Close X
Monday, October 7, 2024
ADVT 
India

The Indian connection in Jerusalem through the centuries

Shilpa Raina, IANS, 13 Aug, 2014 12:45 PM
    For close to a century, many generations of an Indian family have been looking after the Indian Hospice, a symbol of India's heritage, in the old city of Jerusalem. This existence intrigued Indian diplomat-writer Navtej Sarna, who has chronicled its story in a fascinating new book.
     
    Sarna had read about this institution before, but it was only when he landed in Israel in 2008 as the Indian ambassador that he could visit the hospice which hosted Indian soldiers during World War II and today provides accommodation to Indian pilgrims of all faiths.
     
    Sarna felt the topic was "compelling and waiting to be written".
     
    The outcome? His latest non-fiction work, "Indians at Herod's Gate: A Jerusalem Tale" (Rainlight, Rs. 500) came into being after three years of meticulous research, several interactions and countless walks in the old city.
     
    "This is a book about Indian connection to Jerusalem through the centuries and is explored from the standpoint of the Indian Hospice," Sarna, currently a Special Secretary in the Ministry of External Affairs and who has been named Secretary (West), told IANS in an interview.
     
    In 2012, then external affairs minister S.M. Krishna had provided a grant of $25,000 to the hospice.
     
    "When you visit something as layered and rich and complex as Jerusalem, the combination is so compelling that I had to go for it," he added.
     
    The 182-page book takes the reader back to the point when Baba Farid, a sufi saint, visited Jerusalem 800 years ago.
     
    The Indian Hospice was born 800 years ago, with Sheikh Nazir Ansari, a police inspector's son from Saharanpur in Uttar Pradesh, becoming the first Indian to look after the hospice, situated opposite Herod's Gate in the old city, since 1924. Since then generations of the Ansari family have kept the Indian flag flying in a situation which, according to Sarna, is "politically fraught where every inch of territory is claimed or counter-claimed".
     
    It was this Indian angle that Sarna, author of "Winter Evenings", couldn't resist.
     
    Several meetings with the family of the present Jerusalem Hospice director, Sheikh Mohammed Munir Ansari, led to revelations the family wasn't even aware of. And then began the quest to make the Ansari family a centre point, explore this little Indian haven and compare it with complexities of many decades of conflicts that engulf the state located in southwest Asia between the Mediterranean and the deserts of Syria and Arabia.
     
    "There are interesting details about how this place became the centre of conflict in 1967 (during the Six-day war), how it was rebuilt and how its character has changed over several decades," said Sarna.
     
    "It was very important to put a social and political context in place at every stage. It was very challenging to tell just enough and not overload so much of history that the main story gets submerged," he added, referring to the time when Jerusalem had just come out of the Ottoman Empire and was brought into the British Mandate for Palestine.
     
    According to Sarna he followed an "organic process" over a period of three years during which he explored the bylanes of the old city like one does in Chandni Chowk. Admitting that being an Indian was an advantage there as "Indian standing is very high no matter which side of the conflict", Sarna feels there are many untold stories that need to be told and have India connection.

    MORE India ARTICLES

    Rahul Gandhi dozes off in Parliament, footage goes viral on social media

    Rahul Gandhi dozes off in Parliament, footage goes viral on social media
    Congress vice president Rahul Gandhi Wednesday dozed off in the Lok Sabha during the debate on price rise, with the BJP using the visuals caught on the house TV channel to hit out at the Congress.

    Rahul Gandhi dozes off in Parliament, footage goes viral on social media

    Punjab to bring e-stamping to phase out stamp papers

    Punjab to bring e-stamping to phase out stamp papers
    Aiming to eliminate the need to purchase and submit stamp papers with legal documents, the Punjab cabinet Tuesday gave nod to the draft of the state e-stamp rules, 2014 for the implementation of e-stamping system.

    Punjab to bring e-stamping to phase out stamp papers

    Tech, commerce to power Indian Railways in future

    Tech, commerce to power Indian Railways in future
    Bullet trains are set to become a reality in India with the first service between Mumbai and Ahmedabad as Prime Minister Narendra Modi's government sought to run Indian Railways - one of the world's largest - like a "commercial enterprise but serve like a welfare organization".

    Tech, commerce to power Indian Railways in future

    91 Punjabis return from Iraq

    91 Punjabis return from Iraq
    At least 91 men from Punjab who were stuck in conflict-hit Iraq have returned home, a state government spokesman said here Tuesday.

    91 Punjabis return from Iraq

    Punjab rides 'HIGH' on pharmaceutical intoxicants

    Punjab rides 'HIGH' on pharmaceutical intoxicants
    The increasing seizures of drugs, especially heroin, in recent years shows that Punjab has emerged as a major transit point for those in the illegal drugs trade. But the state itself, facing a worrying drugs menace, is hooked to pharmaceutical intoxicants.

    Punjab rides 'HIGH' on pharmaceutical intoxicants

    Where is Breaking News? Modi government tightens grip on information

    Where is Breaking News? Modi government tightens grip on information
    Among the subtle changes associated with Prime Minister Narendra Modi's government are those dealing with the media and nowhere has it affected a news-hungry media's working more than in the way news sources from the government have completely dried up and resulted in shrinking of the culture of intermittent Breaking News on television.

    Where is Breaking News? Modi government tightens grip on information