Waris Fayaz
Sopore, Jul 24 : Meeras Mahal, the valley’s first and biggest private museum and home to more than 7,000 artefacts, has gone online, providing an ethnographic lens into the rich cultural heritage of Kashmir.
The museum in the Sopore area of north Kashmir’s Baramulla district houses ancient ornaments, coins, traditional dresses and utensils, which could now be accessed through the website www.meerasmahalmuseum.com.
It was set up in the year 2002 by renowned educationist Aatiqa Bano who worked hard to preserve Kashmir’s identity and depict its rich history.
Talking to the news agency—Kashmir News Observer (KNO), Muzzamil Bashir, President Meeras Mahal, said, “Initially, the museum was started with a Kashmiri firepot (Kondal) which was kept in a small room, and the additions keep going with gradual collections. The people mostly come here to donate things with an aim to preserve them.”
Though this was just like a store room and was not fulfilling the requirements which a museum must possess, Aatikaa ma’am approached the government several times for its support but always returned disappointed, Muzzamil, who is Aatiqa Bano’s nephew, said. “We are pinning hopes on the present government for its support to preserve the heritage.”
He said the Indian National Trust for Art and Cultural Heritage (INTACH), Kashmir – an organization involved in mapping, documenting and preserving the cultural heritage of Kashmir – is supporting the museum. We are currently shifting the items to the newly-constructed structure, which is a gallery type and fulfilling all the needs of a museum, he added.
Most of the artefacts, Bashir said, are items of daily use that were a common sight in Kashmir until the end of the 20th century. The Meeras Mahal museum collections are classified into terracotta, woodwork, wicker and grass-ware, metal (including jewellery), stone, textiles and manuscripts, he said, adding that new addition to this Meeras is Ladakh’s heritage items including dresses.
The museum’s website was inaugurated by Deputy Commissioner Baramulla Syed Sehrish Asgar last week.
The president of the museum said that putting it online was due to the efforts of Musarat Kar, President Municipal Council Sopore, who is acting as a volunteer and is deeply passionate about preserving the rich cultural heritage of her homeland. This is going to help people across the globe to know about Kashmir’s rich past, he added.
During the peak season of tourism, heritage lovers, both locals including college and school students, and outsiders (foreigners) prefer to visit the Meeras Mahal to gain knowledge about the valley’s rich past.
“Objects have a huge cultural and heritage value as they depict a lifestyle and living pattern of a region,” the DC Baramulla said while inaugurating the website.
“The museum has been used by the local population to get an understanding of the life and times of their immediate ancestors. It gives people firsthand information of their vernacular past,” she said—(KNO)
