The Borneo Post

Stolen gods: Nepal seeks to bring home lost treasures

- Paavan Mathema

KATHMANDU: When Virginia Tech professor Sweta Gyanu Baniya saw an ornate 17thcentur­y Nepali necklace in the Art Institute of Chicago, she burst into tears, bowed down and began to pray.

Now a video she posted on social media has made the artefact one of the latest targets for heritage activists sleuthing online to try to bring home some of the thousands of items whisked out over decades from the Himalayan country.

The return journey has been made by only a handful of relics, but they have come from some of the world’s top cultural institutio­ns and pressure for more is mounting.

Nepal’s then king offered the gilt copper necklace, adorned with semi-precious stones, to Taleju Bhawani, his Malla dynasty’s patron goddess, in around 1650.

Her Kathmandu temple is only open to the public one day a year, but officials removed the work for safekeepin­g in the 1970s — a er which it disappeare­d.

Baniya told AFP her reaction when she visited the Chicago museum in June was ‘just overpoweri­ng’.

“I started to weep in front of it,” she said. “I started to just pray normally like I would do in temple.

“I had so many questions. Like why it is here, how did it come here?”

Traces of vermilion pigment used in Hindu worship rituals are still visible on its surface, and Baniya’s Twi er video prompted Nepali authoritie­s to contact the museum to seek its return.

The Art Institute of Chicago did not respond to multiple requests for comment by AFP but its website states the necklace was donated by the private Alsdorf Foundation, which bought it from a California dealer in 1976.

Priest Udhav Kamacharya has served at the temple for 26 years but Baniya’s footage was the first time he had seen the relic.

As he watched, he said: “I felt that the goddess still resides here.

“We sometimes say the gods are not here anymore, but they are. That is why it was found despite being in a foreign land.”

Opening up

Nepal is deeply religious and its Hindu and Buddhist temples and heritage sites remain an integral part of people’s everyday lives.

Many, though, are bere of their centuries-old sculptures, paintings, ornamental windows and even doors, stolen — sometimes with the assistance of corrupt officials — a er the country opened up to the outside world in the 1950s to feed art markets in the United States, Europe and elsewhere.

“Our art for us is not just art, they are gods to us,” said heritage expert Rabindra Puri, who campaigns to repatriate stolen Nepali heritage and has assembled a collection of replicas for a planned museum on the issue.

In June, the Paris branch of auction house Bonhams was forced to cancel the sale of five gilded copper-bronze idols, wrenched out from the gateway of a temple in the 1970s, a er pressure from Nepali officials and activists.

The auction was first spo ed by Lost Art of Nepal, an anonymousl­y-run Facebook page that has posted about hundreds of historical and religious objects, flagging their new locations from auction houses to European or American museums.

“We have seen empty temples, empty shrines, empty pedestals and torn toranas everywhere” in the Kathmandu valley, the page’s administra­tor said in an email.

“In search for answers, I have collected old photograph­s from...

I felt that the goddess still resides here. We sometimes say the gods are not here anymore, but they are. That is why it was found despite being in a foreign land.

Udhav Kamacharya

(all) possible sources,” they added. “The extent of loss of our heritage is much more than what is known or published.”

Androgynou­s idols

Campaigner­s want to make stolen art — the s continue to this day, primarily from remote monasterie­s — as sensitive an issue among buyers and collectors as conflict diamonds or elephant ivory.

With heritage repatriati­on a growing issue for museums around the world — the ancient Greek Elgin Marbles and the Benin Bronzes from Nigeria are probably the best-known controvers­ies — the occasional Nepali recovery is building into a trickle.

Six pieces have been returned this year and authoritie­s are seeking more from France, the United States and Britain.

In March, the Dallas Art Museum and the FBI returned to Nepal a stolen 12th- to 15thcentur­y androgynou­s stone sculpture of Hindu deities Laxmi-Narayan.

This month it will be reinstalle­d in its original temple location, from where it disappeare­d in 1984.

The museum had held the statue for 30 years but a tweet by arts crime professor Erin L Thompson questionin­g its provenance prompted an investigat­ion.

“These are objects people were worshippin­g until it was ripped away from them,” she said.

New York’s Metropolit­an Museum of Art handed over a 10th-century stone sculpture of the Hindu god Shiva in September, the third item it has repatriate­d to Nepal since 2018.

In Bhaktapur, devotees worship another androgynou­s Laxmi-Narayan idol, protected behind a locked iron gate.

Expecting mothers continue the ancient tradition of offering it oil to predict the gender of their baby.

But it is a replica. The 15thcentur­y original went missing in the early 1980s.

Badri Tuwal, 70, remembers how residents cried in mourning the day the idol disappeare­d.

“We don’t know where it is,” he said, “but I hope someday we can celebrate its return.”

 ?? — AFP photos ?? Puri posing for pictures during an interview with AFP at his house, in Bhaktapur some 12 km east of Kathmandu.
— AFP photos Puri posing for pictures during an interview with AFP at his house, in Bhaktapur some 12 km east of Kathmandu.
 ?? ?? Priest of the Taleju Temple, Kamacharya, posing for pictures during an interview with AFP in Kathmandu.
Priest of the Taleju Temple, Kamacharya, posing for pictures during an interview with AFP in Kathmandu.
 ?? ?? Kamacharya, gesturing during an interview with AFP in Kathmandu.
Kamacharya, gesturing during an interview with AFP in Kathmandu.
 ?? ?? Puri gesturing during an interview with AFP at his house.
Puri gesturing during an interview with AFP at his house.
 ?? ?? Puri gesturing during an interview with AFP at his house.
Puri gesturing during an interview with AFP at his house.
 ?? ?? Puri at his house.
Puri at his house.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia