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Invaluable print heritage
The Roja Muthiah Research Library is a treasurehouse of rare
books and manuscripts. ELIZABETH ROY has a look at the collection
and writes.
ROJA MUTHIAH Research Library has soul. Way beyond Mogappair you
turn off the road into untamed wilds, dotted by square houses.
There are no roads, nothing to show direction except the sun's
trail across the sky and the odd crow flying northward. That's
where the impeccably maintained 5,600-sq. ft. RMRL greets you.
RMRL's director Theodore Baskaran and the 25 professionals who
run the place present a relaxed and democratic atmosphere of
sharing and collective responsibility. While rare books purr in
crowded lines, beyond the glass walls the staff are busy like
little ants at their computers, cataloguing, indexing,
microfilming, at preservation techniques or simply making sense
of what was printed 200 years ago. The oldest work in the
collection, Kandhar Andhadhi, was published in 1804.
A more comprehensive look at RMRL begins with the extraordinary
story of Roja Muthiah Chettiar, "an eccentric bibliophile", who
lived in Kottaiyur, near Karaikkudi. He earned a living as a
painter of signs and spent all his earnings collecting all the
published material (most of it in Tamil) that he could lay hands
on. He collected them, he bought them (many times in multiple
copies of 3 or 4), he exchanged them. Over 40 years he built
himself a collection of 100,000 rare books, journals,
newspapers...He gathered thousands of pamphlets, notices,
letters, invitations and other single sheet material. He also had
a most singular collection of matchboxes and the rarest of stamps
and coins.
When the collection inundated his house he rented other houses,
garages, all kinds of places. Whenever there was a need for money
there were dealings with antiquarians and universities abroad.
(He sold them only copies) Today the University of Michigan alone
has a collection of 120 books that Roja Muthiah sold them. At
other times he would sell a couple of his coins or stamps from
his philately collection. He would carefully follow
advertisements for stamps to complete "sets" and knew which
philatelist in England needed which stamp! At one stage he threw
open his collection to scholars. He called it "India Library
Services". For a small amount you could stay there for a few days
and consult the place. That's how Baskaran first met him, when he
was searching for material for his book on Tamil Cinema.
I encountered a small portion of his collection when I visited
him in his modest home in Kottaiyur. He sat outside under the
shade of a little tree while his house stood thick with his
collection and an oppressive pall of gammaxine. A year later in
1992 I heard that he had died of slow gammaxine poisoning.
His family decided to sell the collection. Scholars from the
University of Chicago who had used it and Indian scholars like A.
K. Ramanujan and C. S. Lakshmi who were in the US at the time
talked to the university's South Asia Research Library outfit
about saving the collection. And the University of Chicago
decided to buy it. Baskaran talks about the deal, "Even while
they were negotiating, they had decided that it would remain in
Tamil Nadu to form the nucleus for a research library for Tamil
Studies. They looked for an organisation that would understand
it, take care of it and carry on Roja Muthiah's project of making
it available to scholars. They zeroed in on MOZHI, in Chennai - a
Trust which was started to develop resources for Tamil language
and related culture, Tamil society and Tamil history." RMRL
opened in 1994.
P. Sankaralingam and S. Ramakrishnan, both trustees of MOZHI
began work on their dream with collaboration from James Nye,
director of South Asian Bibliographic Wing of the University of
Chicago. Sankaralingam became RMRL's first director. A friend
offered to build a space which would temporarily house the
library.
Sankaralingam devised a system for creating machine-readable
catalogue both in Tamil and Roman script. UNESCO provided the
software and they continue to update the skills of the staff.
Unfortunately Sankaralingam passed away in 1997.Baskaran who had
just retired as Chief Post Master General was a close friend and
a trustee of MOZHI and a Social historian. He took over as
director.
Baskaran categorises the collection into religious literature
contemporary literature and popular entertainment forms. "It
includes unorthodox collections: books that do not find a place
in any library, drama scripts going back to 1883, political
pamphlets, a wide collection of erotic literature in the Tamil
tradition...We also have a number of magazines which no other
library has, the magazines that poet Bharathi ran. They are very
important from the point of view of literature and of political
history. There are political pamphlets of the early 40s when the
Dravidian movement began. 'Cinema Ulagam', the very first cinema
magazine and 500 other copies of different cinema magazines. They
were dismissed by most people as plebeian preoccupations. Posters
and graffiti reflect the political concerns of the people."
Roja Muthiah picked up interesting letters as well, "We have a
letter from Kalki written to Ariakudi Ramanuja Iyengar - four
pages on Tamil Isai. That letter became a crucial document
because everyone was sniping at Kalki and suddenly this document
came up that he was really in support of Tamil Isai."
Roja Muthiah collected wedding invitations, invitations for house
warming ceremonies, puberty ceremony. These broadly categorised
as single sheet material are all sitting in sealed boxes waiting
to be catalogued.
"A wedding invitation during the war years has a postscript,'
send your ration material well ahead - arisi paruppu." A drama
notice of 1889 says, "panchamars (Harijans) and lepers not
allowed." These document the concerns of sections of society at
certain periods of time. Now with all the emphasis on subaltern
studies, Dalit studies, women's studies, they have become
absolute treasures." So far they have catalogued 50,000 books and
the catalogue is available on-line. Every article in the magazine
collection is indexed. They hope to finish the work over the next
couple of years. For example, if you want to know how the donkey
was used in Tamil Nadu, in seconds you can reach it subject wise
or author wise.
Wellcome Research Institute for the History of Medicine in
England was particularly interested in this single largest
collection on indigenous medicines, especially Siddha. With their
help RMRL's staff were trained in state of the art technology in
microfilming. A subsequent project made it possible for them to
acquire the entire Siddha section on microfilm, while generating
an income for RMRL. Every book will eventually be on microfilm
and with installation of a microfilm scanner, any page from any
book will be made available on-line. It has become a
professionally equipped digital library.
"We also have an acquisition programme. One of our aims is to
make the Roja Muthiah collection the nucleus and build a
collection around it, extending it. Amazing collections are now
being handed over to us." Among the collections received are
those of A K Ramanujan, Indologist Gift Siromoni's consequential
work on Kolam and the language of the Narikuravas. Milton
Singer's complete collection of South Indian Studies.
RMRL has an ongoing project with the Ford Foundation. They
collaborate with Tamil Nadu State Archives and Maraimalai Adigal
Library to microfilm the rare books. RMRL gets to keep a copy,
the collaborating library keeps one and the hard copy goes back
on the shelf. There are other libraries and organisations both in
the country and abroad that RMRL is currently working with.
In the meantime, back home the team is busy at work, causing
newer and newer ground swells. And maybe as per the MoU, "the
entire collection along with all the infrastructure developed
during the project period will be ceded to MOZHI, once the
present project objectives are achieved." When the dust settles,
all that remains for tomorrow will be an invaluable print
heritage.
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