History vandalized
|
Granite quarrying and
vandalism threaten to destroy
Tamil-Brahmi sites in Tamil
Nadu. |
Tamil-Brahmi inscription on the brow
of a cavern in a hill at Tiruvadavur
near Madurai. In the background, granite
quarrying goes on unhindered within the
prohibited/regulated limit of the
historical site.
SANGAM age
Tamil-Brahmi inscriptions on the brows
of caves, hundreds of beds known as
Jaina beds sculpted on their floors,
beautiful bas-reliefs of Jaina
tirthankaras and exquisite paintings by
prehistoric artists are facing
destruction in the hills in the vicinity
of Madurai in Tamil Nadu owing to
large-scale granite quarrying and
vandalism. Real estate sharks have
destroyed Iron Age burial sites near
these hills. The sites, datable from 2nd
century B.C to 3rd century A.D.,
constitute an invaluable cultural
treasure. The inscriptions offer
evidence to Tamil’s classical language
status and throw light on the advent and
spread of Jainism in the Tamil Sangam
age and the later period in the region.
The sites hold a wealth of information
on how kings, chieftains, traders,
village chiefs and even ordinary people
patronized Jainism and made donations
for the sculpting of Jaina beds. They
also provide interesting information on
the trade guilds that existed during the
period because many of these hills lie
on the trade routes of that period.
Quarrying
has been going on at these sites in
total violation of the Ancient Monuments
and Archaeological Sites and Remains
Act, 1958, and the Ancient Monuments and
Archaeological Sites and Remains Act,
1966. The first one, a piece of federal
legislation, applies to protected
monuments under the control of the
Archaeological Survey of India (ASI),
which functions under the Government of
India. The second one is a State law and
applies to the protected monuments that
come under the Tamil Nadu Archaeology
Department. No construction or mining
activity is allowed up to 100 metres of
the prohibited area beyond the protected
limits of the site. Beyond the 100 m, up
to a distance of another 200 m, is the
regulated area, where, under the terms
and conditions of a licence granted by
the Director-General of the ASI, mining
or construction can be done if it does
not affect the site. All these
provisions apply to monuments coming
under the State Archaeology Department,
too. As per the procedure, the Assistant
Director (Mines and Geology) of the
district concerned, on behalf of the
Collector, would auction the hill. The
Collector would give the contractor who
wins the bid a licence for quarrying.
A letter
dated September 23, 1996, went out from
the Department of Tamil Development and
Culture that “in future… the District
Collectors should consult the
Archaeology Department and only with its
permission they should give the licence
to private parties for quarrying the
hills which have heritage monuments.”
For, it said, “Tamil inscriptions, which
are about 2,300 years old, are found
only in the caves of hills. They
provided the best evidence for learning
about the Tamil Sangam age and the Tamil
society that existed prior to the Sangam
age.” However, the letter said,
quarrying was under way not only to
export granite but also to sell it
locally.
Two quarries mar an otherwise
beautiful view from the Mankulam hill,
which has the most ancient Tamil-Brahmi
inscription.
There are 31
Tamil-Brahmi sites in the State, with 90
inscriptions. Of them, 11 are protected
monuments under the State Archaeology
Department and seven are under the ASI.
Quarry contractors appear to have
violated the provisions of both laws
with regard to the protected monuments.
Take for instance the Tamil-Brahmi site
at Tiruvadavur, 20 km from Madurai, with
two Tamil-Brahmi inscriptions and
prehistoric paintings of concentric
circles. This is a protected site coming
under the State Archaeology Department.
The inscriptions, belonging to the 2nd
century B.C., talk about how Aridhan of
Pangadu village and Upasan had sculpted
the beds on the cave floor. Iravatham
Mahadevan, a renowned scholar on Tamil-Brahmi
and Indus scripts, deciphered the two
inscriptions in 1996. Tiruvadavur is now
the most disturbed Tamil-Brahmi site in
the State, with a huge quarry situated
right at the foot of the hill. Quarrying
has progressed so deep that the site
looks like an open-cast mine. All round
the quarry, for several kilometres,
granite blocks as big as a truck or a
car, are stacked on either side of the
village roads. There is a surreal scene
too: a nearby hill has been sliced in
half, as if it were a cake. An official
of the State Archaeology Department
admitted that quarrying was under way
within the prohibited/regulated area,
that is, within 300 m of the protected
limits of the monument. T.S. Sridhar,
Principal Secretary and Commissioner,
State Archaeology Department, said that
on paper nothing would be illegal. But
after obtaining the licence, quarrying
would take place right inside the
prohibited/regulated areas.
Graffiti on the Jaina beds at
Mankulam.
At the
entrance to the historical site at
Keezhavalavu village, 38 km from
Madurai, an ASI board announces that the
monument is of national importance. The
hill treasures a long Tamil-Brahmi
inscription chiselled boldly from right
to left and some letters written upside
down on the brow of a cavern; three
sculptures of Jaina tirthankaras above
the inscription; Jaina beds; and a
little away, a line of six sculptures of
tirthankaras. On an adjoining hillock,
there is a series of Jaina beds; and two
circular hollows, excavated from rock
floors, with Tamil and Grantha
inscriptions. Sathyabhama Badhreenath,
Superintending Archaeologist, ASI
(Chennai circle), admitted: “The entire
hill is protected at Keezhavalavu.
Quarrying went on within the protected
area.” The Society for Community
Organisation (SOCO) Trust, Madurai,
objected to quarrying within the
protected limits. A. Mahaboob Batcha,
managing trustee, and S. Bhuvaneswari
and G. Pandi, both Keezhavalavu
residents, went to court. The ASI, TAMIN
(Tamil Nadu Minerals Limited, a State
government undertaking) and others were
the respondents. T. Lajapathi Roy,
counsel for SOCO Trust, one of the
petitioners, argued that quarrying went
on within the nucleus of the protected
area. The Madurai Bench of the Madras
High Court appointed M. Ajmal Khan and
K. Srinivasan as advocate commissioners.
They found “quarrying operation being
carried on in an area of 8.60.5 ha
[hectares] within the said notified area
of 20.95.5 ha.”
At Keezhavalavu, THE ASI erected two
pillars to support an awning above the
sculptures of three tirthankaras. The
awning is gone and the pillars now block
the view of the sculptures.
The High
Court granted an injunction and stayed
the quarrying within the protected
limits. A final order is yet to be
passed. Vandalism, too, is rampant at
Keezhavalavu. If the sculptures of the
group of six tirthankaras remained
unharmed when this writer visited the
site in December 2008, the noses of two
tirthankaras appeared smashed up during
a visit in March 2009. There is graffiti
everywhere. The ASI had erected two
pillars to support an awning above the
sculptures of three tirthankaras. The
awning is gone and only the
hideous-looking pillars remain,
obscuring the view of the tirthankaras.
The hillock at Melakkuyilkudi, on the
outskirts of Madurai, is another
protected monument of the ASI. Here,
there were 10 Jaina beds, which
commanded a beautiful view of the
paddyfields below and the Nagamalai hill
at a distance. But illegal quarrying has
led to the collapse of the hillock.
Falling boulders have splintered the
beds. Today, only two beds remain
intact.
After a hill was completely
excavated. |