The Man who knew so much http://kathmandupost.ekantipur.com/news/2017-06-25/the-man-who-knew-so-much.html
When
I first approached Sukra Sagar Shrestha for an interview regarding the
Char Narayan Temple earlier this year, he initially declined the
request, thinking I was a journalist. He did not want any such
attention. The Resident Archeologist at the Kathmandu Valley
Preservation Trust (KVPT), Shrestha, I’d been recommended, would be the
best person to speak at length about the vast, complex iconography that
defines the Newar arts of the Kathmandu Valley.
Only after he realised that I wasn’t working for any media, did he open
up and become radiantly willing to share his vast experience. But
scheduling a recorded audio interview with him took time—he was not
well, diabetic, and always watchful of his weight. He baked and carried
his own bread, walked everywhere, and looked a bit frail, despite the
brightness in his eyes.
Finally, a few weeks later we managed to sit down to speak, and the
conversation initially began with my inquiries into how the cult of
worshipping Narayan came about in the Kathmandu Valley. He was a wealth
of information regarding this and so many other subjects that our
interview ran very long, touching on so many fascinating subjects. At
the time, I reluctantly came to a stop thinking I would have time in the
future to pick his protean brain. I never took a photo of him either,
though I meant to. A few weeks later, Shrestha passed away in the
hospital at the age of 64.
The outpouring of grief was expected; the man was incredibly well
respected but also beloved by those who worked with him. Raju Roka at
the KVPT office remembers fondly his gentle, generous approach while
imparting knowledge, Rohit Ranjitkar, KVPT Nepal Program Director tells
of how Sukra Sagar Sir would frankly correct any thing he thought
inaccurate in a straightforward manner that is so unusual to the Nepali
modus operandi.
In his long interview with me, when he was conversing on various
subjects, he mentioned how his career was a series of him walking out on
institutions which had somehow frustrated him. In his youth, he was
asked to make the first Himalayan Profile of the mountains at the
Department of Tourism. At the time, tourists would come to Nepal but
there was no documentation on the names, distances, and other aspects of
the Himalayas to give to them. Shrestha travelled for nine years
compiling the information. When it was done, he handed it over and
left—he was at odds with the then Minister of Tourism; it was his habit
to not hold his tongue. He then spoke of his subsequent eighteen years
at the Department of Archaeology. He worked there till he was a hundred
and four days away from becoming the Director
General, the highest office in the Department. He resigned because
again, things did not suit his frank personality, which saw right and
wrong very clearly.
Sirish Bhatt, KVPT architect, who worked with him on a National
Geographic documentary that was filming the cave culture of Mustang,
reminisces about his incredible memory, his wide interests, his
attentiveness while imparting knowledge, his humbleness despite his vast
learning, and his apolitical attitude that guided his moral compass and
caused him to leave both government departments despite his swift rise
and clearly promising prospects.
Towards the end of his life, which no one saw coming, Shrestha was
working on two very promising projects, a book, soon to be published, on
erotic carvings (people are always thinking the wrong things on the
subject, he said) that he worked on with Wolfgang Korn, and another work
that was to document all of the idols across the Valley; a sort of
counterpart to Lain Singh Bangdel’s seminal book from 1989 The Stolen
Idols of Nepal, but inclusive of every made image—an invaluable
contribution for future scholars to trace what might be lost.
Today, all those whose path crossed Sukra Sagar Shrestha’s shake their
heads at the loss that is yet to hit us, even as we realise, day to day,
that his gentleness, humour, and sharp observant eyes are no longer
accessible to us. A true scholar with a hunger for learning and an
aptitude for teaching, he never stopped researching the Valley that he
loved so much, and was so proud of as a Newar of Kirtipur. In one of the
last words in my interview with him he said, “Who will come to
Kathmandu Valley if all we see is a concrete jungle? We have to rebuild,
it is the priceless heritage of the Newars that bring people here”. I
hope that we can abide by his wishes.
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