Ruprecht-Karls-Universität Heidelberg
Kathmandu Branch Office
SAI
Resident Representative
Frederic Maria Link, M.A.
Email: frederic.link@sai.uni-heidelberg.de

Address:
South Asia Institute
Heidelberg University
Kathmandu Branch Office
Ward No. 1, Kupondole Height
P.O. Box 4379
Patan, Nepal

Office +977 1 543 72 04
Email: kathmandu@sai.uni-heidelberg.de



Microfilm-Ordering Process
Starting from June 1, 2016 we resume the microfilm-ordering process of the former Nepal Research Centre (NRC) at the National Archives in Kathmandu.
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The bhajan performance on the phalcā

Eighty-year old Purna Lal Maharjan was elated to come to sit alongside his wife on the Lũchẽ Nani phalcā (wayside public shelter with arcaded platform that is also called pāṭī in Nepali) at Jyābābahī. Most casinos offer a free play:slots-online-canada.ca/free-slots/  option to let their customers try new games risk-free. Also, a member of the bhajan (religious hymn) singing team, Purna Lal was happy that he could finally sit on the phalcā and spend his day observing the city life. “It’s really wonderful now. I can enjoy the view of the street and also of the courtyard,” said the octogenarian bhajan performer.  

Although the primary function of a phalcā is to serve as a rest-house for the passersby, it is also a place for the elderly people to sit and enjoy their time during the daytime. The performance of bhajans early in the mornings and evenings is another use of such phalcās. Even if a phalcā stands in an excellent condition, it’s life in the real sense rests on the use of phalcā by the community, especially the elderly people, for performing bhajans and spending their afternoons sitting there and observing the city life. After the devastating earthquake of spring 2015, the phalcā at Lũchẽ Nani was badly damaged, hindering the regular performances of the bhajans as well as its other social uses. And the bhajan performers were the worst sufferers by the damages, as their time at the phalcā while performing hymns had become a key source of their happiness and also an integral part of their life itself. And they needed the phalcā to be there in its former state.  

“The phalcā has to be there. It is indispensable. We have to perform bhajans there. It is very essential. It should not be made to vanish,” said Dev Lal Maharjan, 75, who is also a key member of the bhajan team. “It’s reciting the (names of) gods. It’s all about remembering the gods. We have the scriptures. There are names of the gods given in them. Those who know the lines by heart do not need to refer to the scriptures. Others refer to it while singing,” Dev Lal said. Talking about his feelings after the earthquake damaged the phalcā, Dev Lal said, “It’s boring when you stop doing something that has to be done. It’s just like the feeling of still wanting to eat something when your stomach is already full.”

The bhajan culture is one of the core entities of the Newar society that had to be dismissed due to the earthquake. As an attempt to draw attention to this fascinating socio-cultural musical institution, Dr. Christiane Brosius, with the support of SAI Help Nepal (Heidelberg University) and a generous donation from the Barbara and Wilfried Mohr Foundation in Hamburg, managed to organize the reconstruction of the phalcā. It was carried out under the competent supervision of architect Padma Sundar Maharjan as well as Bijay Basukala. Both Padma and Bijay, experts in traditional Newar architecture, agree that the conservation of these monuments in their traditional forms is a challenge. “The value of traditional Newar architecture is both aesthetics and strength. We only lacked proper maintenance,” said Bijay, who also prepared the designs of the Jyābahābahī phalcā for reconstruction. Bijay used his experience of around three decades to design the pillars of the phalcā with its earliest record dating back to 1668 AD. “It has to be strong too. There is no point in just preserving the old structure without making it strong. On top of that, we have to be very serious in case of the structural elements that chiefly carry the load,” Bijay stressed.

Smaller monuments like phalcās have, unfortunately, received less attention for renovation and reconstruction in post-earthquake reconstruction drive. It is due to more focus on the larger monuments like temples, monasteries and palace buildings. “I think it’s mainly due to the lack of interest from the Nepal Government,” Padma said, “Foreign agencies also prefer to support visible monuments like a palace building. But if any country supports the reconstruction of a phalcā, for instance, it does not get highlighted much. So, there is less support for these monuments.”

A phalcā is more culturally and socially attached to the community than a temple. The responses from the bhajan performers at the Jyābābahī phalcā also state it clearly. It is, therefore, Dr. Brosius, whose untiring efforts made the reconstruction possible, stressed on the continuation of the bhajan culture to keep the phalcā alive, as she spoke at the handover celebration. And indeed, the bhajans have continued, and so has the use of the phalcā by the elderlies to pass their daytime. And there are happy faces of the bhajan performers. 

 

Photos Details:

Bhajan singers: The bhajan performers pose for a photo on the Jyābābahī phalcā with happy faces (Photo by Padma Sundar Maharjan)

Bhajan: The bhajan performance on the phalcā

DSC08866: Dev Lal Maharjan sits alongside another bhajan performer Purna Bahadur Maharjan (Photo by Rajendra Shakya)

Jyababahi Phalcā:  The ladies of the community sit and enjoy their leisure time on the phalcā (Photo by Padma Sundar Maharjan)

Purna Lal: Purna Lal Maharjan shares a light moment with his wife as they come to sit on the phalcā (Photo by Rajendra Shakya)

SAI Help Nepal Update
Two years ago this week, Nepal was devastated by a major 7.8 magnitude earthquake. Another followed a few weeks later, leaving people even more helpless. Few of us can forget the shocking images of houses collapsed, and people and their belongings buried in the rubble; of centuries-old temples being reduced to dust as the ground shook.

The South Asia Institute responded quickly. In the immediate aftermath of the disaster it founded the "Nepal Earthquake Relief Fund Heidelberg" (or more succinctly, SAI Help Nepal) to provide support for communities in need. Drawing on their familiarity with the country, researchers and faculty members of the SAI worked voluntarily together with coordinators on the ground. Since then around twenty short- and long-term projects have been focusing on humanitarian relief, children's education, and the reconstruction of architectural heritage. 

 

The most recent result to come out of this campaign is "Breaking Views," a book co-authored by Christiane Brosius and Sanjeev Maharjan. It delves into the question how artists perceive everyday life after a catastrophe. What meaning does art have in the context of an earthquake, and what can it do? The book brings together the expertise of artists, curators, an art historian, and an anthropologist to offer a set of perspectives that bear witness as much to friction and fragility as to perseverance and resilience. It is testimony to how young artists in Nepal have responded to social and urban change, and how the earthquake in particular inspired creative responses to help others. The book was launched at Tangalwood Hotel during the Kathmandu International Art Festival, also called the Kathmandu Triennale, in March 2017.


"Breaking Views," co-authored by Christiane Brosius and Sanjeev Maharjan, is published by Himalbooks, 2017. 

Christiane Brosius during the book launch at Tangalwood Hotel in Kathmandu. - Photo by Rajendra Shakya

Further, a seventeenth-century public rest house (pati) in a neighborhood of Patan, which collapsed during the earthquake, was rebuilt and handed over to the community. Reconstruction work was carried out with financial assistance from the Barbara and Wilfried Mohr Foundation, Germany. The dismantling of the structural remains of the pati began in August 2016, and the rebuilding, under the guidance of architect Padma Sundar Maharjan, was completed in March 2017. The pati now will again be a significant meeting place for the local Newar community.


The reconstructed pati in Patan. - Photo by Christiane Brosius

Local musicians are performing during the handing over ceremony in March 2017. - Photo by Padma Sundar Maharjan

Reconstruction of the Char Narayan Temple also progressed speedily. After carpenters removed rotted wooden parts and replaced the damaged sections with new timber, woodcarvers skillfully restored carving details. Finally, stonemasons excavated the foundation around pillars and repaved the foundation with bricks bound with mud mortar.

Today many talk of how the earthquake brought an end to life as they knew it. But they also describe it as a beginning, filled with new hopes. At the same time, government distribution of earthquake reconstruction grants for private houses has been slow, and entire communities are still waiting for support from state bodies. That is why we now feel obliged to raise awareness that people in Nepal still need your help. Please do consider donating again.

Click on the link to learn about our past and ongoing projects, and the details of our donation account.

 

With gratitude,

Nadine Plachta, with Christiane Brosius and Axel Michael, Manik and Ritu Bajracharya, Niels Gutschow, Rajan Khatiwoda, Roberta Mandoki, Marcus Nüsser, and Davide Torri.

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