MANUSCRIPTS IN INDIA:  
HARD TO DECIPHER, HARDER TO PRESERVE
HARD TO DECIPHER, HARDER TO PRESERVE
 www.deccanherald.com  - Scholars who scrutinize Indian manuscripts for research fear that the  lack of access to many of them and the shoddy upkeep of some will wipe  out details etched in these ancient treatises.   “The quality of  preservation in several libraries (in India) varies. However, none, as  far as I know, follows international standards of temperature and  humidity control ... not to speak of insects,” Dr Patrick Olivelle, an  expert on Asian studies in the University of Texas, said about the state  of affairs in numerous manuscript repositories in India.  Manuscripts,  inscriptions, and epigraphs are available on myriad surfaces ranging  from steel and rock to perishable materials like palm leaf, bark and  papyrus.  A leading scanner of these texts for the past 35 years,  Olivelle and others of his fraternity in India, which is home to over 4  million manuscripts on subjects ranging from vedas, religion,  architecture, science, astronomy, medicine, have common fears.
www.deccanherald.com  - Scholars who scrutinize Indian manuscripts for research fear that the  lack of access to many of them and the shoddy upkeep of some will wipe  out details etched in these ancient treatises.   “The quality of  preservation in several libraries (in India) varies. However, none, as  far as I know, follows international standards of temperature and  humidity control ... not to speak of insects,” Dr Patrick Olivelle, an  expert on Asian studies in the University of Texas, said about the state  of affairs in numerous manuscript repositories in India.  Manuscripts,  inscriptions, and epigraphs are available on myriad surfaces ranging  from steel and rock to perishable materials like palm leaf, bark and  papyrus.  A leading scanner of these texts for the past 35 years,  Olivelle and others of his fraternity in India, which is home to over 4  million manuscripts on subjects ranging from vedas, religion,  architecture, science, astronomy, medicine, have common fears.    Considered a pioneer of the 20-year-old movement to bring out Indian manuscripts from different dusty corners of the country and translate, microfilm and digitise them, renowned scholar Kapila Vatsyayan explained the state of affairs as “some are kept well, some not”. Her brainchild, the Indira Gandhi National Centre for Arts (IGNCA), is the mother body for the microfilming and digitisation process nationwide. This two-decade effort has led to over 250,000 rare manuscripts being microfilmed and digitalised for study.
 The  experts suggested to set up a National Manuscripts Library (India)  which facilitates the access to these ancient texts available in  different repositories to scholar and researches.  The preservation of  manuscripts follows traditional as well as modern scientific methods to  preserve documents for further use.   In traditional system of  preservation, herbals and in case of modern methods suitable chemicals  are used.  Hindu Press International says that the prodigious collection  of the French Institute of Pondicherry is in the final stages of being  digitized, providing a model for these projects in the future and  protecting a priceless heritage of culture and mysticism of all mankind.
The  experts suggested to set up a National Manuscripts Library (India)  which facilitates the access to these ancient texts available in  different repositories to scholar and researches.  The preservation of  manuscripts follows traditional as well as modern scientific methods to  preserve documents for further use.   In traditional system of  preservation, herbals and in case of modern methods suitable chemicals  are used.  Hindu Press International says that the prodigious collection  of the French Institute of Pondicherry is in the final stages of being  digitized, providing a model for these projects in the future and  protecting a priceless heritage of culture and mysticism of all mankind.WHAT DO THE VEDIC TEACHINGS TELL US? 
 The  manuscripts constitute our most precious national and cultural  heritage. ... In spite of the advent of suitable chemicals for  preservation and their availability, traditional methods for  preservation are in practice. ... From ancient times several indigenous  methods have been used for preservation of manuscripts. The people were  also quite aware of the basic factors of deterioration of the  manuscripts namely light, dust, heat and humidity.  So in order to  protect the manuscripts from these possible factors, the manuscripts  were usually covered by clothes. ... The safe upkeep of manuscripts has  also been inscribed by the authors of manuscripts, generally written in  the colophon which is evident from the following lines: “The  book itself appeals to the owners to protect it from water, oil, slack  binding, rats and from the hands of other people who do not know proper  handling” (“Putravat paripalayet”).  Some of the authors also request the user to treat the manuscripts as their own sons.
The  manuscripts constitute our most precious national and cultural  heritage. ... In spite of the advent of suitable chemicals for  preservation and their availability, traditional methods for  preservation are in practice. ... From ancient times several indigenous  methods have been used for preservation of manuscripts. The people were  also quite aware of the basic factors of deterioration of the  manuscripts namely light, dust, heat and humidity.  So in order to  protect the manuscripts from these possible factors, the manuscripts  were usually covered by clothes. ... The safe upkeep of manuscripts has  also been inscribed by the authors of manuscripts, generally written in  the colophon which is evident from the following lines: “The  book itself appeals to the owners to protect it from water, oil, slack  binding, rats and from the hands of other people who do not know proper  handling” (“Putravat paripalayet”).  Some of the authors also request the user to treat the manuscripts as their own sons.Orissa State Museum, Bhubanewswar, India :
“Indigenous Methods of Preserving Manuscripts”
By Mrs Jyotshna Sahoo & Mr Basudev Mohanty
http://orissa.gov.in/e-magazine/Journal/journalvol3/Journal.htm
http://orissa.gov.in/e-magazine/Journal/journalvol3/pdf/28-32.pdf
http://siddhadreams.wordpress.com/category/literary-research/
“Indigenous Methods of Preserving Manuscripts”
By Mrs Jyotshna Sahoo & Mr Basudev Mohanty
http://orissa.gov.in/e-magazine/Journal/journalvol3/Journal.htm
http://orissa.gov.in/e-magazine/Journal/journalvol3/pdf/28-32.pdf
http://siddhadreams.wordpress.com/category/literary-research/
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