Was honoured to moderate a talk and share stories about the romance of Mumbai, its railway and a bit of cinema with city chronicler-historian Rafique Baghdadi at the dining hall of the UNESCO-listed world heritage site of Mumbai CST railway station on the occasion of CST Heritage Week on July 5, 2016. Thanks to Central Railway Additional General Manager A.K. Srivastava and also Chief Public Relations Officer Narendra Patil.
A feast of old findings and artefacts for global railway heritage buffs of railway archaeology in Bombay - Mumbai India. Rajendra B. Aklekar, Mumbai (rajendraa (@) gmail.com)
09 July 2016
05 July 2016
A coup of sorts at Mumbai CST!
Rajendra B. Aklekar
It was a coup of sorts at the UNESCO-listed Mumbai CST heritage railway headquarters on July 4. It was a momentous moment on the third day at the CST Heritage Week, a brainchild of Central Railway’s Additional General Manager A.K Srivastava, when he managed to get all the city’s heritage guardians and experts on a single platform to commemorate and conserve Mumbai CST.
It was a coup of sorts at the UNESCO-listed Mumbai CST heritage railway headquarters on July 4. It was a momentous moment on the third day at the CST Heritage Week, a brainchild of Central Railway’s Additional General Manager A.K Srivastava, when he managed to get all the city’s heritage guardians and experts on a single platform to commemorate and conserve Mumbai CST.
To celebrate the iconic railway station, Central Railway has organised
a CST Heritage Week between July 2 and July 8 coinciding with the dates when
the structure was declared a World Heritage Site.
From Tasneem Mehta, Vice Chairman, INTACH & Managing
Trustee & Hon. Director the Bhau Daji Lad Museum, who had originally
submitted the dossier for Mumbai CST to UNESCO to get it listed as a World
Heritage Site to former Railway Board Member VN Mathur who represented India in
China at the UNESCO then and from the director of the Chhatrapati Shivaji
Vaastu Sangrahalaya (The Prince of Wales Museum) Sabyasachi Mukherjee to former
bureaucrat Sharad Kale, the director of Asiatic Society.
Dr Dilip Balsekar, the director of the Maharashtra Government Archives, Rajiv Mishra, the director of the directorate of Art also representing JJ School of Arts, Dr Joan Dias, the director of Heras Institute at the St Xavier’s College Mumbai, also representing the Bombay Local History Society.
It was for the first time that all these veterans were on one
platform, speaking on one common love the Victorian Gothic Mumbai CST railway station.
Tasneem Mehta spoke elaborately on how she, along with
conservation architect Vikas Dilawari – who conducted a packed heritage walk on
Day 1 of the week – had worked day and night to get the dossier of Mumbai CST
ready for the UNESCO presentation twelve years ago. “We had a very short time
and there was not enough data available. We caught hold of an old railway
employee who guided us to the FW Stevens’ drawings of the building and that helped
us a lot. We could just manage it within the given time,” she recalled.
Former Railway Board Member VN Mathur who represented India in
China at the UNESCO said, “I was the secretary railway board and had to
represent India at the UNESCO. I had never worked at Central Railway but the dossier
helped me understand the station and fall in love with it. I came down to the
station and studied it so as to understand it. It was a success as Mumbai CST
had won the nomination. Today, 12 years after the event, I acknowledge and
thank all those who worked hard to get this done,” Mathur said, adding that he
was now writing a book on Indian Railway’s stations and their magnificent
architecture.
“The British architects went wild when they came down to
India and experimented with every possible style of architecture by building remarkable
station buildings across India. There is need to appreciate, document and safeguard
these for the future generations,” he added.
“I was surprised when the railways approached me and what would
they want from a museum, but was glad to know that they are celebrating Mumbai
CST. Millions commute to work here but no one really appreciates it. I am ready
to extend all possible help from the museum,” said the director of the
Chhatrapati Shivaji Vaastu Sangrahalaya (The Prince of Wales Museum) Sabyasachi
Mukherjee.
Director of Asiatic Society Sharad Kale spoke at length on
how the train created awe among the local populace when it had first run in
1850s. Rajiv Mishra, the director of the directorate of Art also representing
JJ School of Arts elaborated on how the students of JJ School of Arts had
helped the construction of Mumbai CST building and got the architect FW Steven’s
drawings into reality. , Dr Joan Dias, the director of Heras Institute at the
St Xavier’s College Mumbai, also representing the Bombay Local History Society
extended all possible help to document and conserve the Mumbai CST building.
At the end of the event, former Central Railway general manager Sunil Kumar Sood handed over a set of archives to Dr Dilip Balsekar as a token gesture stating that the Maharashtra State Archives would extend help in conserving the valuable archives at the Central Railway.
At the end of the event, former Central Railway general manager Sunil Kumar Sood handed over a set of archives to Dr Dilip Balsekar as a token gesture stating that the Maharashtra State Archives would extend help in conserving the valuable archives at the Central Railway.
But all said and done this was for the first time ever that
all these dignitaries from almost all the reputed and like-minded institutions of this city and state have been brought together for Mumbai CST, thanks to Additional General Manager AK Srivastava and Chief Public Relations Officer Narendra Patil whose sincere efforts need to be acknowledged.
I have been interacting with all the dignitaries individually and I can tell you that all of them have always had love and concern for the monument and I am sure this gathering will lead to a much better conservation of this stately building and also of the archival records which are not just important for the railways, but also for this city as a whole. Amen!
I have been interacting with all the dignitaries individually and I can tell you that all of them have always had love and concern for the monument and I am sure this gathering will lead to a much better conservation of this stately building and also of the archival records which are not just important for the railways, but also for this city as a whole. Amen!
16 April 2016
16 points about India's first train journey -- 163 years of Indian Railways
163
YEARS OF INDIAN RAILWAYS
16 FACTS OF INDIA’S FIRST RAILWAY- 16 APRIL 2016- Rajendra B. Aklekar
India’s first
passenger train with three Vulcan-built steam locomotives & 14 wooden rail
cars ran between the 21 mile (34km) distance of Boree Bunder (today called
Mumbai CST) & Thana (today called Thane) on Saturday, April 16, 1853 at
3:35pm. The journey completes 163 years today on April 16, 2016, also a
Saturday.
Here are 16 fascinating points about it from my book Halt Station India.
11 April 2016
Another relic along India's first railway line pulled down
Sigh! A relic along Indian Railways' first railway line goes down. Old stone cabin Kurla station on platform 1 demolished to make way for a public utility. Not that it was a part of the actual first line, but definitely along the original route of the G.I.P Railway, the country's first railway company and belonging to that era, a cute little stone structure. The first black/white pic in the collage is a shot of the same cabin as featured in the 1974 Hindi film '27 Down' directed by Awtaar Krishna Kaul.
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