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Is there hope for Hampi?
The group of monuments, once at the centre of the renowned
Vijayanagar Empire, has never been tended with the care and
concern it deserves. Now, with the threat of being taken off the
'World Heritage' list, the ruins may well disappear, says
GAUTAMAN BHASKARAN, who met UNESCO officials in Paris recently.
INDIA has 22 UNESCO "World Heritage" Sites. Poor, compared with
the 582 the world over. Poor, against a much smaller Italy's 29
or Spain's 28 or France's 26. There are many reasons why India's
hundreds of cultural and natural spots have not been declared
'World Heritage' Sites. A recent cause has been improper drafting
of documents by the Archaeological Survey of India. In what has
been an embarrassment to the Government, 11 proposals sent to
UNESCO some time ago were rejected, because the paper work was
incorrect. Obviously, this indicates sheer callousness.
But what is even more terrible is UNESCO's threat to remove the
renowned Hampi group of monuments from the list of 'World
Heritage' Sites, because two bridges are being built within the
area. An existing road, which will be linked to one of them, will
see heavier traffic once the construction is complete. This will
mean greater pollution, which is the worst enemy of any old
building.
UNESCO's World Heritage Centre specialist, Junko Taniguchi, who
has visited Hampi at least twice in the past few months, told me
in her Paris office that "the bridges are the main points of
concern, because they are coming up right within the protected
zone, and completely overwhelm the landscape and setting. Also,
vehicular traffic will increase once the bridge is ready, and
this road passes through one of the most important gates of
Hampi. There have already been instances of trucks running into
it. For 10 years, we have been asking the Archaeological Survey
of India (ASI) to deviate the road, but it was never done."
Besides, there is no comprehensive management plan. This is
absolutely necessary for a place like Hampi, because it is large
and has not only historic structures but also living temples.
Taniguchi says: "There are people residing there, and this
complicates matters even further. There is quite a number of
illegal encroachments, which have not been controlled despite
legislation. The Karnataka Government has said that it will
address this. But the first and foremost worry are the bridges.
"The smaller (foot) bridge is coming up right next to the
Virupaksha temple. It is also located on top of the Nandi, the
worst possible spot. It can be shifted."
UNESCO is obviously peeved. The Director for Asia-Pacific Region
of the World Heritage Centre, Minja Yang, told me in Paris that
"enough warning is given before a site is delisted. The objective
is not to punish or take it off the list: in the first place, if
it was on it, it was there because it was considered to have an
outstanding universal value to the entire human community. The
intention is to work out feasible measures, corrective steps.
"Taniguchi went twice to Hampi and we made recommendations to the
Government, but we are yet to receive an official reply from it.
Of course, we try in the best way possible that these suggestions
are something that the Government can accept. It is not an
unilateral imposition of 'you must do this or otherwise'."
A possible answer to the State administration's laidback attitude
may lie in the fact that many of the sites in India were included
in the 'World Heritage' list very early on, and at that time
perhaps the committee that keeps a watch over these historic
places was not as strict as it is now. In fact, very few of these
have any management plan. Even then, it is surprising that Hampi,
with its enormous size, has never had one.
One would like to mention here that about a decade ago, plots of
land around the Virupaksha temple were given away to the poor.
They, in turn, sold them to developers, who built "illegal"
hotels.
However, there is now a move to continuously monitor the status
of a site. This will be done by the local authorities, and UNESCO
will meet Indian officials by the end of this year to work out a
proper management plan. (This is to make sure that a problem is
nipped in the bud, and that it is not allowed to worsen in a way
that it becomes hard and expensive to deal with it later.)
In fact, Yang avers that one of the grounds why the Indian
proposals for additions to the World Heritage list were turned
down was that the forms had inadequate information ... certainly
pertaining to a management plan. A pity, because there already is
so much in India that can be included.
Taniguchi contends that they have also been encouraging the
administration to group several monuments, which may be linked
historically or culturally or religiously or architecturally,
under a single nomination, instead of, say, five nominations.
They need not even be in the same geographical area. They can be
four corners. This way a lot more of the country can be part of
World Heritage.But who cares?
Yang feels that culture is hardly considered to be a priority not
just in India, but all over. "People use history in a very
political, ideological and manipulative manner. To me that is
most unfortunate, because history is no longer palaces and
religious edifices, but also rural villages and so on."
This does not mean that every bit of the past has to be
preserved. There is a lot of pressure on land in many parts of
the globe, but it is necessary to save examples. "I think Europe
has understood this. There is growing recognition there that the
development of a country or a city requires the physical
manifestation of the past," Yang adds.
But people elsewhere must also learn the value of conservation.
It is not very easy for a villager in Hampi to realise that one
part of the site is as important as the other part on which
stands a monument. It is difficult, so it requires education.
Which was never imparted, at least with earnestness. Years ago, I
saw Hampi's magnificence stained with betel leaf juice or marred
by graffiti. Taniguchi tells me that nothing much has changed
since then, and she last went there in February.
Sadly, it is not just the illiterate who are guilty. The well-
informed are to blame as well. Taniguchi says they have just got
information that the bridges will be operational in August. This
is unconfirmed, but the construction is going on. That is
definite.
Tragic. What a way to treat a splendid expanse of history.
Post-Script: The Darjeeling Himalayan Railway, which has honoured
with the 'World Heritage' status just months ago, may well end up
like Hampi, if the administration does not check its temptation
to tamper with the originality and novelty of the system.
Replacing steam locomotives with diesel ones on the section has
been criticised.
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