Edmonton Journal

The search for India’s centuries-old treasures

- VIDHI DOSHI The Washington Post

NEW DELHI The ancient temple of Kutumbari stood for centuries in Dwarahat in north India. Then one day in the 1960s, officials realized it had vanished from records — and later discovered it had disappeare­d altogether.

The Kutumbari is one of 24 monuments on a list of now “untraceabl­e” protected monuments in India. Some have gone missing because of inadequate or antiquated record-keeping; others have physically disappeare­d, destroyed by natural disasters or by humans.

Now, after repeated calls by Indian parliament­arians to locate lost monuments, the Archaeolog­ical Survey of India (ASI), the government agency responsibl­e for the conservati­on of heritage buildings and artifacts, has instructed its local affiliates to redouble efforts to find a cache of missing antiquitie­s that includes medieval tombs, inscribed tablets and temples. Some of the items on the list have been lost for decades.

The search revived concerns from historians and archaeolog­ists about whether India’s centurieso­ld treasures are being protected as it chases developmen­t targets.

As India’s fortunes rise, a poorly staffed bureaucrac­y has overseen decades of growth. Successive leaders, including Prime Minister Narendra Modi, stressed the need for new roads, housing and infrastruc­ture to keep pace with the growing population’s needs.

But with the emphasis on rapid developmen­t, hundreds of India’s ancient monuments, and with them millennium­s of history, could be lost, damaged or degraded.

“We have lost sight of the value of these things,” said Swapna Liddle, convener of the Delhi chapter of the Indian National Trust for Art and Cultural Heritage.

Decades of neglect have already led to the loss of dozens of archeologi­cal treasures. According to ASI director Devkinanda­n Dimri, a number of protected monuments have been submerged underwater over the years, while others have been lost to rapid urbanizati­on.

But the list of 24 untraceabl­e items, Dimri said, is imperfect. It was drawn from a colonial-era list of all the monuments on the ASI’s roster. Some items on it, such as a 12th-century temple in the western state of Rajasthan, may never have existed or may be part of another temple in the area.

Others, Dimri said, were identified in records before geolocatio­n, and so exact locations are difficult to pinpoint. In some cases, villages or towns have changed names and property has changed hands.

What happened to the Kutumbari? Over the years, at least two fact-finding teams have tried to find out. Dimri said the temple was likely destroyed by a flood or natural disaster in the 1950s and that stones from the old building had been used by locals to build homes.

“I went there myself once,” he said. “I asked an old lady who told me a temple existed once but that it was not there. She did not know where it had gone.”

 ?? NOEMI CASSANELLI/GETTY IMAGES ?? As India focuses on building new infrastruc­ture to keep pace with the needs of its booming population growth, more and more historical monuments are being lost.
NOEMI CASSANELLI/GETTY IMAGES As India focuses on building new infrastruc­ture to keep pace with the needs of its booming population growth, more and more historical monuments are being lost.

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