds from the union government. The federal government doesn't feel comfortable in leaving the running of the city to the state government.
Adding to this, Jain said, "Citizens and those who govern the city need to give more respect to skilled professionals if we want more wonders like the Delhi Metro in the city.
Dikshit also hinted at the possibility of having to go for vertical constructions in the coming years
"Everyone wants a small place in Delhi and this has put immense pressure on the city. We can't demolish the modern to conserve the old. So, we need to work with what we have," she added
But the need to preserve the city's heritage was also emphasised
"We cannot abandon the old in building New Delhi. If we forget the past we cannot build with confidence in future," said Verma
The panelists also spoke about the challenges of migration
"Delhi needs
well developed satellite
towns around it to absorb
the heavy flow of migrants
or the city will choke,"
said Tully
Hindustan Times, 16th December 2011
The multi-level parking project in Kasturba Gandhi Marg that had hit a hurdle for being too close to a protected ASI-monument, may finally take off. State-level government appointed competent authority submitted a report to the National Monuments Authority (NMA) this week recommending a no-objection certificate (NOC) for the project. Now, the final call on this NMDC project will be taken by NMA. However, the green light has come with certain stipulations - made by the competent authority - to maintain the heritage character of the site.
The authority, which has been appointed to look into projects located in prohibited or regulated zones of protected monuments, had visited the site in July this year. Archaeological Survey of India ( ASI) had stopped construction work last year after the Archaeological Sites and Ancient Monuments and Remains (Amendment and Validation) Act, 2010 came into effect. According to this new act, no permission can be given to projects falling 300m of protected monuments without the consent of the National Monuments Authority, which will act on a recommendation by the state-level competent authority. The parking project fell less than 300m from the ancient Ugrasen ki baoli at Hailey Road.
"According to the survey, the construction site falls 204m from the closest side of the baoli and 266m from another side. Since this is within the regulated zone, permission can be given to NDMC adept a few stipulations,'' said Vijay Singh, the competent authority for Delhi monuments.
The report submitted to NMA has some recommendations for the project like incorporating the art and architecture of Ugrasen ki baoli and Connaught Place in the facade of the building. Other recommendations include dedicating space for photo galleries of heritage sites in the corridors, lobbies the building. The roof is suggested to be designed in such a manner that water tanks and pipes are not unaesthetically exposed. To highlight city's heritage and spread awareness further, it has also been recommended to incorporate the art and architecture of the protected monuments in CP inside the interiors of the proposed commercial area of the building.While directing NDMC to steer clear of all sorts of encroachments and unplanned activities, the report also said that traffic circulation plan around the site be studied and integrated properly around the proposed car parking.
With a capacity to park
1,582 vehicles, the 13-floor
structure at KG Marg, is
supposed to be one of
Delhi's biggest fully
automated parking lots
Times of India, 17th December 2011
A collection of photographs by renowned lensmen, a dance performance byShovana Narayan and a spread of Purani Dilli delicacies were the highlights ofDastaan-e-Dilli organised by Iccr. Ila Sankrityayan reports.
On one hand as the aroma of loban, the sound of ghungroos and the recitation of thumri and shayari recreated the bygone era reminding today’s Delhizens of the mehfils that were once a part of the culture of Purani Dilli, on the other it also introduced them to the city’s architectural heritage through some rare photographs. The entire ambience turned nostalgic with the addition of the much-familiar desi ghee rich cuisine from northern India. All these memories were recently revisited during the centenary year celebrations of the Capital — Dastaan-e-Dilli — organised by Indian Council For Cultural Relations at the lush green lawns of its headquarters at Azad Bhawan
The event, with three major facets, included an exhibition on the architectural changes the city witnessed, a cultural performance and a celebration of Dilli’s delicacies. It was an out-of-the-world experience and an eye-opener for some Delhiwalas who have limited knowledge about the heritage of Delhi and want to be acquainted with its past. The event acted as a reminder of certain elements from the past that are either rare to witness or almost vanished from our lives and also showed the beauty and the dynamism of a city where the past co-exists with the present
Visiting architectural
heritage
Over the past 100 years,
Delhi has undergone major
transformations. Overall, it
is a city where at one point
you see narrow lanes, street
food, old havelis, monuments
and on other, there is the
imperial city full of
spacious and tree-lined
avenues, shopping complexes,
hotels and multi-storeyed
buildings The exhibition
showcased Delhi’s change
from pre-Durbar days to
modern-day Delhi as the
focus. It comprised of
photographs and etchings of
pre-1911 Delhi like
Shahjahanabad, Mehrauli and
presenting the monuments to
architectural highlights of
today. It displayed
photographs of Delhi taken
by the legendary Raja Deen
Dayal, Dattatraya Dinkar
Apte and eminent
photographer Achal Kumar.
While going through the
exhibition, one could see
photographs of Qutub Minar,
Red Fort, Old Fort, Jantar
Mantar to Vijay Chowk,
President’s House, India
Gate and the most recent
ones as Metro construction
sites, BSNL building and LIC
building
“It took almost one year to work on this exhibition. First step was selecting the theme and then the works. I chose photos that brought the overall view of the Capital between 1911 to 2011. While the photographs by Raja Deen Dayal reflected ancient Delhi, pictures and etchings by Apte and photos by Achal Kumar depicted the modern city. You could also see a subtle merger of the past with the present in a few of the photos like one by Kumar where he has clicked a zebra crossing in front of the Old Fort. On one side, the fort symbolises the past, the crossing reflects the modern society,” says Naresh Kapuria, curator of the exhibition
Recreating the magic of
Mughal Durba
The evening also
witnessed a Kathak
performance by danseuse
Shovana Narayan and
thumrirecital by vocalist
Kumud Jha Diwan that tried
to capture the romantic era
of later Mughal period
through the poetry of Mirza
Ghalib, Mir Taqi Mir and
Bahadur Shah Zafar. It was
among those rare occasion to
witness the mehfil culture
return to the city with
traditional shararas, kurtas
and dupattas and the
rendition of shayari like
Kuch to tanhai ki raaton ka
sahara hota or tum na aae to
kya sehar na hui. “During
this period, Delhi witnessed
newer and greater heights in
poetry, music and dance with
poets like Ghalib, Mir and
Zafar and musicians like
Adarang, Sadarang, Manrang,
Bande Khan and Bekhud Dehlvi
others, adorning the Mughal
court. Thumri specially
flourished then with
composers writing bandishes.
It was an entirely different
atmosphere,” shares the
danseuse
On thumri recital, Diwan said, “Over time, thumri is losing its charm but in those days, it was an integral part of evening mehfils. In fact, when we are asked to recreate that era here so we selected compositions like Hamara kaha mano rajaji and Jamunia ki daal tod layai as these are among the most famous dadra and thumri bandishes. But with time, only a few thumri singers have been left to present these traditional compositions.
Enjoying the Dehlvi
Dastarkhwa
Aloo-bedvain, sitaphal ki
subzi, jalebi, rabri, kulfi
and many more such
delicacies formed the food
section at the event.
“Keeping in view the
concept, I decided on the
recipes. While the
vegetarian cuisine has been
cooked minus garlic and
onion, traditional non-veg
delicacies from the Mughal
era like chicken nihari and
mutton korma were on the
list. Moreover, all these
dishes were prepared in desi
ghee as refined oil wasn’t
used back then,” says food
section supervisor Gunjan
Goela
The Pioneer, 17th December 2011
Coca Cola's 2010 Diwali commercial will remain an unlikely landmark for Indian tribal art for a long time to come. It was the most stunning example of popular culture incorporating elements of tribal art, the long neglected 'other' art of the country. With the snazzy number Jaata Kahan Hai Deewaney as the backdrop, the commercial showed skeletal figures drawn on the soft drink bottle breaking off into a jig. These are the same signature figures the Warli tribesmen of Maharashtra paint on their mud-plastered walls and on paper.
That may have been a one-off tribute to Warli art, but the so far ignored tribal art of India is on the verge of finding its spot under the sun. Unmistakable tectonic shifts are taking place in its earthy precincts. Though it still has a long way to go to reach the 'aha' levels of urban contemporary art, it has at least found a foot in the door.
To begin with, a tribal art work by the late - and also the most celebrated - Gond artist Jangarh Singh Shyam was given the same platform as that accorded to the works of Husain or Raza at a Sotheby's auction in London in March 2010. It was picked up for Rs 6.4 lakh, double its highest pre-auction estimate. Then, the past two years have seen the opening up of two private art galleries dedicated to tribal art - Meena Verma's Arts of the Earth, and Tulika Kedia's Must Art - both of which are located in Lado Sarai, Delhi. Now, the India Art Fair that will be held at Delhi in January next year will see participation by the Paris-based Galerie Herve Perdriolle , which is dedicated to Indian tribal art. That's a first for the fouryear-old fair.
"Yes, Indian tribal art is on the brink of the recognition that it deserves ," says Jyotindra Jain, professor at JNU. He was the first to curate an exhibition of folk-tribal art, titled The Other Masters, at the Crafts Museum 13 years ago when he was the director there. The show had emphasised on individual identity within the collective tradition of the art forms. "With the entry of folk- tribal art in contemporary spaces, the notion of 'signature' has emerged, which has made galleries and auctions dedicated to it viable," says Jain.
Largely identified by the name of the tribe or place where it is practised, tribal-folk art now boasts of signatures that come with price tags. While Jangarh Shyam remains the most famous Gond signature, Jivya Soma Mashe is his equivalent in the Warli world. The two of them may still be on the periphery of being art celebs in their own country but are routinely feted in art capitals of the West. They were both exhibited in the prestigious Magicians of the Earthexhibition curated by Jean Hubert Martin at Centre Pompidou, Paris, in 1989.
"I've always believed that when urban contemporary artists would have achieved a substantial price, then there would be space for rural contemporary artists, too. That's what is about to happen in India," says Herve Perdriolle, the French connoisseur who owns the eponymous Parisgallery. Perdriolle will showcase works by the late Chano Devi (Madhubani ), Jangarh and his son Mayank Shyam (Gond), and Pushpa Kumari (Mithila) at the India Art Fair.
While all this calls for applause, the threshold of success is a dangerous place to be in, caution those who plough the rather lonely furrow of tribal art. The first casualty was registered 10 years back when Jangarh committed suicide while on a residency in Japan. In the changing dynamics of tribal art, Jain warns against market pressure which could lead to mediocre mass production. Kedia also cautions against inflation of prices. "Even as we help Gond artists achieve good prices, we don't want to create a bubble. It would burst and then genuine collectors too would lose interest," she says.
Top Gond artists like Bhajju Shyam (Jangarh's nephew) and Mayank Shyam command Rs 2 lakh to Rs 3 lakh for their canvases whereas Perdriolle had sold two of Jangarh's paper works for Rs 7 lakh and Rs 8 lakh last year. Alongside, substantial collections of these art forms have also been built - Anupam Poddar of the Devi Art Foundation has one of the largest Gond art collections while Perdriolle's Warli art pool is almost legendary.
A story on Indian tribal art can never be complete without flogging the old reprehensible horse - the government - which has fallen short of expectations . Jain points to a vital aspect of nurturing tribal art when he cites the example of Australian aboriginal artists who are far better placed, not only in terms of exposure and prices but also with respect to their Intellectual Property Rights. Australian aboriginal artist Clifford Possum holds the record for the highest price for folktribal art ever with the figure of Rs 11 crore, compared to which the record for an Indian tribal art work seems paltry - Rs 9.8 lakh for a Mashe work.
But the prices right now are a magnet for collectors. Neha Kirpal, founding director of the India Art Fair, says that tribal art should entice the young collectors as "the market for this genre of art market is still nascent and a lot of good quality work will be available at reasonable prices."
It's a long road ahead for tribal art to reach where its urban counterpart stands now. But it looks like the journey has begun Times of India, 18th December 2011
The new capital was to seek a complete transformation under keen guidance, thus paving the way for a liberal, modern though historic settlement. Pioneer correspondents noted the ambitious vision and well-worked plans on December 15
This morning a ceremony which had not been contemplated when the programme of the Durbar was sanctioned by the King-Emperor took place in the Government of India camp
Upon the royal announcement regarding the transfer of the capital from Calcutta to Delhi it was suggested that their imperial majesties should themselves lay the foundation stones of the new city beyond the Ridge, and this was at once adopted. The only question was one of time, but early yesterday an official circular was sent out with the heading, “Ceremony of inaugurating the restoration of Delhi as the capital of India by laying foundation-stones.” This showed that the arrangements had been made and the time given for the ceremony was ten o’clock this morning
The spot chosen was in the
so-called Avenue, where the
tents of the Executive
Members of the Council are
pitched. Here the Public
Works Department had men
working day and night.
Foundations of a wall were
sunk running some fifteen
feet from east to west and
the wall itself, of solid
construction, was built to a
height of seven feet above
the ground level. Two blocks
of dressed stone were
prepared three feet three
inches in height, their
width being two-and-a-half
feet and their depth
one-and- a-half feet. These
were slung by pulleys over
the masonry and were about
three feet apart. A platform
with an easy approach
completed the arrangements.
Captain Allanson, in charge
of the Government of India
Camp, and Mr. R. T. Angus,
Assistant Engineer, Public
Works Department, were chief
among those who worked
hardest to secure that
everything should be ready
in time. Invitations were
issued to heads of Local
Government and
Administration, Ruling
Chiefs, provincial
representatives who did
homage at the Durbar, and
high military officers; but
the number had to be limited
in all to five hundred owing
to the difficulty of
accommodating more,
especially as the list
naturally included residents
in the Government of India
Camp.
The Governor-General
Hardinge then spoke as
follows :
“By graciously consenting to lay the first stones of the imperial capital to be established at Delhi, your imperial majesties will set a seal upon the announcement made by his imperial majesty on the day of the Coronation Durbar, a day which will ever be memorable in the history of India, partly owing to the splendour with which it was celebrated, but much more on account of the fervent demonstrations of loyalty which it evoked
“Many capitals have been inaugurated in the neighbourhood of Delhi, some of which are so ancient that their origin is lost in the mists of antiquity, but none has ever arisen under happier auspices than those which attend the ceremony which your imperial majesties are about to perform and assuredly none ever held promise of greater permanence or of a more prosperous and glorious future
“The decision to remove the capital of the Government of the India from Calcutta was not reached without mature and anxious consideration. Proposals of a similar nature had been fully discussed as long ago as 1868 and ample materials were on record for the formation of a just opinion upon all debatable points
“No great change, however beneficial, can be carried out without some sacrifice, without some injury to personal interest or some offence to local sentiment. Yet, if I may be permitted to speak as your imperial majesty’s Governor-General on behalf of myself and my colleagues in Council, I desire to say that we are confident that there have been few changes so important which have been so much to the advantage of the many and so little injurious to the interests of the few, that the injury which the few may anticipate will be merely temporary and within no long time will be greatly outweighted by the benefits which will ensue.
The King-Emperor, remaining seated on his throne, then replied in the following terms:
“It is a matter of supreme satisfaction to the Queen-Empress and myself that it has been possible for us before leaving Delhi to lay the first stones of the imperial capital which will arise from where we now stand
“This is the first step to give material effect to the important announcement which it was my pleasure to make on that magnificent, and to us deeply impressive, occasion of my Coronation Durbar three days ago
“I earnestly hope that the anticipation of the beneficial and far-reaching results from the great changes now to be effected may be amply fulfilled, securing to India improved administration and to its people increased happiness and prosperity
“It is my desire that the planning and designing of the public buildings to be erected will be considered with the greatest deliberation and care so that the new creation may be in every way worthy of this ancient and beautiful city.
The King-Emperor, attended by the Governor-General, the Lord High Steward and the Lord-in-Waiting, then left the dais and proceeded to the platform where the stone on the proper right was raised by pulleys worked by four Madras Sappers in uniform under the superintendence of Mr Angus. A gold trowel was handed to his imperial majesty who spread the mortar, and the stone was lowered into position and tapped with the mallet in the usual ceremonial way
The site where the foundation-stones are laid is about eight hundred yards south-west in a bee line from the Flagstaff tower and some six hundred yards south from the centre of the royal camp. The Ridge is directly to the east, its crest being about five hundred yards away. The land on every side is flat, with the exception of the low hill to the south, which is known as the General’s Mound. There are no villages, for the hamlet of Rajpur with its few mud houses is scarcely worth counting and one has to go as far as Sabzi Mandi on the Grand Trunk Road to find a bazar of any considerable size
Taking the Ridge, the Mall and the Grand Trunk Road, as three sides of a triangle with the Ridge as the base, there is a vast extent of open ground, while northwards of the Mall, is the space now occupied by the Chiefs’ Camps, through which Coronation Road, Kingsway and Prince’s Road run, so aligned as to give good access over a wide area and only needing connecting roads. Kingsway station, if enlarged and improved, would well serve the new Delhi via Azadpur Junction, but this question of railway communication will probably have to be carefully considered in view of the expansion of traffic to and from Delhi as a whole
The planning of this new
city should be on a large
and liberal scale, for the
ground is practically
unlimited. It should have
its parks, open spaces, its
boulevards and avenues,
while the architecture of
its public buildings and
private houses should be
above reproach. It will take
many years to accomplish the
task of creating a Delhi
beyond the Ridge, but no
plans should be accepted
which do not take count of
the far future. In this way
only can the capital of
India excite admiration and
enthusiasm, as it slowly
spreads from the foundation
stones laid to-day
The Pioneer, 18th December 2011
The headquarter of the Archaeological Survey of India (ASI) - on New Delhi's Janpath - is buzzing with activity. The organisation , which has the mandate of protecting the country's vast archaeological heritage, is preparing to celebrate 150 years of its existence. A string of events starting December 20 have been planned. Prime Minister Manmohan Singh will inaugurate the celebrations that'll include international conferences, lectures by distinguished archaeologists and outreach programmes
The man coordinating the celebrations, the agency's director general Gautam Sengupta , says he is excited at the prospect of taking the ASI to the next phase. But he's also aware of the monumental challenges he faces (see interview), which are many
Even after a century-and-a-half of its existence, the ASI has struggled to live up to the premise on which it was started. Instead of emerging as an organisation of excellence that sets world standards in preserving and showcasing India's rich historical past, it has functioned as yet another sarkari department, caught in bureaucratic sluggishness and operating at an antiquated pace
"ASI's biggest problem is bad management ," says OP Jain, convener of the Indian National Trust For Art and Cultural Heritage (INTACH) and founder of the Delhi-based Sanskriti Foundation. "It doesn't run like a professional organization , with clear goals and accountability. There's little initiative to get things done, since it would mean more work, which nobody wants to do.
It's not as if the ASI isn't aware of its problems. It admitted its shortcomings to a committee set up by the PM under the chairmanship of former Union law minister Veerappa Moily. The biggest issue, it claimed, was manpower, pointing out that its current staff strength does not permit deployment of even a single person on fulltime basis at more than two-thirds of its monuments. With 3,676 monuments under its care, this means that virtually 75% of its monuments are unguarded. In order to augment its manpower, the agency told the committee, it will need to create additional posts of 10,000 monument attendants
Hiring this additional manpower would mean an expense of a few hundred crores. Then there's need for specialists- apart from the attendants -who can help in conservation
But would merely getting in additional staff solve the agency's problems? Chances are that they might simply end up as a burden on the exchequer unless they are trained properly and develop a love for heritage . For instance, when Sunday Times visited the Rani Kamlapati Mahal in Bhopal recently, the scant disregard for the monument was evident even as there were plenty of workers and ASI staff. The top two floors of the 18th century palace was a makeshift home for the workers, while the rest of what was earlier a seven-storeyed structure was a bath and wash area
Historian Nayanjot Lahiri, a member of the Moily committee, says the ASI's record in preservation and conservation is far from inspiring. She cites the instance of the Buddhist stupa site at Kanganahalli in Karnataka as a case in point. "The state of the conservation here makes one cry. This is a site where the sculptures of Ashoka are of the highest quality, but they have been kept in a pathetic state.
It's not as if the agency is not capable of doing good work in restoration. Heritage management consultant Amita Baig points out several cases where the ASI has done a world-class job. "One only has to look at archival pictures to see the apalling state of most of our heritage, when the ASI came into existence. They have done seminal work in bringing these back from the edge of extinction," she says
But over the past few decades, battling its myriad problems seems to have taken its toll. According to the ASI's own submission last year, 249 of its protected monuments were encroached or physically occupied by squatters. At Chennai's Fort St George, for instance - the first British settlement in India - the agency has been struggling for years to secure the fortress and clear traders who have set up shops tucked into the inner walls
Training and staff morale are other major issues. An archaeologist working with the agency says there aren't enough avenues for in-house training. Also, promotions are sporadic. "The career path within the ASI is not clearly defined, which often leads to loss of enthusiasm among promising archaeologists ," says KN Dikshit of the Indian Archaeological Society
Morale is also low at the ASI's Institute of Archaeology, once considered a premier centre for learning the craft. "The quality of the faculty as well as students graduating from it have gone down considerably ," points out Jain
Sengupta says he is aware the agency needs to invest in its manpower urgently and also reach out to people more in order to showcase their work - an area where they have been woefully inadequate . But many feel that good intentions should be followed up with a time-bound action plan. "Being the largest government organisation doing archaeology anywhere in the world, the ASI is an important part of the country," says Lahiri . "What it needs is less celebration and more introspection. It needs a route map to rejuvenate the legacy it seems largely to have abandoned.
HISTORY KEEP
ASI is the world's biggest
state-run archaeology body
It functions under Ministry
of Culture, Government of
India It takes care of 3,676
monuments spread across 24
circles within the country
116 of its monuments are
ticketed It earned Rs 87.8
crore in ticket sales last
year.
Times of India, 18th December 2011
Red Fort's vaunted Diwan-i-Khas and its famous boast - if there be paradise on earth, this is it... - are a short walk away from Salimgarh Bastion, where King George V arrived for his Durbar 100 years ago. But the State Procession that followed his entry hurried the king away from the hall, out of Delhi Gate and into the city.
Riding a horse under the winter sun, George V had time merely to mark the fort's sparse grandeur and discrete pavilions, and wonder why it had been called the noblest palace in the world for so long. What he probably didn't know was that most of the 'Exalted Palace' travellers raved about for two centuries had been swept away. Gone was the sparkling canal that divided the very road he took out of the fort. Houses of the salatin (royal descendants) had made way for the new lawns to his right. Razed palaces, arcades and cloisters had left behind the long, empty brackets of space to his left.
The Red Fort George V saw was like a poem with most of its lines missing. It's the same with us, who wrap up a visit in under an hour to spend four hours shopping in Chandni Chowk. Returning to the fort's heyday is not possible, but a new book offers a glimpse into the palace of the last Mughal and the surrounding city that Zauq and Ghalib loved and lived in.
JP Losty's Delhi 360o (Roli Books) reveals the Red Fort and Shahjahanabad of the Mughal dynasty's dying years through artist Mazhar Ali Khan's panorama, "A Picture of the Imperial City of Shahjahanabad Drawn from the Lahore Gate of the Exalted Fort". Acquired by the British Library at a country auction in 1981, the painting is signed November 25, 1846 , and is an important historical record.
The Mutiny happened in 1857 and by 1863 the British had cleared a large swathe of the city that lay within firing range (450 yards) of the fort walls. Most of the palaces and buildings within the fort were also demolished in the name of security. So, Khan's panorama captured the fort and the city in their swan song, and in massive detail.
Measuring 66.5cm high and 490.8cm wide, the panorama is the equivalent of a 455-megapixel shot when printed at 300 dots-per-inch photo quality. The only way to produce such a photo-real historical record in the 1840s was by faithfully recording every line of street, roof and pillar with brush and paint.
From his observation deck under one of Lahore Gate's chhatris (cupolas), Khan swept his gaze first north (towards the ticket counters) and then clockwise, till he had traced a unique 360o view. The roughly 5-metre water colour panorama was painted on five sheets and pasted together as a scroll longer than an average apartment bedroom.
More than its age, the panorama is important for what it shows. The fort is fully built up. It is no longer true to Shahjahan's aesthetic, but a living, thriving space nonetheless. Outside, the city is more orderly built and leafy than what you see today. Trees ring it from the north all the way to Fatehpuri Masjid on the west. There are trees even on Chandni Chowk's median. Of traffic there is little, and squalor none, but the last may be the artist's disinclination to sully his canvas.
At first glance, nothing but the fort's august gates is recognisable. There is so much between them that no living person has seen. For instance, the very intricate decorations of Chhatta Bazaar's walls. They are now lost under layers of white paint. Immediately to the right is a spread of houses for the salatin. Moving on, the Naqqarkhana has a large, enclosed court with three-arched gateways to the north and the south. In fact, gates, arcades and cloisters regularly frame, link and also curtain the fort's different quarters. Another surprise is the white Diwani-Aam beyond Naqqarkhana. The hall's pearly plaster finish was stripped off early in the last century, exposing its red sandstone.
The painting also shows Shahjahanabad in relation to the older relics. Monuments such as Kotla Firoz Shah, Humayun's Tomb, Purana Qila, and the farthest, Qutab Minar, are duly marked out.
Studying Khan's panorama
will leave you a little
wistful, for the lost
splendours of Red Fort, the
city's easy pace, its leafy
environs, the Yamuna's wide
expanse - and the horizon.
Once upon a time, earth and
sky met all around Delhi.
Times of India, 19th December 2011
People living close to centrally protected monuments in the city can heave a sigh a relief as the newly formed National Monuments Authority (NMA) has begun issuing no-objection certificates on pending applications. The applications for minor repairs have been taken up on priority and culture ministry sources said about a dozen NOCs have been issued.
It has been a long wait for people who live within 300m of the protected monuments after the Ancient Monuments and Archaeological Sites and Remains (Amendment and Validation) Act, 2010, was passed in March last year. According to it, permissions for any kind of constructions - minor or major - within 300m of a monument under the Archaeological Survey of India (ASI) umbrella can come only from the proposed NMA. The law had stripped ASI of any such authority, leaving residents of such houses with no other option but to wait for setting up of NMA.
"Two part-time and one-full time members were appointed last month and along with the member-secretary, the functioning of NMA started in November. A number of applications are awaiting approval with NMA from all over the country. Public projects apart, the number of applications where people urgently need to make repairs in residential houses falling in a prohibited or regulated zone were also growing. There were instances where some people had rented accommodations elsewhere till they got an NOC from NMA. Such cases are being taken up on priority," said a source.
ASI stopped issuing NOCs from January 23, 2010, and the delay in setting up of NMA had given rise to cases of unauthorized constructions. ASI sources said on an average, they received one complaint of unauthorized constructions daily. "In a growing urban city like Delhi, people living in areas like South Ex, Hauz Khas, Panchsheel have been affected as they live close to a protected monument," said an official.
A new survey is also underway by the state-level competent authority to map all existing structures within a 500m radius of every ASI monument. Culture ministry sources said the Survey of India would be roped in to help with the documentation and mapping of a 500m radius of all protected monuments, which will be considered as the base index for future years. It is expected to be a very time-consuming process as every construction, house, building, street size etc will be recorded exactly in the new mapping so that heritage bylaws can be prepared for each monument.
"Mapping of all the monuments will be done so that we get details on what constructions exist presently in order to stop problems of unauthorized constructions. The mapping will also be undertaken to study how much should the protected area of these monuments be limited to," said a senior official.
While the 2010 act
specifies that minimum 100m
of all ASI monuments has to
be prohibited, wherein no
constructions can be
allowed, the regulated zone
area has no outer limit
prescribed though that also
has to be up to 200m at
least. "It is unlikely that
regulated areas will be
beyond 200m though the act
allows it to go up to any
length. If at all, it might
be considered only for
crucial monuments like Taj
Mahal. Any such decision
will be taken jointly by NMA
and ASI, which is still the
custodian of these
monuments," said an
official.
Times of India, 19th December 2011
With passions reaching fever pitch between Kerala and Tamil Nadu over the decommissioning of the century-old Mullaperiyar dam, experts are asking whether dams do collapse in India?
Three dams have collapsed in Andhra Pradesh in the last five years. These include the Subbaraya Sagar in East Godavari in 2010, the Palamvagu Dam in Khammam in August 2008 and the Gundlavagu Dam in Warangal district in 2006.
Prof. T. Shivaji Rao, director, Centre for Environment Studies at the Institute of Science, Visakhapatnam, highlighted that these dams collapsed due to poor construction and improper design.
“In all, 50 dams built post-independence have failed, including the Kodaganar dam in Tamil Nadu, Nanaksagar dam in Punjab and the Machhu 11 dam in Gujarat and the Koyna dam in Maharashtra,” Prof. Rao stated.
A confidential report prepared by the Delhi-based Centre for Soil and Materials Research Station revealed that investigations submitted to the Empowered Committee (EC) of the Supreme Court had highlighted that the masonry cover of the Mullaperiyar dam had been severely damaged between the depth of 32m and 29m throughout the length of the dam.
The Detailed Project Report submitted to the EC by the Kerala state government also raises major safety issues.
Mullaperiyar dam, constructed 116 years ago is 365.7 metres long and 53.6 metres high, is presently one of the oldest dam’s in the world.
While its walls are covered with rubble masonry, its core is built with hydraulic lime and surkhi comprising a mixture of crushed bricks, sand and sugar.
Members of the Central
Water Commission (CWC) have
recommended lowering the
maximum water level in the
reservoir. A CWC member
pointed out, “The dam should
last for another 10 years or
so. But no dam can survive
for 999 years which is the
length of the lease between
the two states. A new dam
will have to be constructed
and this is the best time to
start work on a new dam.”
Deccan Chronicle, 20th December 2011
Delhi’s monuments have always captured the imagination of the creative world. From photographers to writers and painters, the city’s ancient architecture has always etched a story in every artist’s heart. Retelling the fascinating stories related to the capital’s monuments, artist Uma Lohtia recently presented her first solo exhibition, ‘The Living Legends of Delhi,’ a tribute to the city that commemorates its 100th anniversary as India’s capital this year.
“Delhi’s countless monuments have always fascinated me for their architecture and the stories behind them. All the paintings are a tribute to the city’s rich heritage,” she says.
At 77, the artist says that it is never too late to do something close to one’s heart. “During my school and college days, I wanted to go to the J.J. School of Art in Bombay but those were conservative times. After graduating from Lady Irwin College, I started painting for my family. In 1959, I got married and painting took a backseat as I got busy with home and children. After my children got married, my daughter Rati asked me to start painting again. It is the first time I have done so many paintings on one theme and my family urged me to exhibit them. As the city happens to be celebrating 100 years of Delhi this year, it seemed a right time to showcase my work to a wider audience,” she says.
She started exploring Delhi monuments early this year. “The monuments in Hauz Khas were my first paintings in the series of Delhi monuments. There were certain things which fascinated me, for instance a door in the Old Fort which is lying closed for years and the surroundings of Humayun’s Tomb,” shares Uma.
And the idea is to take us all back in time to a Delhi which was once frequented by great emperors, who for centuries added to the artistic character of the city.
“Delhi sits on the banks of the Yamuna and it grew to political, commercial and cultural prominence. With the rise of the Delhi sultanates and even after the arrival of the British, the capital was in the spotlight. Today Delhi is a modern metropolis yet, drifting through Delhi, one gets the feeling of travelling back in time. The streets are punctuated by towering monuments, imposing mosques, partly destroyed tombs, and exotic gardens — all frequented once by great emperors who hosted elaborate durbars and extended warm patronage to the arts,” she says.
She takes her influence from the countless monuments in the city. “Each crumbling brick, each sandstone wall, each lofty spire inspires me to re-create the story of its glorious past. You feel these monuments are speaking to you. There is so much art in them, just in the bricks alone. Solidity too, but a lot of art,” she says.
And if you’re an artist
capturing the essence of
Delhi on canvas, the Old
Delhi charm is bound to
captivate you. “I painted
the monuments which are more
easily accessible in Old
Delhi like the Red Fort. All
the monuments inside Purana
Qila are my favourites.
Mehrauli, Lodhi Garden,
Qutub Minar found a special
place in my paintings that
are going to be on display
at this exhibition,” she
tells us.
The artist is well
acquainted with various
forms of art like batik,
Ikebana, watercolours, mixed
medium, “but all 30
paintings that will be
showcased during this
exhibition are oil on
canvas,” says Uma.
The exhibition is on till
December 24 at Open Palm
Court Gallery, India Habitat
Center, Lodhi Road
Asian Age, 20th December 2011
Veerarajendrapete, or
today's Virajpet, was built
by Kodagu ruler Dodda
Veerarajendra to celebrate
his cordial relationship
with the British. The town
has streets named Bengali
Street, Jain Street and
Telugu Street, after people
from neighbouring regions
arrived here following an
invitation from the king,
writes C P Belliappa
Dodda Veerarajendra sat on
the throne of Kodagu from
1791 to 1809 and is
considered the hero of
Haleri dynasty that ruled
the land for more than 200
years. Dodda Veerarajendra
was baptised by fire as it
were.
As a young man in his
mid-twenties, he crafted a
dramatic escape in 1788
after having been in Hyder
Ali and Tipu Sultan’s
captivity for eight years.
By 1791, with help from
Kodava chieftains, he
managed to gradually gain
control over his kingdom.
In 1790, he signed a
friendship treaty with the
East India Company and
formed an alliance with the
British. It was in April
1791 that a senior British
officer, General Robert
Abercrombie, who was also
the Governor of Bombay,
visited Kodagu to hold
discussions with Dodda
Veerarajendra regarding
specific help that they
wanted from him.
General Abercrombie had
travelled from erstwhile
Bombay and was on his way to
Srirangapatna. Dodda
Veerarajendra met the
General who arrived from
Tellichery.
The location where they met
was on a hillock about ten
kilometres from the border.
The General was quite
taken-up with the
indomitable young raja. As
required by the British, the
raja readily provided
supplies for their troops,
beasts of burden to
transport war material, and
a place for the horses and
elephants to be looked
after.
He also agreed to provide
land for setting up a field
hospital to treat war
casualties. In 1792, General
Abercrombie again met the
raja of Kodagu on his way
back from Srirangapatna, at
the same spot as their
earlier meeting. The raja
had made elaborate
arrangements to make the
General’s stay comfortable.
The elevated spot provided a
panoramic view of the
Western Ghats. During this
visit they had more time to
discuss a variety of
subjects. General
Abercrombie was fascinated
by Dodda Veerarajendra’s
narration of the history of
the Haleri dynasty. He
requested the raja to record
these details which Dodda
Veerarajendra did, several
years later, under the title
– ‘Rajendraname’.
This is the only recording
of the early history of
Kodagu. General Abercrombie
later became the
commander-in-chief of the
British Army in India. He
remained a good friend of
Dodda Veerarajendra and was
instrumental in Rajendraname
being translated to English.
Dodda Veerarajendra was very
happy after these two
meetings with General
Abercrombie. He felt secure
after gaining British
support. He wanted to
commemorate this historic
development and decided to
found a town around this
hillock where he had
important discussions with
the British general. He
named the town after
himself, Veerarajendrapete,
and started construction of
a fort and an ammunition
dump on this hillock. A
little distance away a pond
was dug for the horses and
elephants to be serviced.
Earlier wars had depopulated
Kodagu to a great extent.
Dodda Veerarajendra invited
people from neighbouring
areas with promise of land
to settle down in
Veerarajendrapete. Amongst
those who made Kodagu their
home were about 100 Muslim
men and women from Kannur
whose ancestors had earlier
fled Bengal in 1757 after
the Battle of Plassey.
About 700 Christians also
took refuge in Kodagu. Dodda
Veerarajendra provided land
for them to build a church,
St. Anne’s Church, which is
very much in existence to
this day. In addition, there
were Mudaliars, Jains,
Telugu Chettis and Moplahs
from Kerala who settled down
in the new town.
Veerarajendrapete gradually
came to be known as
Virajpet. Presently, this
busy town has streets named
Bengali Street, Jain Street
and Telugu Street depending
on the original settlers.
This fort in Virajpet was
last mentioned in a letter
dated February 24, 1837
written by General Mark
Cubbon the British
Commissioner in Bangalore,
to Captain C T Le Hardy the
Superintendent of the then
Coorg, granting a sum of Rs
150 for repairs. However
there is no trace of this
edifice now except for the
two entrance gate-posts.
It is surprising that these
remnants of the first
structures to be built in
Virajpet as far back as 1792
have not been paid much
attention to. The gate-posts
have withstood the ravages
of time, but have
ingloriously become a part
of the wall surrounding the
PWD Inspection bungalow
which now occupies the site
where Dodda Veerarajendra
met General Abercrombie.
Deccan Herald, 20th December 2011
The 134.88 sq km area
of Chincholi forest in
Karnataka has now been
declared South India’s first
dryland wildlife sanctuary
to protect the prime wolf
and hyena habitat.
The Karnataka State Forest
Department notified the
forest on November 28,
marking another step by
Karnataka to conserve prime
wolf and hyena habitat of
Chincholi forest spread
across Gulbarga and Yadgir
districts. It will be named
as the ‘Chincholi Wildlife
Sanctuary.’
The Forest department has
issued a notification
exercising its power under
Section 26 A (b) of Wildlife
Protection Act 1972. The
forest, adjoining Andhra
Pradesh according to the
notification, is necessary
to be protected as a
wildlife sanctuary, due to
its unique features. It
deserves to be defined as
ecologically sensitive area.
In addition, the area, with
economically important tree
species and the region is
vulnerable even to mild
disturbances. It requires
careful management and is
considered as ‘ecologically
and economically important.’
Explaining the biological
richness of this forest
patch, which is potentially
of high value to society,
the notification states that
this region, with natural
forest cover, has about 0.40
per cent of canopy cover and
is the only area in the
Hyderabad-Karnataka region
with many features of the
Western Ghats.
Pointing that it is the duty
of Karnataka to protect the
precious and irreplaceable
unique wealth given by
nature, the notification
issued by the Department of
Forest Ecology and
Environment says, “Due to
biotic and climatic
intervention, there is
threat of degradation of
rich natural forest and may
cause threat to the wildlife
of the area.”
Five blocks
Accordingly, the 13,488.31
hectare area (ha) or (134.88
sq km area) of the sanctuary
will have five blocks, the
Chincholi forest block
comprising of 11,985.62 ha,
Sangapura forest block
comprising of 688.39 ha,
Bhonsapur forest block
comprising of 317.59 ha,
Magdumpur forest block
comprising of 327.67 ha and
Shadipur forest block
comprising of 169.04 ha. The
sanctuary shall not include
any of the revenue villages,
patta land, revenue lands as
on the date of publication
of notification dated
November 28, 2011.
It can be recalled that the
Karnataka State Wildlife
Advisory Board, led by
Vice-President Anil Kumble,
in April 2011, had conducted
a public hearing at
Konchavaram village, within
the forest area, to declare
the Chincholi forest a
wildlife sanctuary.
The forest has good dry,
deciduous and moist
deciduous forest in the core
with acacia and teak
plantations on the fringes.
Apart from the large
Chandrampalli dam, four
small dams too exist at its
centre. The forest hosts
rich biodiversity. With
human density of 121 per sq
km and a village for every
12 km, the region has 30
lambani thandas relying on
forests for a living. Apart
from the rich medicinal
herbs and trees, species
like red sanders and
sandalwood have been found
abundantly.
Floral species like
Anogessus Latifolia,
Chloroxylon, Bosweellia
Serrat and Madhuca Indica
are available in plenty
here.
The forest is also home to
fauna like black buck,
common fox, four-horned
antelope, fruit bat, hyena,
Indian wolf, panther and
wild boar. Over 35 species
of birds, including black
drongo, black-winged kite,
blossom-headed parakeet,
blue pigeon, black-headed
oriole and grey patridge are
also found in the
region.
Deccan Herald, 20th December 2011
Wildlife experts fear
that the proposed road in
the Kutch region will harm
the flamingo population that
arrives here annually,
writes Atula Gupta
Travel through the Rann of
Kutch in winters and the
eyes see nothing but barren,
white cracked land with not
a single patch of green to
signal life and break the
monotony. But come here
during the monsoons and the
extremity of the
morphological changes can
easily amaze and astound.
As sea, river and rainwater
floods the marshland, the
whole area is transformed
into a huge inland sea. It
is to this unusual land that
flamingos of cold countries
migrate each year to
increase their brood and
spread their speck of
flaming pink in the desolate
salty marshlands. But with
development plans underway
it is the same congregation
that may cease to exist in
this still untarnished
region on earth.
The Gujarat State Public
Works Department (GSPWD) has
submitted a proposal to
build a road across the
inhospitable terrains of
Kutch. The purpose, as per
the proposal, is to provide
greater access to Border
Security Force (BSF) that
guards the line separating
Gujarat from Sindh region in
Pakistan.
This road is going to be at
least 30 to 40 km inland of
the border and somehow
conservationists feel, the
move will help tourism more
than it will aid the BSF
which already has a frontier
road. It is now the decision
of the Standing Committee of
the National Board of
Wildlife, chaired by
Environment Minister,
Jayanthi Natarajan that will
decide the future of this
saline ecosystem.
Flamingo city
In 1893, Maharao Shri
Khengarji of Kutch reported
for the first time the
natural extravaganza of both
greater and lesser flamingos
touching down on the salty
marshes of Kutch to nest
specifically at Hanj Bet
(Kutchhi for ‘Flamingo
mountain’) and known today
as the flamingo city.
In April 1945, Salim Ali
estimated that half a
million of these pink birds
made up the congregation and
it is still an enigma to
naturalists as to why
generations of flamingos
have chosen this one spot
when they could go anywhere
on the 10,000-sq-km Rann. In
fact, in all of south Asia,
this is the only nesting
grounds known of the areal
pink brigade.
Some believe it has
something to do with the
dynamic flow of water. Fresh
water flows from Pakistan
and Rajasthan in the north
and from Kutch in the south,
while sea water floods in
underground. The rich flow
of nutrients from land and
sea allows numerous
micro-organisms to thrive,
providing prawns and fish
for humans, crustaceans for
flamingos and fish for water
birds like pelicans. Once
here, the flamingos thus
construct muddy nests, lay
eggs and rear young ones
while devouring on the
crustaceans.
Latest reports say this
year, an estimated four lakh
Greater Flamingos have
arrived here as against the
average 40,000-50,000. Even
the locals and regular bird
watchers find the numbers a
surprise, a phenomenon not
heard of in the last 20
years. The proposed road
falls north of the flamingo
city which is now within the
famous Kutch Desert Wildlife
Sanctuary.
The greatest fear of
biologists, therefore, is
that if the road is
constructed, the movement of
water will be impeded which
will in turn imbalance the
conditions suitable for the
flourishing life forms.
According to a report
presented by wildlife
experts, “The proposed
alignment would result in
stoppage of water within the
Rann…The team is of the
unanimous opinion that this
road must not be built as it
entails a huge financial and
ecologically unacceptable
cost.”
Triple jeopardy
There are other reasons too
that stand against the road
construction. According to
the plan, the road will
traverse the main refuge of
wild ass in the Great Rann,
sacred forest of Shravan
Kavadia, and the Dholavira
ruins.
Once found in southern Iran,
Afghanistan, and western
India, wild asses are an
endangered species, now seen
only in Gujarat and small
adjoining parts of
Rajasthan. The 7,000-sq-m
Shravan Kavadia which the
road threatens, is one of
the rarest mangrove systems
in the world located more
than 100-km inland from the
sea and known for their
enormous stature. Dholavira
is the fifth largest site of
the Indus Valley
civilisation in the
subcontinent and the road
project has not even been
sanctioned by the Ministry
of Culture.
Further up, the road will
pass through a small but
critically connecting link
between the Little Rann with
the Great Rann. The former
is already cut off from the
Gulf of Kutch by two highway
bridges, a railway line and
a water pipeline.
Development woes
Both the cultural and
natural heritage of Rann is
at stake if the saline
terrains are replaced with
tarred expressways. To reap
the benefits of a tourism
industry that flourishes for
five months, ironically, the
very region that the state
wishes to promote will pay
the price of development and
sustain irreparable damage.
The prosperity of Gujarat is
often credited to the innate
character of the state’s
residents to judge the
future worth of a venture.
Rann’s worth is its crusty
terrain, roaming wild asses
and visiting flamingos
serenading locals and
tourists alike. If the birds
bid adieu to their centuries
old winter homes, just
because a concrete path was
laid to lead to them, the
loss will bear heavily on
vibrant Gujarat.
Deccan Herald, 20th December 2011
While the government is busy setting up new agencies to protect heritage structures, unauthorized constructions continue to crop up in the vicinity of protected monuments. One such multi-storey building is coming up a stone's throw away from the historicNizamuddin dargah.
The Archaeological Survey of India (ASI) had lodged a police complaint regarding the matter but no action was initiated by the civic agency or the police. One month on, locals say that half the construction work has already been completed. The building is located at a distance of 15m from the dargah complex which also houses tombs of Jahanara, Amir Khusrau and Atagha Khan.
Under the Ancient Monuments and Archaeological Sites and Remains (Amendment and Validation) Act, 2010, no construction is allowed within 300-m (100-m prohibited and 200-m regulated zone) of centrally-protected monuments. One has to first seek permission from the competent authority and then await approval from National Monuments Authority ( NMA), which has recently been established.
Sources say the building is coming up at a vacant plot owned by DDA. The plot was occupied by ragpickers till they cleared out some time back, say locals. Three floors of the building are ready. Labourers can be seen working at the construction site but the authorities have turned a blind eye to the encroachment. The dargah - the mausoleum of sufi saint Nizamuddin Auliya - is thronged by visitors every week. Centrally protected monuments like Nizamuddin baoli, Chausath Khamba, Bara Khamba and Humayun's Tomb are also located in the vicinity.
This is not the first
time that illegal
constructions have cropped
up near the Nizamuddin
basti. A building sprang up
next to Mirza Jehangir's
Tomb inside the dargah
complex months back and the
crypt of Atagha Khan's Tomb
has been occupied for years.
However, ASI has not taken
action fearing a violent
reaction from locals.
Times of India, 24th December 2011
In a joint excavation carried out by the Department of Archaeology of Pune’s Deccan College and Gujarat’s archaeology department, a new Harappan site has been discovered at Kotada Bhadali village area in Nakhatrana taluka of Kutch district. The site dates back to 3000 BC
The state’s archaeology department and Deccan College have planned a detailed excavation in January to gather more information related to the site
Y S Rawat, the state’s director of archaeology, said, “Primary excavations have showed that the site probably belongs to late Harappan period around 3000 BC, but the data available from the excavation is too little to determine the exact period. We will carry out more studies to confirm the period and other facts.
He said the investigation so far has been preliminary in nature. “In January, extensive digging will be done on all sides of the fortification wall to understand the exact nature of construction style and its layout. This will help us understand if it is really a fortification wall. If so, what is it they were guarding their settlement from?” Indian Express, 25th December 2011
It is high time we studied our mathematical heritage with diligence and objectivity
Quite often I find that conversations, with people from various walks of life, on ancient Indian mathematics slide to “Vedic mathematics” of the “16 sutras” fame, which is supposed to endow one with magical powers of calculation. Actually, the “16 sutras” were introduced by Bharati Krishna Tirthaji, who was the Sankaracharya of Puri from 1925 until he passed away in 1960, associating with them procedures for certain arithmetical or algebraic computations. Thus, this so-called “Vedic mathematics (VM)” is essentially a 20th century phenomenon
Neither the “sutras” nor the procedures that they are supposed to yield, or correspond to, have anything to do with either the Vedas, or even with any post-Vedic mathematical tradition of yore in India. The image that it may conjure up of ancient rishis engaged in such arithmetical exercises as are taught to the children in the name of VM, and representing the solutions through word-strings of a few words in modern styled Sanskrit, with hardly any sentence structure or grammar, is just too far from the realm of the plausible. It would have amounted to a joke, but for the aura it has acquired on account of various factors, including the general ignorance about the knowledge in ancient times. It is a pity that a long tradition of over 3,000 years of learning and pursuit of mathematical ideas has come to be perceived by a large section of the populace through the prism of something so mundane and so lacking in substance from a mathematical point of view, apart from not being genuine
Tall claims
The colossal neglect involved is not for want of pride about the achievements of our ancients; on the contrary, there is a lot of writing on the topic, popular as well as technical, that is full of unsubstantiated claims conveying an almost supreme knowledge our forefathers are supposed to have possessed. But there is very little understanding or appreciation, on an intellectual plane, of the specics of their knowledge or achievements in real terms
In the colonial era this variety of discourse emerged as an antithesis to the bias that was manifest in the works of some Western scholars. Due to the urgency to respond to the adverse propaganda on the one hand and the lack of resources in addressing the issues at a more profound level on the other, recourse was often taken to short-cuts, which involved more assertiveness than substance. There were indeed some Indian scholars, like Sudhakar Dvivedi, who adhered to a more intellectual approach, but they were a minority. Unfortunately, the old discourse has continued long after the colonial context is well past, and long after the world community has begun to view the Indian achievements with considerable objective curiosity and interest. It is high time that we switch to a mode betting a sovereign and intellectually self-reliant society, focussing on an objective study and critical assessment, without the reference frame of “what they say” and how “we must assert ourselves.
Ancient India has indeed contributed a great deal to the world's mathematical heritage. The country also witnessed steady mathematical developments over most part of the last 3,000 years, throwing up many interesting mathematical ideas well ahead of their appearance elsewhere in the world, though at times they lagged behind, especially in the recent centuries. Here are some episodes from the fascinating story that forms a rich fabric of the sustained intellectual endeavour
Vedic knowledge
The mathematical tradition in India goes back at least to the Vedas. For compositions with a broad scope covering all aspects of life, spiritual as well as secular, the Vedas show a great fascination for large numbers. As the transmission of the knowledge was oral, the numbers were not written, but expressed as combinations of powers of 10. It would be reasonable to believe that when the decimal place value system for written numbers came into being it owed a great deal to the way numbers were discussed in the older compositions
The decimal place value system of writing numbers, together with the use of ‘0,' is known to have blossomed in India in the early centuries AD, and spread to the West through the intermediacy of the Persians and the Arabs. There were actually precursors to the system, and various components of it are found in other ancient cultures such as the Babylonian, Chinese, and Mayan. From the decimal representation of the natural numbers, the system was to evolve further into the form that is now commonplace and crucial in various walks of life, with decimal fractions becoming part of the number system in 16th century Europe, though this again has some intermediate history involving the Arabs. The evolution of the number system represents a major phase in the development of mathematical ideas, and arguably contributed greatly to the overall advance of science and technology. The cumulative history of the number system holds a lesson that progress of ideas is an inclusive phenomenon, and while contributing to the process should be a matter of joy and pride to those with allegiance to the respective contributors, the role of others also ought to be appreciated
It is well-known that Geometry was pursued in India in the context of construction of vedis for the yajnas of the Vedic period. The Sulvasutrascontain elaborate descriptions of construction of vedis and enunciate various geometric principles. These were composed in the rst millennium BC, the earliest Baudhayana Sulvasutra dating back to about 800 BC. Sulvasutra geometry did not go very far in comparison to the Euclidean geometry developed by the Greeks, who appeared on the scene a little later, in the seventh century BC. It was, however, an important stage of development in India too. The Sulvasutra geometers were aware, among other things, of what is now called the Pythagoras theorem, over 200 years before Pythagoras (all the four major Sulvasutras contain an explicit statement of the theorem), addressed (within the framework of their geometry) issues such as nding a circle with the same area as a square and vice versa, and worked out a very good approximation to the square root of two, in the course of their studies
Though it is generally not recognised, the Sulvasutra geometry was itself evolving. This is seen, in particular, from the differences in the contents of the four major extant Sulvasutras. Certain revisions are especially striking. For instance, in the early Sulvasutra period the ratio of the circumference to the diameter was, as in other ancient cultures, thought to be three, as seen in a sutra of Baudhayana, but in the Manava Sulvasutra, a new value was proposed, as three-and-one-fth. Interestingly, the sutra describing it ends with an exultation “not a hair-breadth remains,” and though we see that it is still substantially off the mark, it is a gratifying instance of an advance made. In the Manava Sulvasutra one also nds an improvement over the method described by Baudhayana for nding the circle with the same area as that of a given square
The Jain tradition has also been very important in the development of mathematics in the country. Unlike for the Vedic people, for Jain scholars the motivation for mathematics came not from ritual practices, which indeed were anathema to them, but from the contemplation of the cosmos. Jains had an elaborate cosmography in which mathematics played an integral role, and even largely philosophical Jain works are seen to incorporate mathematical discussions. Notable among the topics in the early Jain works, from about the fifth century BC to the second century AD, one may mention geometry of the circle, arithmetic of numbers with large powers of 10, permutations and combinations, and categorisations of innities (whose plurality had been recognised)
As in the Sulvasutra tradition, the Jains also recognised, around the middle of the rst millennium BC, that the ratio of the circumference of the circle to its diameter is not three. In “Suryaprajnapti,” a Jain text believed to be from the fourth century BC, after recalling the “traditional” value three for it, the author discards that in favour the square root of 10. This value for the ratio, which is reasonably close to the actual value, was prevalent in India over a long period and is often referred as the Jain value. It continued to be used long after Aryabhata introduced the well-known value 3.1416 for the ratio. The Jain texts also contain rather unique formulae for lengths of circular arcs in terms of the length of the corresponding chord and the bow (height) over the chord, and also for the area of regions subtended by circular arcs together with their chords. The means for the accurate determination of these quantities became available only after the advent of Calculus. How the ancient Jain scholars arrived at these formulae, which are close approximations, remains to be understood
Jain tradition
After a lull of a few centuries in the early part of the rst millennium, pronounced mathematical activity is seen again in the Jain tradition from the 8th century until the middle of the 14th century. Ganitasarasangraha of Mahavira, written in 850, is one of the well-known and inuential works. Virasena (8th century), Sridhara (between 850 and 950), Nemicandra (around 980 CE), Thakkura Pheru (14th century) are some more names that may be mentioned. By the 13th and 14th centuries, Islamic architecture had taken root in India and inGanitasarakaumudi of Thakkura Pheru, who served as treasurer in the court of the Khilji Sultans in Delhi, one sees a combination of the native Jain tradition with Indo-Persian literature, including work on the calculation of areas and volumes involved in the construction of domes, arches, and tents used for residential purposes
Mathematical astronomy or the Siddhanta tradition has been the dominant and enduring mathematical tradition in India. It ourished almost continuously for over seven centuries, starting with Aryabhata (476-550) who is regarded as the founder of scientic astronomy in India, and extending to Bhaskara II (1114-1185) and beyond. The essential continuity of the tradition can be seen from the long list of prominent names that follow Aryabhata, spread over centuries: Varahamihira in the sixth century, Bhaskara I and Brahmagupta in the seventh century, Govindaswami and Sankaranarayana in the ninth century, Aryabhata II and Vijayanandi in the 10th century, Sripati in the 11th century, Brahmadeva and Bhaskara II in the 12th century, and Narayana Pandit and Ganesa from the 14th and 16th centuries respectively
Aryabhatiya, written in 499, is basic to the tradition, and even to the later works of the Kerala school of Madhava (more on that later). It consists of 121 verses divided into four chapters — Gitikapada, Ganitapada, Kalakriyapada and Golapada. The rst, which sets out the cosmology, contains also a verse describing a table of 24 sine differences at intervals of 225 minutes of arc. The second chapter, as the name suggests, is devoted to mathematics per se, and includes in particular procedures to nd square roots and cube roots, an approximate expression for ‘pi' (amounting to 3.1416 and specied to be approximate), formulae for areas and volumes of various geometric gures, and shadows, formulae for sums of consecutive integers, sums of squares, sums of cubes and computation of interest. The other two chapters are concerned with astronomy, dealing with distances and relative motions of planets, eclipses and so on
Influential work
Brahmagupta's Brahmasphutasiddhanta is a voluminous work, especially for its time, on Siddhanta astronomy, in which there are two chapters, Chapter 12 and Chapter 18, devoted to general mathematics. Incidentally, Chapter 11 is a critique on earlier works including Aryabhatiya; as in other healthy scientific communities this tradition also had many, and often bitter, controversies. Chapter 12 is well-known for its systematic treatment of arithmetic operations, including with negative numbers; the notion of negative numbers had eluded Europe until the middle of the second millennium. The chapter also contains geometry, including in particular his famous formula for the area of a quadrilateral (stated without the condition of cyclicity of the quadrilateral that is needed for its validity — a point criticised by later mathematicians in the tradition). Chapter 18 is devoted to the kuttaka and other methods, including for solving second-degree indeterminate equations. An identity described in the work features also in some current studies where it is referred as the Brahmagupta identity. Apart from this, Chapter 21 has verses dealing with trigonometry. Brahmasphutasiddhanta considerably influenced mathematics in the Arab world, and in turn the later developments in Europe. Bhaskara II is the author of the famous mathematical texts Lilavati and Bijaganita. Apart from being an accomplished mathematician he was a great teacher and populariser of mathematics. Lilavati, which literally means ‘one who is playful,' presents mathematics in a playful way, with several verses directly addressing a pretty young woman, and examples presented through reference to various animals, trees, ornaments, and so on. (Legend has it that the book is named after his daughter after her wedding failed to materialise on account of an accident with the clock, but there is no historical evidence to that effect.) The book presents, apart from various introductory aspects of arithmetic, geometry of triangles and quadrilaterals, examples of applications of the Pythagoras theorem, trirasika, kuttaka methods, problems on permutations and combinations, etc. The Bijaganita is an advanced-level treatise on Algebra, the first independent work of its kind in Indian tradition. Operations with unknowns, kuttaka and chakravala methods for solutions of indeterminate equations are some of the topics discussed, together with examples. Bhaskara's work on astronomy, Siddhantasiromani and Karana kutuhala, contain several important results in trigonometry, and also some ideas of Calculus
The works in the Siddhanta tradition have been edited on a substantial scale and there are various commentaries available, including many from the earlier centuries, and works by European authors such as Colebrook, and many Indian authors including Sudhakara Dvivedi, Kuppanna Sastri and K.V. Sarma. The two-volume book of Datta and Singh and the book of Saraswati Amma serve as convenient references for many results known in this tradition. Various details have been described, with a comprehensive discussion, in the recent book by Kim Plofker. The Bakhshali manuscript, which consists of 70 folios of bhurjapatra (birch bark), is another work of signicance in the study of ancient Indian mathematics, with many open issues around it. The manuscript was found buried in a eld near Peshawar, by a farmer, in 1881. It was acquired by the Indologist A.F.R. Hoernle, who studied it and published a short account on it. He later presented the manuscript to the Bodleian Library at Oxford, where it has been since then. Facsimile copies of all the folios were brought out by Kaye in 1927, which have since then been the source material for the subsequent studies. The date of the manuscript has been a subject of much controversy since the early years, with the estimated dates ranging from the early centuries of CE to the 12th century
Takao Hayashi, who produced what is perhaps the most authoritative account so far, concludes that the manuscript may be assigned sometime between the eighth century and the 12th century, while the mathematical work in it may most probably be from the seventh century. Carbon dating of the manuscript could settle the issue, but efforts towards this have not materialised so far
A formula for extraction of square-roots of non-square numbers found in the manuscript has attracted much attention. Another interesting feature of theBakhshali manuscript is that it involves calculations with large numbers (in decimal representation)
Kerala school
Let me nally come to what is called the Kerala School. In the 1830s, Charles Whish, an English civil servant in the Madras establishment of the East India Company, brought to light a collection of manuscripts from a mathematical school that ourished in the north-central part of Kerala, between what are now Kozhikode and Kochi. The school, with a long teacher-student lineage, lasted for over 200 years from the late 14th century well into the 17th century. It is seen to have originated with Madhava, who has been attributed by his successors many results presented in their texts. Apart from Madhava, Nilakantha Somayaji was another leading personality from the school. There are no extant works of Madhava on mathematics (though some works on astronomy are known). Nilakantha authored a book called Tantrasangraha (in Sanskrit) in 1500 AD. There have also been expositions and commentaries by many other exponents from the school, notable among them being Yuktidipikaand Kriyakramakari by Sankara, and Ganitayuktibhasha by Jyeshthadeva which is in Malayalam. Since the middle of the 20th century, various Indian scholars have researched on these manuscripts and the contents of most of the manuscripts have been looked into. An edited translation of the latter was produced by K.V. Sarma and it has recently been published with explanatory notes by K. Ramasubramanian, M.D. Srinivas and M.S. Sriram. An edited translation of Tantrasangraha has been brought out more recently by K. Ramasubramanian and M.S. Sriram
The Kerala works contain mathematics at a considerably advanced level than earlier works from anywhere in the world. They include a series expansion for ‘pi' and the arc-tangent series, and the series for sine and cosine functions that were obtained in Europe by Gregory, Leibnitz and Newton, respectively, over 200 years later. Some numerical values for ‘pi' that are accurate to 11 decimals are a highlight of the work. In many ways, the work of the Kerala mathematicians anticipated calculus as it developed in Europe later, and in particular involves manipulations with indenitely small quantities (in the determination of circumference of the circle and so on) analogous to the innitesimals in calculus; it has also been argued by some authors that the work is indeed calculus already
Honouring the tradition
A lot needs to be done to
honour this rich
mathematical heritage. The
extant manuscripts need to
be cared for to prevent
deterioration, catalogued
properly with due updates
and, most important, they
need to be studied
diligently and the ndings
placed in proper context on
the broad canvass of the
world of mathematics, from
an objective standpoint. Let
the occasion of the 125th
birth anniversary of the
genius of Srinivasa
Ramanujan, a global
mathematician to the core,
inspire us as a nation, to
apply ourselves to this
task.
The Hindu, 26th December 2011
It is high time we studied our mathematical heritage with diligence and objectivity
Quite often I find that conversations, with people from various walks of life, on ancient Indian mathematics slide to “Vedic mathematics” of the “16 sutras” fame, which is supposed to endow one with magical powers of calculation. Actually, the “16 sutras” were introduced by Bharati Krishna Tirthaji, who was the Sankaracharya of Puri from 1925 until he passed away in 1960, associating with them procedures for certain arithmetical or algebraic computations. Thus, this so-called “Vedic mathematics (VM)” is essentially a 20th century phenomenon
Neither the “sutras” nor the procedures that they are supposed to yield, or correspond to, have anything to do with either the Vedas, or even with any post-Vedic mathematical tradition of yore in India. The image that it may conjure up of ancient rishis engaged in such arithmetical exercises as are taught to the children in the name of VM, and representing the solutions through word-strings of a few words in modern styled Sanskrit, with hardly any sentence structure or grammar, is just too far from the realm of the plausible. It would have amounted to a joke, but for the aura it has acquired on account of various factors, including the general ignorance about the knowledge in ancient times. It is a pity that a long tradition of over 3,000 years of learning and pursuit of mathematical ideas has come to be perceived by a large section of the populace through the prism of something so mundane and so lacking in substance from a mathematical point of view, apart from not being genuine
Tall claims
The colossal neglect involved is not for want of pride about the achievements of our ancients; on the contrary, there is a lot of writing on the topic, popular as well as technical, that is full of unsubstantiated claims conveying an almost supreme knowledge our forefathers are supposed to have possessed. But there is very little understanding or appreciation, on an intellectual plane, of the specics of their knowledge or achievements in real terms
In the colonial era this variety of discourse emerged as an antithesis to the bias that was manifest in the works of some Western scholars. Due to the urgency to respond to the adverse propaganda on the one hand and the lack of resources in addressing the issues at a more profound level on the other, recourse was often taken to short-cuts, which involved more assertiveness than substance. There were indeed some Indian scholars, like Sudhakar Dvivedi, who adhered to a more intellectual approach, but they were a minority. Unfortunately, the old discourse has continued long after the colonial context is well past, and long after the world community has begun to view the Indian achievements with considerable objective curiosity and interest. It is high time that we switch to a mode betting a sovereign and intellectually self-reliant society, focussing on an objective study and critical assessment, without the reference frame of “what they say” and how “we must assert ourselves.
Ancient India has indeed contributed a great deal to the world's mathematical heritage. The country also witnessed steady mathematical developments over most part of the last 3,000 years, throwing up many interesting mathematical ideas well ahead of their appearance elsewhere in the world, though at times they lagged behind, especially in the recent centuries. Here are some episodes from the fascinating story that forms a rich fabric of the sustained intellectual endeavour
Vedic knowledge
The mathematical tradition in India goes back at least to the Vedas. For compositions with a broad scope covering all aspects of life, spiritual as well as secular, the Vedas show a great fascination for large numbers. As the transmission of the knowledge was oral, the numbers were not written, but expressed as combinations of powers of 10. It would be reasonable to believe that when the decimal place value system for written numbers came into being it owed a great deal to the way numbers were discussed in the older compositions
The decimal place value system of writing numbers, together with the use of ‘0,' is known to have blossomed in India in the early centuries AD, and spread to the West through the intermediacy of the Persians and the Arabs. There were actually precursors to the system, and various components of it are found in other ancient cultures such as the Babylonian, Chinese, and Mayan. From the decimal representation of the natural numbers, the system was to evolve further into the form that is now commonplace and crucial in various walks of life, with decimal fractions becoming part of the number system in 16th century Europe, though this again has some intermediate history involving the Arabs. The evolution of the number system represents a major phase in the development of mathematical ideas, and arguably contributed greatly to the overall advance of science and technology. The cumulative history of the number system holds a lesson that progress of ideas is an inclusive phenomenon, and while contributing to the process should be a matter of joy and pride to those with allegiance to the respective contributors, the role of others also ought to be appreciated
It is well-known that Geometry was pursued in India in the context of construction of vedis for the yajnas of the Vedic period. The Sulvasutrascontain elaborate descriptions of construction of vedis and enunciate various geometric principles. These were composed in the rst millennium BC, the earliest Baudhayana Sulvasutra dating back to about 800 BC. Sulvasutra geometry did not go very far in comparison to the Euclidean geometry developed by the Greeks, who appeared on the scene a little later, in the seventh century BC. It was, however, an important stage of development in India too. The Sulvasutra geometers were aware, among other things, of what is now called the Pythagoras theorem, over 200 years before Pythagoras (all the four major Sulvasutras contain an explicit statement of the theorem), addressed (within the framework of their geometry) issues such as nding a circle with the same area as a square and vice versa, and worked out a very good approximation to the square root of two, in the course of their studies
Though it is generally not recognised, the Sulvasutra geometry was itself evolving. This is seen, in particular, from the differences in the contents of the four major extant Sulvasutras. Certain revisions are especially striking. For instance, in the early Sulvasutra period the ratio of the circumference to the diameter was, as in other ancient cultures, thought to be three, as seen in a sutra of Baudhayana, but in the Manava Sulvasutra, a new value was proposed, as three-and-one-fth. Interestingly, the sutra describing it ends with an exultation “not a hair-breadth remains,” and though we see that it is still substantially off the mark, it is a gratifying instance of an advance made. In the Manava Sulvasutra one also nds an improvement over the method described by Baudhayana for nding the circle with the same area as that of a given square
The Jain tradition has also been very important in the development of mathematics in the country. Unlike for the Vedic people, for Jain scholars the motivation for mathematics came not from ritual practices, which indeed were anathema to them, but from the contemplation of the cosmos. Jains had an elaborate cosmography in which mathematics played an integral role, and even largely philosophical Jain works are seen to incorporate mathematical discussions. Notable among the topics in the early Jain works, from about the fifth century BC to the second century AD, one may mention geometry of the circle, arithmetic of numbers with large powers of 10, permutations and combinations, and categorisations of innities (whose plurality had been recognised)
As in the Sulvasutra tradition, the Jains also recognised, around the middle of the rst millennium BC, that the ratio of the circumference of the circle to its diameter is not three. In “Suryaprajnapti,” a Jain text believed to be from the fourth century BC, after recalling the “traditional” value three for it, the author discards that in favour the square root of 10. This value for the ratio, which is reasonably close to the actual value, was prevalent in India over a long period and is often referred as the Jain value. It continued to be used long after Aryabhata introduced the well-known value 3.1416 for the ratio. The Jain texts also contain rather unique formulae for lengths of circular arcs in terms of the length of the corresponding chord and the bow (height) over the chord, and also for the area of regions subtended by circular arcs together with their chords. The means for the accurate determination of these quantities became available only after the advent of Calculus. How the ancient Jain scholars arrived at these formulae, which are close approximations, remains to be understood
Jain tradition
After a lull of a few centuries in the early part of the rst millennium, pronounced mathematical activity is seen again in the Jain tradition from the 8th century until the middle of the 14th century. Ganitasarasangraha of Mahavira, written in 850, is one of the well-known and inuential works. Virasena (8th century), Sridhara (between 850 and 950), Nemicandra (around 980 CE), Thakkura Pheru (14th century) are some more names that may be mentioned. By the 13th and 14th centuries, Islamic architecture had taken root in India and inGanitasarakaumudi of Thakkura Pheru, who served as treasurer in the court of the Khilji Sultans in Delhi, one sees a combination of the native Jain tradition with Indo-Persian literature, including work on the calculation of areas and volumes involved in the construction of domes, arches, and tents used for residential purposes
Mathematical astronomy or the Siddhanta tradition has been the dominant and enduring mathematical tradition in India. It ourished almost continuously for over seven centuries, starting with Aryabhata (476-550) who is regarded as the founder of scientic astronomy in India, and extending to Bhaskara II (1114-1185) and beyond. The essential continuity of the tradition can be seen from the long list of prominent names that follow Aryabhata, spread over centuries: Varahamihira in the sixth century, Bhaskara I and Brahmagupta in the seventh century, Govindaswami and Sankaranarayana in the ninth century, Aryabhata II and Vijayanandi in the 10th century, Sripati in the 11th century, Brahmadeva and Bhaskara II in the 12th century, and Narayana Pandit and Ganesa from the 14th and 16th centuries respectively
Aryabhatiya, written in 499, is basic to the tradition, and even to the later works of the Kerala school of Madhava (more on that later). It consists of 121 verses divided into four chapters — Gitikapada, Ganitapada, Kalakriyapada and Golapada. The rst, which sets out the cosmology, contains also a verse describing a table of 24 sine differences at intervals of 225 minutes of arc. The second chapter, as the name suggests, is devoted to mathematics per se, and includes in particular procedures to nd square roots and cube roots, an approximate expression for ‘pi' (amounting to 3.1416 and specied to be approximate), formulae for areas and volumes of various geometric gures, and shadows, formulae for sums of consecutive integers, sums of squares, sums of cubes and computation of interest. The other two chapters are concerned with astronomy, dealing with distances and relative motions of planets, eclipses and so on
Influential work
Brahmagupta's Brahmasphutasiddhanta is a voluminous work, especially for its time, on Siddhanta astronomy, in which there are two chapters, Chapter 12 and Chapter 18, devoted to general mathematics. Incidentally, Chapter 11 is a critique on earlier works including Aryabhatiya; as in other healthy scientific communities this tradition also had many, and often bitter, controversies. Chapter 12 is well-known for its systematic treatment of arithmetic operations, including with negative numbers; the notion of negative numbers had eluded Europe until the middle of the second millennium. The chapter also contains geometry, including in particular his famous formula for the area of a quadrilateral (stated without the condition of cyclicity of the quadrilateral that is needed for its validity — a point criticised by later mathematicians in the tradition). Chapter 18 is devoted to the kuttaka and other methods, including for solving second-degree indeterminate equations. An identity described in the work features also in some current studies where it is referred as the Brahmagupta identity. Apart from this, Chapter 21 has verses dealing with trigonometry. Brahmasphutasiddhanta considerably influenced mathematics in the Arab world, and in turn the later developments in Europe. Bhaskara II is the author of the famous mathematical texts Lilavati and Bijaganita. Apart from being an accomplished mathematician he was a great teacher and populariser of mathematics. Lilavati, which literally means ‘one who is playful,' presents mathematics in a playful way, with several verses directly addressing a pretty young woman, and examples presented through reference to various animals, trees, ornaments, and so on. (Legend has it that the book is named after his daughter after her wedding failed to materialise on account of an accident with the clock, but there is no historical evidence to that effect.) The book presents, apart from various introductory aspects of arithmetic, geometry of triangles and quadrilaterals, examples of applications of the Pythagoras theorem, trirasika, kuttaka methods, problems on permutations and combinations, etc. The Bijaganita is an advanced-level treatise on Algebra, the first independent work of its kind in Indian tradition. Operations with unknowns, kuttaka and chakravala methods for solutions of indeterminate equations are some of the topics discussed, together with examples. Bhaskara's work on astronomy, Siddhantasiromani and Karana kutuhala, contain several important results in trigonometry, and also some ideas of Calculus
The works in the Siddhanta tradition have been edited on a substantial scale and there are various commentaries available, including many from the earlier centuries, and works by European authors such as Colebrook, and many Indian authors including Sudhakara Dvivedi, Kuppanna Sastri and K.V. Sarma. The two-volume book of Datta and Singh and the book of Saraswati Amma serve as convenient references for many results known in this tradition. Various details have been described, with a comprehensive discussion, in the recent book by Kim Plofker. The Bakhshali manuscript, which consists of 70 folios of bhurjapatra (birch bark), is another work of signicance in the study of ancient Indian mathematics, with many open issues around it. The manuscript was found buried in a eld near Peshawar, by a farmer, in 1881. It was acquired by the Indologist A.F.R. Hoernle, who studied it and published a short account on it. He later presented the manuscript to the Bodleian Library at Oxford, where it has been since then. Facsimile copies of all the folios were brought out by Kaye in 1927, which have since then been the source material for the subsequent studies. The date of the manuscript has been a subject of much controversy since the early years, with the estimated dates ranging from the early centuries of CE to the 12th century
Takao Hayashi, who produced what is perhaps the most authoritative account so far, concludes that the manuscript may be assigned sometime between the eighth century and the 12th century, while the mathematical work in it may most probably be from the seventh century. Carbon dating of the manuscript could settle the issue, but efforts towards this have not materialised so far
A formula for extraction of square-roots of non-square numbers found in the manuscript has attracted much attention. Another interesting feature of theBakhshali manuscript is that it involves calculations with large numbers (in decimal representation)
Kerala school
Let me nally come to what is called the Kerala School. In the 1830s, Charles Whish, an English civil servant in the Madras establishment of the East India Company, brought to light a collection of manuscripts from a mathematical school that ourished in the north-central part of Kerala, between what are now Kozhikode and Kochi. The school, with a long teacher-student lineage, lasted for over 200 years from the late 14th century well into the 17th century. It is seen to have originated with Madhava, who has been attributed by his successors many results presented in their texts. Apart from Madhava, Nilakantha Somayaji was another leading personality from the school. There are no extant works of Madhava on mathematics (though some works on astronomy are known). Nilakantha authored a book called Tantrasangraha (in Sanskrit) in 1500 AD. There have also been expositions and commentaries by many other exponents from the school, notable among them being Yuktidipikaand Kriyakramakari by Sankara, and Ganitayuktibhasha by Jyeshthadeva which is in Malayalam. Since the middle of the 20th century, various Indian scholars have researched on these manuscripts and the contents of most of the manuscripts have been looked into. An edited translation of the latter was produced by K.V. Sarma and it has recently been published with explanatory notes by K. Ramasubramanian, M.D. Srinivas and M.S. Sriram. An edited translation of Tantrasangraha has been brought out more recently by K. Ramasubramanian and M.S. Sriram
The Kerala works contain mathematics at a considerably advanced level than earlier works from anywhere in the world. They include a series expansion for ‘pi' and the arc-tangent series, and the series for sine and cosine functions that were obtained in Europe by Gregory, Leibnitz and Newton, respectively, over 200 years later. Some numerical values for ‘pi' that are accurate to 11 decimals are a highlight of the work. In many ways, the work of the Kerala mathematicians anticipated calculus as it developed in Europe later, and in particular involves manipulations with indenitely small quantities (in the determination of circumference of the circle and so on) analogous to the innitesimals in calculus; it has also been argued by some authors that the work is indeed calculus already
Honouring the tradition
A lot needs to be done to
honour this rich
mathematical heritage. The
extant manuscripts need to
be cared for to prevent
deterioration, catalogued
properly with due updates
and, most important, they
need to be studied
diligently and the ndings
placed in proper context on
the broad canvass of the
world of mathematics, from
an objective standpoint. Let
the occasion of the 125th
birth anniversary of the
genius of Srinivasa
Ramanujan, a global
mathematician to the core,
inspire us as a nation, to
apply ourselves to this
task.
The Hindu, 26th December 2011
Medieval India historian and ‘Amin Saab’ to several generations of Stephanians, Mohammed Amin, turns up his nose when younger students talk about wanting to visit ‘Old’ Delhi. “For heaven’s sake, you are very welcome to call yourself ‘New’ or even ‘Newest’ Delhi, but we are just Delhi, not ‘Old’ Delhi,” he says
Kashmere Gate (built in 1638), one of the only four of the gates of Shahjahanabad still in existence, defies the break-up of Delhi into the ‘Old’ and the ‘New’. Though at first glance, it seems just a chaotic car parts bazar and a monumentally busy thoroughfare, this has been and is a very significant gateway between the Delhis of varying vintages
Still boasting of a GPO, perhaps the first big post office, built by the British, Kashmere Gate bears witness to much that went into the making of Delhi down the ages. The Mughal Magazine, just near the GPO,used as an armoury by the British later, saw one of the most fierce battles during the 1857 war of independence. Two cemeteries — Nicholson and Lothian — served as resting places for many of the British killed in battle then. The British, when they started to wrest back control of Delhi in September 1857, started right through Kashmere Gate
The remains of the library of Dara Shikoh (the author of Majma ul Bahrain, son of Shah Jahan, who translated the Upanishads into Persian) are here. St James Church, commissioned by James Skinner, the son of a Scotsman and a Rajput lady, is an imposing structure to date.
St Stephen’s College was housed right across from the Church, before moving to its present location. The rivalry between St Stephen’s and Hindu College was nursed at the crossing here as the two colleges faced off exactly as they do today on north campus
‘Delhiphile’ and CEC, SY Qureshi, who grew up close by, wistfully recalls “shopping for shoes here.
Kashmere Gate to Civil Lines was where the British chose to locate their homes and markets, even before the Crown took over. In 1804, the British chose a military engineer, Robert Smith, to fortify the gate whose strategic value they recognised. The area acquired a distinct cosmopolitan air about it. Says Kashmere Gate-born Sohail Hashmi, who organises historical walks: “the market here is still so typically English in design that it stands out from the rest of the city. Look at the wrought iron work in the balconies, some of it, surprisingly, survives, the cast iron pillars, the sloping roofs topped with wooden tiles or corrugated sheets.
It was not without reason that Nirad Choudhri made Nicholson Road his home and An Autobiography of an Unknown Indian was mostly written here. Or that Congress President, Dr MA Ansari, had his house here, and hosted people like EM Forster. Malik Ram, an eminent expert on poet Ghalib, did most of his research at his Transport Company here
The Shia Jama Masjid is here, and another open ground where women have offered the namaz alongside men for years. Books at the 102-year-old Atma Ram and Sons are still sold and there is a fourth generation son, Sudhir Puri, holding the fort. But others, like leather at Verma Leather Stores, movies at Ritz or Minerva, drycleaning at Band Box, scones at Carlton Cafe, or Khameeri roti at Khyber, dahi vadas at Mithan Halwai, or sightings of the various test cricket teams that stayed at the Oberoi Hotel, then located here, are history now. Kashmere Gate grew as Delhi did — sometimes planned but, at most other times, despite the neglect and indifference
With the Metro now and the bus adda, it remains a transport hub as ever, but the historicity of the area has been not overtly recognised. Large monuments like Jama Masjid or Red Fort have been easier to push as chapters of the Delhi story
But, says Prof Sanjay Sharma
of Ambedkar University,
which is located here: “The
Delhi government wants the
proposed ‘Museum of Delhi’
to be here and we are to
help with the project and
resurrect the sense of the
city that this place
embodies.” So, Mughal
cannons, British
engineering, mithai, the
special rotis, the Chinese
shoe-maker, wrought iron
balconies, the new metro and
car parts shops could just
find a context and help
explain — as Dara Shikoh may
have put it — the confluence
or Majma ul Bahrain that
Delhi and India are
Indian Express, 26th December 2011
Bold colours and bolder drawings tell stories from mythology and history as well as of the shenanigans of the babus during the days of the Raj. Kalighat scroll paintings known as pat, which was born in Bengal in early 19 th century, retain their kitschy and folk appeal to this day. Now, the prestigious Victoria and Albert Museum of London is holding a showcase of Kalighat pat paintings in India, possibly the largest exhibition of its kind. More than 105 pat paintings are on display at the Chhatrapati Shivaji Maharaj Vastu Sangrahalya in Mumbai and the exhibition will travel to Hyderabad and Delhi in 2012
Titled Kalighat Paintings Exhibition, the collection shows the gradual evolution of the art form down the years. While one work depicts the Jagannatha Trio, another canvas has Hanuman fighting Ravana, and a series showcases the Tarakeshwar Affair in which a Brahmin priest has an affair with a married woman
“My main task in curating
the show was to select 68 of
the best examples from V&A’s
collection of over 600
Kalighat paintings, and to
combine them with the 24
important paintings from
Kolkata’s Victoria Memorial
Hall’s (VMH) collection, to
create a strong narrative,”
says curator Suhashini
Sinha, a British born
Bengali working with the
V&A. This is the first time
that V&A’s collection is on
public display. Sinha’s
research took her to the
village of Naya in the
Midnapur district of West
Bengal, where a village of
patuas (painters of pat art)
create the patachitra. Here,
she roped in contemporary
pat painters Anwar and Uttam
Chitrakar to exhibit their
modern interpretations
alongside the old pat
paintings. While there is no
“For sale” section,
paintings by contemporary
artists are available. “This
modern revival of Kalighat
painting interests a lot of
art buyers both nationally
and internationally,” adds
Sinha.
Indian Express, 26th December 2011
Three months after a building collapsed atChandni Mahal in the Walled City claiming nine lives, the debris remains piled dangerously - iron rods and broken concrete perilously poised that can come crashing down any moment. Residents continue to live in fear, the horror of September 27 still fresh in their minds.
Salim Ashraf, a tea stall owner, tells his customers to be cautious. Pointing to the jutting rods, he said, "The debris can claim more lives if it crashes on pedestrians."
Residents say MCD lost interest ever since the incident stopped making headlines. "Till the time, media was here, the debris was getting cleared. Even in these narrow lanes, MCD brought machines to clear the rubble. But for than two months now, no official has visited this place," said Suleman Rehman, a resident.
Just not Chandni Mahal, nothing much has changed at the building collapse site at Uttam Nagar - the debris still lies piled up on the spot. Four peopledied on December 3.
But MCD officials say the onus lies on the property owner. But at Chandni Mahal, with owners in police custody, nobody is taking responsibility. "It is owner's responsibility to remove rubble. If the owner doesn't remove it, MCD has to clear it and later recover the cost. We send notices to them asking them to remove it," said Yogender Chandolia, chairman, MCD standing committee. But till now MCD has made no efforts to clear the debris.
With rubble strewn across the narrow lanes of Uttam Nagar, it has become difficult for residents to move. Broken brick and mortar pieces with protruding iron rods pose a threat to children. "It's almost a month, but debris hasn't been cleared. People come and throw garbage here. It is unsafe to send children to play as they might get hurt. Theft cases have also increased in area, " says Tazeem Khan(35), who resides in the adjacent building.
Even at Chandni Mahal, the collapse site has become a dumping ground. "Residents dump garbage and vendors park their carts here. We have asked the area councilor, but no action is taken," said Rehman.
But the area councilor, Ubaid Iqbal says he wasn't informed. "Residents did not contact me and if they want, we will clear the rubble. We didn't take the initiative as residents would have thought that we are on the builders' side," said Iqbal.
This has become a health hazard too. People in the area are also having problem in parking their cars near their resident. "I cannot park my car outside the house after the incident. It has become impossible to open the windows of my house due to flying dust," says Nand Kumar (25) resident of that area.
Debris has encroached upon
parking space of residents.
"My car cannot cross the
narrow lanes where the
debris is lying so I have
been parking my car on the
road. MCD had given
assurance but never turned
to clear the waste," says
Prem Shankar Mishra 67,
resident of Uttam Nagar.
Times of India, 26th December 2011
Depletion of bamboo clusters in Kerala’s Wayanad Wildlife Sanctuary is threatening to make the coming summer hard for several species of wildlife there and in the adjoining forests that constitute the Nilgiris biosphere. Experts say that the phenomenon could even lead to a famine as far as Wayanad jungles’ herbivores are concerned
Almost all the bamboo clusters which used to grow in about 100 sq km of the 344-sq km area of the Wayanad Wildlife Sanctuary have disappeared in the past six years due to flowering of the plants indicating that surviving the coming summer would be difficult for the herbivores in the forest like elephants and gaurs
The reason for the disappearance of the bamboo clusters, the mainstay of herbivores in summer when water becomes scarce in the jungle due to drying up of springs and ponds, is the gregarious flowering of the monocarpic plant
The flowering cycle of thorny bamboo, belonging to the grass family, varies from 30 years to 50 years, according to botanists. Officials in the Kerala Forest and Wildlife Department said that the situation was very serious as the bamboo groves in the adjacent sanctuaries also have begun to get depleted due to flowering
While the destruction of bamboo clusters in the Wayanad sanctuary is almost exhaustive, a 20 per cent to 30 per cent bamboo cluster depletion due to flowering has happened in the adjacent Rajiv Gandhi National Park, Nagarhole and the Bandipur Tiger Reserve in Karnataka, a major habitat of tigers, elephants and other species, since last year
Botanists with the Kerala Agricultural University at Vellanikkara, Thrissur said that the bamboo clusters, disappearing altogether due to flowering, could grow back in some years as seeds, which have no dormancy, could germinate in favourable climatic conditions. “Bamboo regeneration is quite natural and profuse,” said a KAU botanist
However, he said that the Forest Department should be extra careful to ensure that no fire incidents occurred in the jungle. “Forest fires can end the possibility of the bamboo clusters’ growing back as the seeds could get reduced to ashes. But fire incidents are rare in the Wayanad sanctuary,” the botanist said
Established in 1973, the
Wayanad Wildlife Sanctuary,
contiguous to the protected
area network of Nagarhole
and Bandipur on the
northeast and Mudumalai of
Tamil Nadu on the southeast,
is home to 20 to 25 tigers.
Rich in bio-diversity, the
sanctuary was established
with the specific objective
of conserving the biological
heritage of the region.
There are reports that the
sudden disappearance of the
wall of bamboo clusters in
the eastern part of Wayanad
could be one of the reasons
for the climate shift being
felt in the hilly district.
Environmentalists fear that
the bamboo depletion could
have led to the creation of
a hot wind pass into Wayanad
from the Deccan plateau.
The Pioneer, 26th December 2011