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Kashmir's Heritage in Peril

Kashmir's Heritage in Peril: Over 7,000 Artefacts Collected by Women's Empowerment Icon Neglected. Despite efforts, Meeras Mahal's invaluable collection faces significant neglect.

By Ahmed Ali Fayyaz
New Update

When Sopore, northern Kashmir's apple hub, was evolving into the epicentre of a burgeoning insurgency, a celibate, burqa-clad educationist, Atiqa Bano, conceived the idea of preserving Kashmir heritage by safeguarding the symbols of the valley's culture. She initiated this monumental task from a small, dingy hostel room of her private education college, marking the humble beginnings of a significant cultural endeavour.

Six years after her death, in December 2023, her dream of a countryside museum remains unfulfilled for want of financial support, even as the government's cultural preservation bodies have remained unconcerned, and two nonprofit groups have renovated a repository and helped in documentation. Delhi-based Jaspreet Kaur's Span Foundation has remodelled Bano's 'museum' with a support of ₹90 lakh, but much of the collection is lying in shambles as there are no fireproof lockers, airtight containers, or properly protected galleries, not even CCTV cameras, a proper compound wall, or gate. 

Housing over 7,000 meticulously curated artefacts, Bano’s Meeras Mahal (the palace of heritage) serves as a vital repository of Kashmir heritage, offering an intimate glimpse into the life and customs of Kashmir’s past. This collection sheds light on a way of life that was an integral part of this region until the twentieth century, preserving the rich cultural legacy of Kashmir for future generations.

Kashmir's Heritage in Peril: Preserving History

Early this month, Jaspreet Kaur attended the inauguration of a three-story museum building, 'Meeras Mahal,' at the Highland Colony on the Sopore-Bandipora road, in the company of a galaxy of cultural activists. The collection of artefacts pertains to the ethnography of Kashmir’s 19th and early 20th century, ranging between wood, grass, wicker, and pottery. It also contains ethnic jewellery, coins, musical instruments, rare published books, and manuscripts, mostly 100-150 years old.

What motivated the daughter of an alien structural engineer to champion a noble cause for preserving Kashmir heritage in a remote area of the Kashmir valley, a region long associated in the news with bloodshed, devastation, and encounters?

“My father was associated with the construction of Jawahar Tunnel—Jammu and Kashmir’s first road tunnel of 2.85 km length through the Pir Panjal mountain between Kashmir’s Qazigund and Jammu’s Banihal towns on the Srinagar-Jammu highway, which was inaugurated in 1956. Until his death in 2021, he had a dream of making something memorable, something that would preserve the repertoire of Kashmir’s distinct culture and heritage. I decided to accomplish it,” Jaspreet Kaur told The Probe.

“I launched Span Foundation in 1997. Years later, I met the Kashmir in-charge of INTACH (Indian National Trust for Art and Cultural Heritage), Saleem Beg, who said that Sopore’s educationist and social reformist, Atiqa Bano, had laid the foundation for a countryside museum in 2002. We provided financial support to Atiqa Ji’s project through INTACH from 2008, and finally, the building was inaugurated in Sopore in December 2021,” Kaur asserted.

“But it’s still in need of massive funding if all of its galleries and stores have to be developed as per the standards of a real museum,” added Kaur, who is also busy with the documentation of Kashmir’s exquisite art and handicrafts.

Atiqa Bano (1940-2017) set up a private education college with a hostel in which 80 percent of seats were reserved for women. After holding different positions, including District Education Officer, in the J&K Government’s School Education Department, she retired as Director of Libraries, Archives, and Museums. She pursued her dream of a rural museum seriously after her retirement from government service.

Granddaughter of Sopore’s learned scholar and litterateur, Ghulam Mohammad Hanafi Sopori, Bano utilised her considerable time in identifying objects and artefacts reflecting Kashmiri life and customs, especially those putting a spotlight on Kashmir’s highly evolved rural life, agricultural practices, customs, rituals, minor arts, and traditional cottage industries.

Over the years, Bano’s commitment and perseverance became a driving force behind establishing ‘Meeras Mahal’ inside her college hostel. The collection of over 7,000 articles and artefacts came from personal contributions. “The museum is thus a result of her dogged pursuit to preserve a significant part of our cultural history, especially material heritage, which otherwise was fading fast from the landscape and mindscape of people in Kashmir,” says the website of Meeras Mahal.

From college and hostel to the museum, the entire foundation is administered by Bano’s women empowerment initiative ‘Majlis-un-Nissa,’ which runs mainly on local contributions.

Atiqa Bano | Meeras Mahal
Atiqa Bano | Photo courtesy: meerasmahalmuseum.com

According to Dr. Rafeeq Masoodi, Advisor-in-Chief of ‘Meeras Mahal’ and former Director of Doordarshan Kendra Srinagar and Radio Kashmir Srinagar, who also functioned as Secretary of the J&K Academy of Art, Culture, and Languages, Bano went from door to door and travelled to hundreds of remote villages for over two decades to collect rare books and manuscripts in Arabic, Persian, Kashmiri, and Sanskrit, besides coins, Gujjar jewellery, Pahari jewellery, Kashmiri jewellery, and a huge variety of articles and artefacts made out of terracotta, grass, wood, bronze, and copper. 

“Atiqa was an indefatigable crusader for women's empowerment. She began her mission with the establishment of a typing institute, the first in northern Kashmir. In 1972, she got her ‘Majlis-un-Nissa’ registered as an educational and capacity-building society for women. Later, her forte diversified to

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