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Thursday, November 26, 2009

Ahluwalia, wife visit Khuda Bakhsh Library

Source: TNN 19 November 2009, 04:17am IST

PATNA: Planning Commission deputy chairman Montek Singh Ahluwalia and his wife, I J Ahluwalia, visited the Khuda Bakhsh Oriental Public Library
Library director Intiaz Ahmad apprised them of the history and activities of the Library. Ahluwalia paid rich tributes to institution founder Khan Bahadur Khuda Bakhsh for his vision in collecting and preserving the rare cultural heritage of the country.
The visiting dignatories were shown rare Persian manuscripts preserved at the library, including Timur Namah, Shah Namah, Badshah Namah, Diwan-e Hafiz and Safinatul Auliya, carrying the autograph of Moghul Emperors and princes. They were also shown specimens of Mughal paintings, calligraphy and book decoration and Arabic and Urdu manuscripts. They were also shown the book of Military Accounts of Maharaja Ranjit Singh, besides a page of holy Quran written on deer skin. The visiting guests were presented a memento and recent publications of the library.

Tuesday, November 10, 2009

Mughals on the big stage


Amir Raza Hussain’s Shahenshah Nama is a theatrical extravaganza..
 

Ronita Torcato
On the sprawling ground adjoining the Grand Hyatt at Kalina, Mumbai, one could spot the Qutub Minar, the red sandstone Agra Fort, and pristine-white marble corridors culminating in splendid, arched palaces. Delhi-based theatre artiste Amir Raza Hussain had brought over his latest production — Shahenshah Nama — portraying the history of the Mughals in India. The sets consisted of these elaborate edifices crafted from wood, metal and plaster of Paris.
The last time Hussain was in the city, he had got a 100-member crew to build 19 sets on a three-acre plot to stage The Legend of Ram with 35 characters. He’d called it “the greatest story in the world”.

Besides acting in numerous productions, Hussain has directed 73 plays including The Fifty Day War, One flew over the Cuckoo’s Nest, comedies such as No Sex please, We Are British, and a film — Kim — for BBC starring Peter O’Toole.
His choice of the son et lumière (sound and light) medium is apt for period pieces such as The Legend of Ram and Shahenshah Nama. This night-time theatrical device lends itself to the grand spectacle demanded of such productions, including opulent wardrobes and magnificent sets.


Shahenshah Nama premiered some months ago at Hyderabad’s Chowmahallah Palace, which was beautifully lit up to exude royal splendour.
Theatre lovers in that city were delighted with the novel experience of watching the open-air production by moving from set to set (seven in all).
At the Mumbai show, the lights (handled by Hussain’s wife Virat) dimmed and a rich baritone boomed over the music, which swelled to a crescendo. For about an hour, the senior citizens in the audience chose to sit around tables some distance away, while the rest walked slowly from set to set, as the tumultuous history of the Mughals unfolded.
Revisiting the Mughals
The reference material for Babar, who invaded India in 1526 A.D., was his own meticulously recorded diaries in which he talks of hunting rhinoceros in the Punjab and complains about things Indian, comparing them to his native Samarkhand. The Babarnama also records natural history — the plants that he saw and even the fruits he ate. On the ‘King of the Fruits’, he says, rather prosaically, “The mango is one of the fruits peculiar to Hindustan. It is eaten in two ways: one is to squeeze it to a pulp, make a hole in it and suck the juice; the other is to peel and eat it like a peach.”
The production included tales of Babar’s son Humayun, who was addicted to opium; the best and wisest of them all, Emperor Akbar; Jahangir and his ambitious chief queen Noorjahan; Shah Jahan, a lover of beauty who immortalised his beloved Mumtaz in a breathtaking white tomb; and the controversial Aurangzeb. In Hussain’s production the monarchs were fleshed out by a cast attired in lush costumes, and the miming and dancing brought alive the medieval period. The Mughal women, especially Noorjahan, were depicted as steel magnolias.
Hussain has clarified that his Shahenshah Nama is “not a textbook lesson in history”. Which is probably why it glosses over Aurangzeb’s excesses, while amplifying slivers of legend. One of the more riveting sequences shows how the powerful singing (Raga Deepak) of Tansen, one of the nine jewels or Navaratnas at the court of Akbar, sets the trees on fire and how this, in turn, is doused by the rains resulting from the mellifluous singing (Raga Megh Malhar) by his daughter. Abul Fazal writes in Ain-e-Akbari (which Hussain sources for his script) that Akbar, a great lover of music, had personally chosen each of the gems in his court.
Despite the grey skies and predictions of rain, the crowd thronged the dusty maidan for the weekend show. We enjoyed the royal spectacle as a balmy breeze blew around us, and just as the show ended the skies opened up.

Chequered past : HISTORY

Source: The Hindu




C.N.ANAND

History throws open unanswered questions on Rajmata Gayatri Devi’s vast property and treasure.



Apart from the wealth she brought as a princess from Cooch Bihar, the wealth bequeathed to Gayatri DEvi by Maharaja Man Singh was considerable


Photo: S. Subrahmanium

Jaigarh fort: Witness to lives and legends


News about the claimants to the 1000-acre estate of late Rajmata Gayatri Devi has been making headlines. Apart from the wealth she brought as a princess from Cooch Bihar, the wealth bequeathed to her by Maharaja Man Singh was considerable and has a rich history with a Mughal connection.
Travelling by road from Delhi to Jaipur, the gradual transformation of the land from a fertile one to a rocky and sandy terrain with little tree cover is noticeable. There are many hillocks en-route, almost all crowned with a fort. One wonders how such a sparse land could throw up surplus labour to afford these forts. Surely, the land must have been more fertile in earlier centuries, before the desert encroached.
Original capital

As one approaches Jaipur, a hill range looms offering an obstacle to an invading force. The road runs through a pass in the hill range. At the end of the pass is Amber, the original capital of the Jaipur family. Overlooking Amber to the West is a hill on which Jaigarh fort was constructed. If Amber was threatened, the inhabitants could retreat into the fort to withstand a siege. While on a visit to Amber Emperor Akbar saw Jodha Bai, sister of Maharajah Man Singh. The marriage of Akbar to Jodha Bai cemented the ties between the Mughals and the Jaipur family and Man Singh was trusted with the office of Commander-in-Chief of the Mughal army. History tells us that Akbar ordered Man Singh to subjugate the Afghans. Jaipur folklore has it that Man Singh plundered Afghanistan and returned with a lot of treasure. It also alleges that he did not share the treasure with Akbar but hoarded it in Jaigarh fort.


Fast-forward to Aurangzeb’s era. History tells us that Man Singh’s counterpart in Jaipur was Jai Singh. During one of Aurangzeb’s campaigns, Jai Singh was summoned. But he arrived late as he had a love affair on the way. Jai Singh saved the day by conjuring up a smart excuse that led Aurangzeb to remark, “You are more than one; you are one plus a quarter.” Since then the title Sawai stuck and to this day the Jaipur royal family flies two flags: a full-sized one and a quarter flag below it. It was Sawai Jai Singh who planned and constructed Jaipur city with broad and straight roads to form a grid across the town.
Furore

Fast-forward to pre- and post-Independence days. Just before Independence, the Maharaja of Jaipur was another Man Singh who married Gayatri Devi. In 1955, Queen Elizabeth and Prince Philip stayed in Jaipur as Sawai Man Singh’s guests during their tour of India. A tiger hunt was arranged and Prince Philip bagged a tiger causing a furore among conservationists. After Maharajah Man Singh passed away, relations between Indira Gandhi and Rajmata Gayatri Devi soured.
During the Emergency, the Rajmata was imprisoned and an income tax raid conducted. Rumour has it that four quintals of gold and many priceless gems were seized. An old document from Sawai Jai Singh’s time, which mentioned the existence of treasure in the Jaigarh fort, was discovered. Curiously, all forts in Jaipur were under the care of the Archaeological Survey of India, except Jaigarh fort, which was in the custody of the Jaipur Royal family. The fort was not open for tourists.
The Government of India dispatched an Army unit to Jaigarh fort to investigate if the treasure existed. After a three-month search, nothing was found. Could Sawai Jai Singh have used the treasure to construct the city of Jaipur?

C.N. Anand is the author of Tarbela Damned – Pakistan Tamed.