Mudar Patherya is bringing the dead back to life in one of India’s oldest colonial-era burial grounds. This well-known heritage activist of Kolkata is single-handedly getting tombstones, undecipherable over time, cleaned at the South Park Street Cemetery in order to restore a part of the city’s past.
The cemetery, now run by the Christian Burial Board, opened in 1767 and, after being closed briefly in 1790, remained in use until the 1850s. Here lie buried several people who have a prominent place in Indian history, such as Henry Louis Vivian Derozio, Sir William Jones, Col. Robert Kyd, Lt. Col. Colin Mackenzie, and Maj. Gen. Charles Stuart.
“This is possibly the richest repository of funerary architecture outside Europe. So far, I have been able to get 392 tombstones cleaned, there are 300 to 400 more that need to be cleaned, for which I need to raise more funds,” Mr. Patherya told The Hindu.
It all began a month ago when someone from a WhatsApp group on Urdu that he is part of told him about a particular tombstone — tombstone no. 1331 — that had an inscription in Urdu. He wondered why the gravestone of a British man should have an inscription in Urdu, and he went to the cemetery to take a look. The grave turned out to be that of British politician Samuel Smith.
“When I saw the tombstone closely, I also saw inscriptions in English and Bengali. I thought I must clean this up. I wrote to the Christian Burial Board for permission; they called me for a meeting and asked me if I could clean up other tombstones too,” Mr. Patherya said.
The Board, according to him, has been “extremely receptive and cooperative”, as a result of which things moved very fast: it was only last month he approached them for permission and he has already cleaned 392 tombstones after having quickly raised ₹4 lakh through donations from well-wishers.
When he set out for the job, he found that there was no documentation and no cleaning done, possibly for decades, and that structures above the graves were in danger. “But what was amazing was the sense of beauty — the beauty of the structures, the beauty of calligraphy and the sense of emotion. You have the graves of two-year-olds there. If you aggregate the stories written on the tombstones, you get a slice of life lived from 1767 to the 1850s, when the cemetery started filling up,” Mr. Patherya said.
One of the nearly 1,600 graves in South Park Street Cemetery is that of Rose Whitworth Aylmer, whose family packed her off to India because she was getting too close to the poet-writer Walter Savage Landor. She died in Calcutta, at the age of 20, almost immediately after her arrival, and Mr. Landor wrote a poem in her memory, which became one of his best-known works and which was later inscribed on her gravestone.
Mr. Landor never got the fame he deserved, but he had admirers who went on to attain immortality. One of them was Robert Browning; another was Charles Dickens, who had named his second son after Mr. Landor. By a strange coincidence, the mortal remains of that son of Mr. Dickens — Walter Landor Dickens — lie buried in the same cemetery.
Published – September 17, 2024 06:27 pm IST