JNTU(K) and C.R. Rao AIMSCS sign MoU
Hyderabad|India|March'2011:The
Center for Deccan Studies (CDS) and the U.S. Consulate General
Hyderabad celebrated the refurbishment of the garden tomb of Mah
Laqa Bai at Moula Ali, on March 6, 2011. The U.S. Government funded
the work through the Ambassadors Fund for Cultural Preservation. The
Muslim Educational, Social and Cultural Organization (MESCO) also
provided important support to the project.
Representatives from MESCO, CDS and Consul General Katherine Dhanani
spoke at the inauguration. Emory University Professor Dr. Scott
Kugle who researched the site and Mah Laqa Bai’s life, spoke about
her role in Hyderabad’s history. Instrumental music before and after
the program added to the festivities.
The Hyderabad-based restoration architects - Heritage Conservation
Initiative Consultants (HCIC) carried out the renovation work. The
company cleared the area of debris and restored the buildings and
their exquisite decorations. They rebuilt water channels and planted
trees and bushes appropriate to Mah Laqa Bai’s time.
“The Ambassadors Fund supports a wide range of projects to preserve
cultural heritage, such as the restoration of historic buildings.
Today as we laid flowers on Chanda’s tomb we honored a brilliant,
creative and knowledgeable woman. It is appropriate that we fete her
during the month of March, when we celebrate Women’s History Month,
for Mah Laqa Bai represents history’s women who have contributed
significantly to their society and culture but who have often been
written out of history,” Consul General Dhanani said.
Mah Laqa Bai is one of the most illustrious women of Hyderabad’s
cultural history. Also known as Chanda Bibi, she died in 1824 after
leading an exemplary life as the court dancer for the second and
third Nizams. She was the first woman to author a full collection of
Urdu ghazals. She was active in the religious and political life of
Hyderabad during the city’s golden age. An exhibit on site presents
the story of Mah Laqa Bai’s life and cultural legacy, through
poetry, paintings, maps, architecture and religious sites associated
with her
March.2011