Dear Friends:

This is from India Ink, NY Times today (23 03 2012)


-bhuban






March 23, 2012, 7:57 AM
The Parsis, Once India’s Curators, Now Shrug as History Rots
By DINYAR PATEL

Courtesy of Parzor Project
Dasturji Meherjirana at the Meherjirana library, Navsari, Gujarat. His family 
has been connected to the Meherjirana library, and its predecessor, the private 
collection, that existed for generations.

In the course of over one year of archival research in India, I have been 
heartened to see how, in a few institutions like the National Archives, the 
country’s rotting history now has a fighting chance of survival. However, I 
have been deeply dismayed by one observation: the inability of my own 
community, the Parsis, to properly protect our own history and heritage. In 
many ways, the Parsi experience reflects a colossal stumbling block toward 
proper historical preservation in India: a dearth of public activism, support 
and interest, even amongst the educated and affluent.
The Parsis, long considered the most progressive and socioeconomically advanced 
community in India, were once at the forefront of establishing and patronizing 
cultural institutions in Mumbai and Gujarat. We utilized ourcommercial wealth 
to help set up libraries, colleges and educational societies in the 19th and 
early 20th centuries. The leading savants of Europe trained our scholars and 
priests, who in turn maintained meticulous collections of manuscripts and 
voluminous libraries.

Elizabeth Dalziel/Associated Press
A Parsi woman and a man pray at a fire temple in Mumbai on the Parsi new year,  
in this Aug. 21, 2002, file photo.

With some notable exceptions, we have since fallen on hard times. Our 
institutions did not keep up with new scholarship and preservation techniques. 
Many old libraries with Parsi connections would qualify as excellent research 
centers — if it were still 1910. Piles of 100-year-old Encyclopaedia 
Britannicas, along with popular English literature from the late Victorian era, 
gather dust in Godrej steel cabinets. Many staff members have a limited idea 
about what their collections hold, and trustees have looked the other way while 
irreplaceable runs of 19th century newspapers have been sold off for scrap. I 
have been in one library where I was told I was the first visitor in four years.
The case of Mumbai’s J.N. Petit Institute illustrates what has happened due to 
gross neglect and mismanagement. It was founded by one of the community’s most 
aristocratic families, one that still boasts a Raj-era baronetcy. According to 
Murali Ranganathan, the Petit Institute has been throwing away “entire 
cabinets” of valuable books. He found one such item being sold in the premises: 
a copy of John Locke’s An Essay Concerning Human Understanding published in 
1746. The Petit Institute, he recalled, was nice enough to issue a receipt for 
the 40 rupees (less than $1) he paid to purchase this priceless antique volume.

parsis.net.in website
The façade of the old, two-story, Jamsetjee Nesserwanjee Petit Institute 
building, Bombay, 1938.

According to one “sadly disappointed” Parsi who was briefly affiliated with the 
library, and who wanted to remain anonymous, the Petit Institute suffers from 
ailments afflicting countless other libraries across the country: a lack of 
imagination, ambition and open-mindedness amongst trustees, as well as a 
complete disconnect with what actually goes on inside the premises. Tellingly, 
when I contacted library staff, they were unwilling to furnish details on the 
institute’s trustees, saying that they did not play a very important role (I 
eventually found contact information for one trustee, who did not return my 
calls). One library administrator simply acknowledged that the selling and 
trashing of books “happens everywhere” in India.
Why has all of this happened in a supposedly educated, advanced community? 
There are many possible reasons. Parsis have steadily been losing command over 
their native language, Gujarati, rendering an entire corpus of knowledge 
inaccessible — and therefore less valuable (elderly Parsis have offered me 
several precious volumes, telling me that they know their children will throw 
them out). Community institutions have failed to recruit younger Parsis as 
trustees and patrons, leave alone interest them in their activities.

parsis.net.in website
The reading room and library housed inside the old building of Jamsetjee 
Nesserwanjee Petit Institute, Bombay, 1938.

But the most glaring problem is the hands-off approach most Parsis take toward 
these institutions. Within a community otherwise known for its philanthropy, 
there is little sense that ordinary individuals can themselves make positive 
contributions, financial or otherwise; there is a limited sense of public 
ownership and collective responsibility. When I tell Parsi audiences about 
rotting books and decaying collections, individuals in this wealthiest of 
Indian communities will, more often than not, elicit a sanctimonious “tsk, tsk” 
— and then promptly forget about the matter altogether. When I broach the 
subject of fund-raising, someone will invariably say, “Why don’t the Tatas 
help?,” as if this philanthropic multinational is the only actor capable of 
helping out.
Shernaz Cama, a professor in the University of Delhi, realized the devastating 
consequences of public apathy when she became involved with a Unesco project to 
save one Parsi institution, the Meherjirana Library, in the Gujarati town of 
Navsari. When she arrived at the library in 1999, Ms. Cama found a Mughal sanad 
(property deed) on the wall covered in dust, correspondence with the court of 
Akbar lying on the floor and windowsills, and DDT being used on books to keep 
the bugs away. She quickly realized that this was not the fault of the 
library’s staff — preoccupied with salvaging priceless manuscripts and family 
trees that Parsis in Navsari were selling to scrap-paper dealers — but rather 
that of the wider Parsi community that was providing neither funds nor 
patronage.
With support from Unesco and the National Archives, Ms. Cama and her 
foundation, Parzor, have fire-proofed and restored the library’s 19th-century 
building, repaired books and manuscripts, and microfilmed important 
collections. Scholars from India and across the world have, consequently, 
descended on this sleepy Gujarati town, discovering new treasures in the 
library. This January, for example, one doctoral candidate from Harvard, Dan 
Sheffield, reported having found a portion of a 14th-century Zoroastrian 
manuscript, the rest of which is in the British Library, that had been missing 
for centuries.
In spite of the Meherjirana Library’s revival, Ms. Cama remains ambivalent as 
to whether even the Parsis can better preserve their heritage. “The Parsis 
definitely have the finances,” she commented, “but they also need the will and 
the interest to want to keep their history.” The same goes for the rest of the 
Indian public. I sincerely hope that, as Indians become wealthier and more 
educated, the Parsi experience proves to be the exception, rather than the 
rule, to how the past is treated.
In this four-part series, a historian examines the appalling condition of 
India’s archives, the reasons for the neglect and what can be done to fix the 
problem. Previously: In India, History Literally Rots Away, Repairing the 
Damage at India’s National Archives, India’s Archives: How Did Things Get This 
Bad?,
Dinyar Patel is a Ph.D. candidate in history at Harvard University, currently 
working on a dissertation on Dadabhai Naoroji and early Indian nationalism. He 
can be reached at dpa...@fas.harvard.edu.




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