[CPProt.net] Nepali heritage on fire

MSN CPPnet (Ton Cremers) museum-security at museum-security.org
Sun Sep 11 10:03:06 CEST 2005


Nepali heritage on fire

September 11, 2005     
  
- 
Among the daily sad reports coming out of Nepal was the recent news,
published in all local newspapers, that the four-storey Agam House at
Pashupatinath caught fire on the night of Saturday, June 25, 2005, and
continued burning for hours. Valuable manuscripts, historical documents and
artefacts were destroyed.
The Agam House was the shrine of the tantric deity of Pashupatinath and the
residence of Madan Bhatta, the official tantric priest. In NS 848 (1728 AD)
Sambasadashiva Bhatta was authorised by Jagajjaya Malla (1722-1735 AD), a
king of mediaeval Kathmandu, to act as priest for several deities of the
Pashupatinath area, and also as Tirthaguru Nemuni at the time of the
Lingayatra and Kundayatra. He thus came to be the priest of the Agam House
of Shankaracharya Swami, who was connected with Shankaracharya Matha in
Pashupatinath. Madan Bhatta is a decendant of his.

Madan Bhatta informed the news media that among the items of his collection
were numerous documents relating to Pashupatinath, copperplates and palm
leaves from the time of King Jagajjaya Malla, King Rajendra Bikram Shah
Dev's Lalmohar ("red seal") of VS 1901 (1844 AD), a two-sealed Sanad
("decree") of VS 1906 (1849 AD) from the rule of Jung Bahadur Rana
(1817-1877 AD), manuscripts concerning the performance of rituals and the
holding of festivals, and documents relating to his ancestral authority in
the Pashupatinath area. According to the news reports, all these unique
items were reduced to ashes.

Fortunately, they are not completely lost, for the Nepal-German Manuscript
Preservation Project (NGMPP) had previously preserved most of them on
microfilm. The NGMPP was founded in 1970 under an agreement between His
Majesty's Government of Nepal and the German Oriental Society. During 31
years of fruitful activity it managed to microfilm the bulk of Nepal's
extraordinary wealth of old manuscripts, block prints and historical
documents written in Sanskrit, Newari, Maithili, Nepali, Tibetan or other
languages. Thanks to the NGMPP, among the more than 180,000 manuscripts and
documents available now on microfilm are the items destroyed in the Agam
House.

The NGMPP microfilmed material from Pashupati Gosvara under the code letters
PN (Pashupatinatha) from September 11, 1998 to March 31, 2000. The total
number of documents microfilmed in the Pashupatinath area is 1,578 (PN 1/1
to PN 37/42). Madan Bhatta was foresighted enough to allow his private
collection, consisting of 204 manuscripts and 136 historical documents, to
be microfilmed from February 18, 1999 till February 24, 2000. The subjects
include: Stotras (71), Tantric Karmakanda (44), General Karmakanda (26),
Purana-Mahatmya (24),  Jyotisa (7), Ayurveda (7) and Yoga (6), along with
two manuscripts in South Indian scripts and 17 miscellaneous items.
Especially worthy of note is a multiple text manuscript containing the
Purvamnayanitya-karmarcanavidhi, the Daksinamnayapujavidhi and the
Pascimamnayapujavidhi, the whole dated NS 827 (1706 AD) and scribed by
Sambasadashiva Bhatta himself (PN 27/1). There is also an old palm-leaf
manuscript, dated NS 702 (1582 AD), of the Kashikhanda (from the
Skandapurana) written in Sanskrit and Newari (PN 22/15), which has recently
been mentioned by Madan Bhatta under the title Himavatkhanda.

 There are five copperplates (dated NS 821, 851, 863, 877 and 935), 29
palm-leaf and 100 paper documents. The earliest of the palm-leaf documents,
a deed of sale, is dated NS 513 (1393 AD). It was microfilmed on reel no. PN
12/35. There is a palm-leaf document issued by Jagajjaya Malla (PN 12/32),
and another one, dated NS 594 (1474 AD), issued to Narayan Bhatta Ravata, a
priest of Unmatta Bhairava of Pashupati.

 The paper documents, including photocopies of earlier ones, fall under
categories such as: Lalmohar, Rukka, Tamasuka, Kabolanama, Rajinama,
Amsabanda, Bintipatra, Arji, Suchi, Phaisala, Muchulka, Sankalpapatra and
Darkhasta. Among the important documents preserved on microfilm are the
Lalmohar of VS 1901 (PN 16/1) and the Sanad of VS 1906 (PN 18/42-44).

 This is the third time that the work done by the NGMPP has proved to be
valuable under such dramatic circumstances. In 1989, a fire at the famous
monastery of Tengboche in Khumbu burned the monastery's library to ashes,
completely destroying unique manuscripts that had been brought from Tibet.
Fortunately again, these rare manuscripts (185 texts, 15,766 folios) had
been photographed by the NGMPP just a few months prior to the fire. In the
beginning of 2001 the entire village of Prok in Gorkha district was
destroyed by fire, only two months after the NGMPP preserved the valuable
manuscripts and documents of this village.

 The microfilms of all manuscripts and documents are kept both in the
National Archives in Kathmandu and in the State Library in Berlin, and are
generally accessible to the interested public all over the world. It was the
far-sighted German academic community, earnest Nepalese archivists and
scholars, and prudent private owners who enabled the NGMPP to save much of
Nepal's written tradition from ruin. 

The timely preservation of manuscripts and historical documents is one
important way to keep the cultural identity and historical assets of Nepal
from being lost. For the sake of future generations, misfortunes such as the
fires in Tengboche, Prok and Pashupatinath should instigate further efforts
to preserve and study Nepal's unique heritage.

 
Dragomir Dimitrov / Kashinath Tamot
(Nepal Research Centre, 

www.uni-hamburg.de/ngmcp/nrc)

 




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