On Beliaghata Main Road, a little under a kilometre southeast of the point where the road crosses the canal lies a mysterious, abandoned mosque. I say abandoned because the mosque is not used for prayers by Muslims anymore, although it is far from empty. What was once a mosque is now used as a residential building and storage space. I first found out about the abandoned mosque in Beliaghata from a Facebook post by my friend Avijit Das. Avijit and Souvik had been alerted to the presence of the mosque by another Facebook post. “Sayan Banerjee had posted about the mosque, claiming that it was the oldest mosque in Kolkata and that it was ASI property”, Souvik told me. But when they visited the site, they found it to be occupied by a Hindu family. Souvik was able to identify the family as Vaishnava based on the “kanthi” or wooden necklace that a male member of the family was wearing. The sheer ridiculousness of a Vaishnava family living inside a mosque was enough to pique my curiosity, and so I decided to do some investigation of my own.
Showing posts with label Abandoned Sites. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Abandoned Sites. Show all posts
Friday, 15 June 2018
Monday, 21 March 2016
The Metropolitan Laboratory & Nursing Home Ltd., Theatre Road
“That building over there? That used to be the Metropolitan Nursing Home”, said my colleague Robin in answer to my question. He has been working at our office on Camac Street for much longer than I have, and our 13th-floor veranda gives us a bird’s eye view of the building on 18 Theatre Road (now Shakespeare Sarani). By the time I started working, the building was far past its prime, the nursing home was shut, and the entire plot was overgrown. It was only recently, over a cup of tea at my uncle’s house on Amherst Street that it emerged that my uncle, Dr. Dipak Ranjan Sarbadhikari was connected to this building.
Monday, 31 August 2015
Bose House, Serampore
I
discovered Bose House in Serampore purely by chance. Actually even using the
word “discovered” would be inaccurate. It would imply that I came upon
something, and knew what it was. I did not. I was doing my rounds of Serampore,
taking photographs of the town’s colonial era buildings, and just happened to
drive past the building on 22, T.C. Goswami Street. I was struck both by the
size and obvious magnificence of the structure, and it’s almost frightening
decay. I told the chauffeur to pull over, and entered to take some photographs
that I was pretty certain I would never use.
Tuesday, 12 August 2014
Henry Martyn's Pagoda, Serampore
“Buildings have many lives”, Belgian photographer Luc
Peters had once told me. For no building is this more true than for Henry Martyn’s
Pagoda in Serampore.
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| Henry Martyn's Pagoda |
Located in the Hoogly district of West Bengal, about 25
km away from the state capital of Calcutta, Serampore was once part of Danish
India, under the name Frederiksnagore. But unlike Calcutta, which came into
existence thanks to the British, Serampore may be said to be a pre-colonial
town, having existed as a settlement before the arrival of the Danes. Of the several
ancient Hindu temples that are found in the town today, one of the most
important is the temple of Radha Ballabh.
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| The present Radha Ballabh temple |
The story begins in the 16th century, with a
man called Rudraram. Rudraram, who was living with his maternal uncle in the
Chatra area of Serampore, came to Ballabhpore, and began meditating. The deity Radha
Ballabh appeared to him in his dreams and instructed him to go to Gaur, the
then capital of Bengal, secure a black stone, to be found atop the gate of the Viceroy’s
private residence, and carve an image of Radha Ballabh out of it. Upon arrival
in Gaur, Rudraram found the Viceroy’s Prime Minister to be a devoted Hindu, and
was able to secure the stone. Transporting a stone which weighed several tonnes should have been a challenge but the legend says this was accomplished by supernatural means. The river apparently carried it straight to the Ballabhpore ghat! The idol, celebrated for its beauty, was carved, and set up within a
temple in Ballabhpore. However, when the river Bhagirathi began changing its
course, and came to within 300 feet of the temple, it was thought prudent to
evacuate the idol, and thus, the present Radha Ballabh temple, about a quarter
of a mile inland, came into being. The construction of this new temple is said to
have been sponsored by the Mallik family of Calcutta, and it still contains
Rudraram’s original idol. The old temple was abandoned, and left to be
reclaimed by nature.
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