How to Save the Taj Mahal?
A debate rages over preserving the awe-inspiring, 350-year-old monument that now shows signs of distress from pollution and shoddy repairs
- By Jeffrey Bartholet
- Photographs by Alex Masi
- Smithsonian magazine, September 2011, Subscribe
(Page 3 of 5)
The first day I toured the complex, several hundred people were waiting in line to enter the mausoleum; I returned later in the week when the line was much shorter. Inside the main room, the richly engraved cenotaphs (empty memorial sarcophagi) of Mumtaz Mahal and Shah Jahan are located behind an elaborate jali, or marble screen. A second set of cenotaphs is located in a lower chamber, inaccessible to ordinary visitors. It is believed the emperor and his beloved wife are buried even more deeply in the earth. The cenotaphs, the marble screen and marble walls are decorated with exquisite floral patterns of colored stone and inlaid inscriptions from the Koran.
While the Taj is a testament to love, it also embodied the power of Shah Jahan himself. As the emperor’s historian wrote: “They laid the plan for a magnificent building and a dome of high foundation which for its loftiness will until the Day of Resurrection remain a memorial to the sky-reaching ambition of His Majesty...and its strength will represent the firmness of the intentions of its builder.”
Presumably, the end of time is still a long way off, but the Taj is slowly deteriorating now. Seen up close, the marble has yellow-orange stains in many places; some slabs have small holes where the stone has been eaten away; in a few places, chunks have fallen from the facade; my guide Brij and I even found a bit of recent graffiti on the white marble platform, where two visitors, Ramesh and Bittoo, had signed their names in red ink.
The sandstone of the terraces and walkways is particularly weathered. Where restoration work has been done, it sometimes appears sloppy. Workers have filled holes with a cement-like substance of a mismatched color. In at least one instance, it appears that someone stepped in the wet glop before it dried, leaving an indent the size and shape of a small shoe. The grouting in some of the gaps between marble slabs of the walls looks like the amateur work I’ve done in my bathroom.
For decades activists and lawyers have been waging a legal battle to save the Taj Mahal from what they believe is environmental degradation. M.C. Mehta, currently one of India’s best-known lawyers, has been at the forefront of that fight. I met him twice in New Delhi in a half-finished office with holes in the walls and wires dangling out.
“The monument gives glory to the city, and the city gives glory to the monument,” he tells me, exasperated that more has not been done to clean up Agra and the Yamuna River. “This has taken more than 25 years of my life. I say: ‘Don’t be so slow! If somebody is dying, you don’t wait.’”
When he began his campaign in the 1980s, one of Mehta’s main targets was an oil refinery upwind of the Taj Mahal that spewed sulfur dioxide. Preservationists believed the plant emissions were causing acid rain, which was eating away at the stone of the monument—what Mehta calls “marble cancer.” Mehta petitioned the Supreme Court and argued that the Taj was important both to India’s heritage and as a tourist attraction that contributed more to the economy than an oil refinery. He wanted all polluters, including iron foundries and other small industries in Agra, shut down, moved out or forced to install cleaner technology. In 1996, twelve years after he filed the motion, the court ruled in his favor, and the foundries around Agra were closed, relocated or—as was the case with the refinery—compelled to switch to natural gas.
But for all his successes, Mehta believes there’s much more to be done. Traffic has surged, with more than 800,000 registered vehicles in the city. Government data shows that particulate matter in the air—dust, vehicle exhaust and other suspended particles—is well above prescribed standards. And the Yamuna River arrives in Agra bearing raw sewage from cities upstream.
The river, once such an integral component of the Taj’s beauty, is a mess, to put it mildly. I visited one of the city’s storm drains where it empties at a spot between the Taj Mahal and the Agra Fort, a vast sandstone-and-marble complex that was once home to Mughal rulers. In addition to the untreated human waste deposited there, the drain belches mounds of litter—heaps of plastic bags, plastic foam, snack wrappers, bottles and empty foil packets that once held herbal mouth freshener. Environmental activists have argued that such garbage dumps produce methane gas that contributes to the yellowing of the Taj’s marble.
Next: The Taj "has a natural tendency to slide or sink into the river" »
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Comments (17)
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there is nothing much that would save tj mahal in the following article
Posted by deepthi peter on January 30,2013 | 08:29 AM
WONDERFULLY DONE....................
Posted by Nandagopal V. on January 28,2013 | 09:59 AM
this fact and vidio are very wonderful these are best information and presentation i have ever seen about taj mahal
Posted by gulshan gait on January 11,2013 | 07:40 AM
AAAWWWSSSOOOMMMEEE
Posted by on December 23,2012 | 07:28 AM
The Daily Mail and the British Museum , had carried out a survey of the TAJ MAHAL, at Agra (India ) recently. There were articles on the Taj regarding the life of the Taj lasting not more than 5 years hence. Could you be able to mail the experts suggestions on how to preserve and restore them WORLD WONDER OF THE TAJ , once again with the past glory? I would like to give due publicity to such suggestion coming from experts. Regards , Arun Nigudkar , 19.7.12
Posted by Arun Nigudkar on July 19,2012 | 08:56 AM
Refer ASI 1936 Report , that states the presence of hundreds of rooms along the octagonal floors , the wall compound , the seventh story well , the dome at the top. Besides, the lowest floor . During the British Regime,it was the responsibility of the TAJ administration of ASI to carry sweeping with broom and water all the floors at regular intervals. This practice led to clean atmosphere within the Taj interior corridors. Since the windows and passages within were kept open fresh air cooled the premises with sufficient light to peep into. Now every passage going up or deep below is locked from outside. The red tape prevails everywhere. This practice of cleanliness automatically stopped since then. If the floors are unlocked now, you will find heaps of dirt , mortal remains of rats, cats and animals, filth and rubble with bad smell of water entered into from open gutters and tunnels with broken unsafe openings of wells never cleaned and nallis going to Jamuna. Who will set these things right earnestly ? Now and immediately? Outlets to Jamuna need necessary repairs and cementing with pipes and valves to control filthy water flowing in Pl seek the reply from the Taj Administration and ASI Arun Nigudkar
Posted by Arun Nigudkar on May 4,2012 | 09:06 AM
Take suggestions for vaccinations seriously if you are traveling to India. Agra is one nasty filthy place and if you go off the beaten path a bit with your tour guide (suggested) you will see things a few clicks from the Taj that will just make your head spin. Fly into Delhi take the train to Agra..get a first class ticket..it's only a couple of bucks. Be ready for the shakedown for tips from the train crew..and DO NOT eat anything they serve on the train The Taj MUST be on your bucket list. The agra fort as well. Mostly discounted, it's quite a sight. Add Mysore Palace to your tour list. With rupess going for a bit more then .02 US, India can be a great value and a culture shock which I assure you will change you somehow. For me, it was a huge change for the better
Posted by Pete on March 21,2012 | 09:19 PM
Someone needs to a research into the real history of Taj Mahal and other north Indian monuments beyond the mythology. Hint: Sofia Hagia in Turkey. Some interesting questions raised by this http://www.stephen-knapp.com/question_of_the_taj_mahal.htm
Posted by ali sina on December 10,2011 | 11:54 PM
Last week, most of the newpapers flashed new on deteriorating condition of the Taj, they report that foundation of the Taj has become weak because of polluted water of the Yamuna full of chemical and suffocating unpleasant smelling mortal remains of dead animals by the tannaries around. Such filthy water and residues enter into the tunnels and Nalis of the Taj during the high tide and get stuck up around . God knows, how deep in the basement of the Taj the ugly substance has reached. For number of years the basement passages and staircases reaching the nallis and tunnels are locked by the Archaeological Department. It is possible that the sewage thus getting accumulated is not cleared or flushed out everyday> If this continues , the Taj will collapse within five years as predicted by the scientists. The Taj lovers should write in newspapers, and pressureise the Govt. to conduct repairs and proper maintenance. Arun Nigudkar
Posted by Arun Nigudkar on October 9,2011 | 05:59 AM
Too bad the Taj Mahal (Smithsonian, September 2011) too has become a victim of "newspeak". Apparently, it is now "'Islamic-inspired' architecture". Considering Shah Jahan was a Muslim, his wife Mumtaz was a Muslim, the principal architect was a Muslim, the design featuring four prominent minarets at the boundary corners is Islamic, I cannot think of a more Islamic building. So let us call it what it is, not Islamic-inspired, but Islamic architecture as is the exquisite Alhambra in Spain and countless other examples. We live in one world with contributions to civilization from different traditions. Let us do them all justice.
Posted by Arshad M Khan on September 22,2011 | 12:45 PM
An interesting piece that captures the mood of the monument and the challenges it is facing.
Both the macro & micro vision for the Taj is bleak with saline ground water being used to wash the paved areas in the complex which is causing pitting and the addition of new graffiti which Alex Masi has captured on camera.
The flawed macro vision has resulted in continued urbanization within 5km of the monument and a new proposed inner ring road threatens more pollution with increased vehicular traffic to the South-East & East of the monument. Sadly the Environmental Management Plan prepared for the cities development authority by the Central Pollution Control Board in January 2002 has been grossly violated.
Posted by ravi singh on September 22,2011 | 09:13 AM
The Taj stands on a platform below which there are two floors of red sand stone . Below the two floors are several wells , some kept still open , some stuffed with rubbl e. There are hidden passages or gutters interlinking each other and the banks of Yamuna. During the high tide water enters these passages and nallis . During ebb, it gets stuck up because of any sort of garbage that might come floating in with high tide. Since tanneries around started throwing their filthy garbage in Yamuna waters , any type of rotten material might have gone or regularly going in the Taj passages. During the British days , it is reported that the tunnels and nallis below the last floor of the structure, were regularly sweeped, filth accumilited was flused out . This they did knowing the importance of the Taj. (ASI 1936 report ) What is the position now after we achieved freedom ?--Arun Nigudkar
Posted by arun nigudkar on September 22,2011 | 05:18 AM
I visited the Taj Mahal last year, and it was really amazing.
Posted by Almaluz on September 13,2011 | 02:57 PM
I visited the Taj Mahal in 2001 and first was amazed by it's beauty and loved the history about it. I saw the same that you mention, yellowing, holes, and decay. What ever is the cause of the deterioration, pollution or climatic, it is the Indian government's responsibility to address the issues of both the Taj and the river (which was disgusting in 2001). The international community also needs to step up and save this marvel.
Posted by jerome on September 4,2011 | 06:12 PM
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