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  • Denial of dignity

    The Hindu, India
    Aug 5 2007

    Denial of dignity

    ANTARA DAS


    Two historical cemeteries in Kolkata are in a state of utter neglect
    and indiscriminately vandalised.

    In a bustling part of South Kolkata, tucked in between monstrously
    designed offices and apartment buildings, lie a few acres of history.
    They exist as two separate grounds, almost ashamed of their
    antiquity, cowering within themselves so that the wei ght of the past
    that they invoke does not trouble those leading the fast life
    outside.

    An observant pair of eyes will not miss the odd, weather-beaten
    steeple or the graceful but damaged lines of the funerary urns that
    dot the South Park Street cemetery, the solemn abode of the dead. It
    contains around 1,600 graves that were erected over a period of 150
    years, the oldest monument dated September 8, 1768, dedicated to the
    memory of one Mrs. Sarah Pearson. A little further up is the bigger
    and still functional Lower Circular Road (LCR) cemetery, a rambling
    wilderness that surprisingly houses 12,000 graves.

    Not resting in peace

    It would be quite erroneous to assume, however, that characters part
    of this vast historical gallery - ranging from British to Americans
    and Greek to Armenians - lie in peace in their final resting place,
    free from the restless clamour of life. A peek into the LCR cemetery
    shows the sweeping decay that the place has come to symbolise, with
    graves being hollowed out, tombstones ripped apart from the graves to
    be either stolen or recklessly discarded and piled into a heap. While
    the ravages of weather have ensured that most of the inscriptions
    have turned illegible, those inflicted by humans have violated the
    dignity due to the dead.

    Acknowledging the ruinous state of the LCR cemetery, Ronojoy Bose, an
    executive member of the Christian Burial Board that is in charge of
    both these cemeteries apart from three others in the city, blames
    petty criminals as well as more organised criminal networks operating
    from the adjacent slums for the widespread vandalism. These mischief
    makers regularly scale the boundary wall, at times even dismantling
    parts of it, attacking the graves to pilfer whatever might have any
    antique or archaeological value. `They have even stolen the railing
    around the tomb of the Bengali poet Michael Madhusudan Dutt, one of
    the shining figures of the Bengal Renaissance; only exemplary
    punishment meted out by the police can tackle this menace,' Mr. Bose
    said.

    Already, the West Bengal Minority Commission has suggested certain
    measures to rein in the theft of railings, concrete and marble slabs,
    widespread dumping of garbage from the adjacent apartment blocks and
    the trespassing that has become the order of the day. `The Minority
    Commission had exercised its right to visit the cemeteries and as a
    recommending body, suggested certain measures to the police to check
    encroachment and restore the serenity and tranquility of the place,'
    said Syed Adnan, Chairman of the Commission. `The last resting place
    is a sacred site that also has religious sentiments attached to it;
    in the event, it is very disconcerting for people to arrive at the
    graves of their ancestors and find human faeces or pigs' entrails
    strewn all over it,' he added.

    One might indeed be bemused at the apparent lack of concern for its
    colonial heritage in the city that was once the darling of the
    colonialists. The South Park Street cemetery, in fact, has been
    claimed to be one of the earliest non-church cemeteries in the world,
    which housed colonial administrators and soldiers of the invading
    army as well as the men, women and children who played only bit parts
    in the larger drama of the time, their lives and deaths determined by
    their resilience to withstand smallpox, rabies, cholera and `Arracan
    fever'.

    A reflection of lives

    While the South Park Street cemetery is better preserved than the one
    at LCR, owing to the conservation efforts of the Association for the
    Preservation of Historical Cemeteries in India, the one at LCR needs
    more attention. As the official brochure aptly reminds us, a walk
    down the lanes among the decaying, moss-covered, weather-beaten
    structures is as much a lesson in the neo-classical architectural
    fashions of the times as it is a reflection of the lives that the
    ordinary and not so ordinary led. So while John Drinkwater Bethune -
    whose epitaph describes his achievement as having `paved through the
    dark world of Indian women and rejuvenated it with the benevolent
    light of education' through the foundation of the Hindu Female School
    - rests at the LCR cemetery, the towering steeple over the grave of
    the pioneering Indologist William Jones dominates the one at Park
    Street.

    That is not to forget the tomb dedicated to the memory of Rose
    Whitworth Aylmer, a sprightly girl all of 17 - a companion and source
    of inspiration to the poet William Savage Landor - who lost the
    battle to cholera almost as soon as she landed in Calcutta. While
    Landor's ode to Rose is inscribed on the epitaph (`Rose Aylmer, whom
    these wakeful eyes, / May weep, but never see, / A night of memories
    and sighs, / I consecrate to thee'), it is the eccentric religious
    inclinations of Major General Charles Stuart, also known as `Hindoo'
    Stuart on account of his devotion to the Hindu pantheon of gods and
    his daily dip in the Hooghly river, that are reflected in the Hindu
    religious motifs on his grave.

    Already, a large number of graves in the LCR cemetery have been
    uprooted on account of the entangling roots of the around 250 ancient
    trees that dot the grounds in this area. The Christian Burial Board,
    Mr. Bose said, is considering sending out an international notice,
    stating that unless the descendants assume responsibility for the
    upkeep of the graves of their ancestors or depute representatives to
    do the same, the graves might not be preserved at all. It is said
    that in the olden days, burials would take place here with the help
    of lanterns, in the gathering dark of the evening. Perhaps now, more
    than ever, that darkness is gathering strength.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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