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Tuesday, August 9, 2011

In India, Snake Charmers Are Losing Their Sway : NPR

Snake charmers used to be a fixture at Indian markets and festivals, beguiling crowds with their ability to control some of the world's most venomous reptiles.

But one of India's iconic folk arts is fading away — and animal-rights activists say it can't happen soon enough. They say it's an art based on cruelty.

These days, it's not easy to find a snake charmer, even on Nag Panchami, the yearly religious festival in honor of the king cobra, which fell on Aug. 4 this year.

It took a full day of searching in New Delhi to find Buddhanath, a thin man with a long, white beard who was sitting cross-legged on the pavement behind a round, flat container that looked a bit like a tortilla basket.

Buddhanath wore a loosely wrapped orange turban and a sweet, joyous expression as he tapped the basket.

"I have a king cobra," Buddhanath said. "He is Lord Shiva's cobra, and we worship him."

The blue-skinned Hindu god is usually portrayed wearing a king cobra around his neck.

The charmer flipped the lid off the basket, and the cobra popped up like a jack-in-the-box, scanning around with its hood fully extended.

It fixed its gaze on the tip of Buddhanath's gourd flute. The cobra's black scales glistened as it swayed, following the movement of the flute's tip.

Art Transcends Politics for Asia Society's New Pakistani Exhibit - DNAinfo.com

UPPER EAST SIDE — Only three months after U.S. armed forces killed Osama bin Laden in the countryside of Pakistan, and almost 10 years after the al Qaeda attack on 9/11, the Upper East Side's Asia Society wants to challenge New Yorkers to see Pakistan's history in an entirely new light.

When Asia Society's new exhibit "The Buddhist Heritage of Pakistan: Art of Gandhara" opens on Tuesday, museum-goers will have a chance to see Buddhist sculptures, architecture and other art works made from gold and bronze from the ancient area of Pakistan that have never been on view in the United States.

The exhibit is the first of its kind in nearly 50 years, according to a musuem spokeswoman.

It was significant that the art was made available to an American museum in light of the the recently strained alliance between the two countries after bin Laden's assassination, Asia Society Museum Director Melissa Chiu said.

“Against a backdrop of political turmoil and tensions in the U.S.-Pakistan relationship, securing these loans has been an extraordinary achievement,” says Chiu, who is also vice president of the Global Art Programs.

The exhibit is separated into three sections: "Classical Connections," "Narratives and Architectural Context" and “Buddhas and Bodhisattvas." It shows the influence of Greco-Roman culture on the area's artwork, scenes of Buddha's life and the multi-faceted nature of the religious figure as he was represented in Pakistan.

Chiu hopes that these 70 works that have been so carefully preserved might give New Yorkers more insight into Pakistani culture.

“Despite images of Pakistan as a place of violent extremism, the region has an ancient tradition of tolerance and pluralism as evidenced by the survival of these spectacular examples of Gandharan art," she said.

The majority of the works are on loan from Pakistan's National Museum in Karachi and the Lahore Museum in Lahore. At its height, Gandhara encompassed areas in Afghanistan and northwest India.

"Through this exhibition, Asia Society aims to provide new contexts for looking at the arts and culture of Pakistan today, in keeping with our long history of programming about and engagement with the region," Chiu added.



Thursday, July 7, 2011

Asia Times Online :: India's temple treasure prompts test of faith

MUMBAI - A US$22 billion treasure trove in a south Indian temple, the world's single-largest treasure find, has sparked an intensifying debate across India about who owns this ancient wealth of the gods: priests or the people?

The hoard of gold, diamonds, precious stones, jewelry and artifacts was found over the past week in five vaults of the 9th century Sree Padmanabhaswamy (pronounced padh-manaa-baa-swamee) temple in Trivandarum, capital of the south Indian state of Kerala.

The vaults of the temple were opened after 130 years. The Supreme Court had ordered an inventory of them, acting on a petition from lawyer T P Sundara Rajan after a squabble over temple management.

Tuesday, July 5, 2011

Unearthing Treasures: One Vault Remains to be Opened at Indian Temple - International Business Times

By Balasubramanyam Seshan | July 5, 2011 5:32 AM EDT

Unearthing treasures has long been an obsession of archaeologists -- and one treasure hunt has ledIndian officials to unearth treasures worth $23 billion from underground chambers in the centuries-old Sree Padmanabhaswamy temple in Kerala.

  • (Photo: Reuters)<br>Devotees leave Sree Padmanabhaswamy temple after offering prayers on the eve of Pongala festival in Thiruvananthapuram, capital of the southern Indian state of Kerala February 18, 2011.
(Photo: Reuters)
Devotees leave Sree Padmanabhaswamy temple after offering prayers on the eve of Pongala festival in Thiruvananthapuram, capital of the southern Indian state of Kerala February 18, 2011.

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A court-ordered search of the vaults beneath Sree Padmanabhaswamy temple, located in Thiruvananthapuram, the capital city of the South Indian state of Kerala, has unearthed gold coins, silver, diamonds, jewels and statues worth $23 billion. It has been known that officials unearthed only five of the six secret subterranean vaults of the 16th century Hindu temple.

Recently, it has been reported that while unearthing one of the six vaults at the temple, officials found a golden idol of Mahavishnu, with a height of about one foot, and a golden "anki" that weighs close to 30 kilograms. The golden anki used to adorn the presiding deity, who is in the eternal sleep posture. In addition, investigators discovered numerous coins issued in the early 16th century.






The fate of the last vault, which is the only one to be opened, will be decided on Friday, government officials said. Sources say when the contents of the last vault are accounted the total asset of the temple may cross the stunning sum of Rs. 1 lakh crore (about $23 billion).

The wealth from these vaults, which was opened after almost 136 years, has made Sree Padmanabhaswamy temple the richest temple in India. Earlier, Tirumala Venkateswara Temple in Tirupati, Andhra Pradesh;Golden Temple in Amritsar, Punjab; and the Shirdi Sai Baba shrine in Maharashtra were believed to be the richest temples in the country.

The vaults were opened in the presence of the panel, and observers, which include high court judges, temple officials, archaeology authorities, lawyer Sundararajan who had petitioned the Indian Supreme Court to open the vaults, and a representative of the current Maharajah of Travancore, Uthradan Thirunaal Marthanda Varma, who is also the managing trustee of the temple.

Police set up a dedicated control room close to the temple, as state Chief Minister Oommen Chandy pledged full state security for the hoard and promised it would remain the property of the temple after an inventory was made.

The vaults were searched after Sundararajan petitioned the country's Supreme Court, accusing administrators of mismanaging and poorly guarding the temple.

A seven-member panel was appointed by India's Supreme Court to enter and assess the value of the objects stored in its cellars, including two chambers last thought to have been opened about 130 years ago, according to BBC News.

The Sree Padmanabhaswamy temple was built in the 16th Century by the kings who ruled over the then kingdom of Travancore. Local legends say the Travancore kings sealed immense riches within the thick stone walls and vaults of the temple.

In India normally devotees donate gold and other precious objects as gifts to several temples as part of their pilgrimage to get the blessings of the God. This has led to billions of dollars worth of wealth existing in several temples of India.

The spiritual guru Sai Baba, who died in April, left behind an estimated $9 billion estate, while the Tirumala temple is reported to have 3,000 kilograms (6,614 pounds) of gold, a third of which it deposited with the State Bank of India last year.

India's Supreme Court will decide what happens to the treasure and the rest of the temple, once it has established the total value of the holdings. Kerala, also known as God's Own Country, has now become the real abode of God's own treasury too. ($1 = 44.445 Indian rupees).