Assam seals pact with British Museum to bring 16th-century ‘Vrindavani Vastra’ in 2027

Chief Minister Himanta Biswa Sarma signed a loaning arrangement with the British Museum, calling it a landmark moment reconnecting Assam with its cultural heritage.

Update: 2025-11-18 03:35 GMT

Himanta Biswa Sarma at the signing of the Letter of Intent with London British Museum (Photo - @himantabiswa / X)

Guwahati, Nov 18: The Assam government on Monday signed a loaning arrangement with the British Museum, London, for the display of the 'Vrindavani Vastra', a 16th-century silk textile depicting the life of Lord Krishna, in the State in 2027, Chief Minister Himanta Biswa Sarma said.

The Vrindavani Vastra was created under the guidance of Shrimanta Sankardeva, at the request of Koch king Nara Narayan, and it also has a part of a poem written by him.

The exhibit, acquired in 1904 from Tibet by the British Museum, is nine-and-a-half metres long and is made of several pieces of silk drapes. It originally featured 15 pieces that were later assembled.

The Memorandum of Understanding was signed in London, in the presence of Chief Minister Himanta Biswa Sarma.

"The Vrindavani Vastra is not just a textile; it is a symbol of Assam's rich spiritual and cultural heritage, reflecting the devotion and vision of Mahapurush Srimanta Sankardev," Sarma said in a post on microblogging site.

A priceless heritage returns to where it truly belongs, he said.

"The signing of the Letter of Intent with the British Museum to bring it back home under a loaning arrangement marks a red-letter moment which strengthens our connection to Assam's timeless legacy," the CM said.

This would be the first time that a portion of the textile will be on display in the State after it was taken away over at least a century ago, with fragments ending up as artefacts in museums across the world.

Sarma, who had reached London over the weekend for the signing of the pact, said in a post on microblogging site earlier in the day that London's British Museum is a timeless repository of the phenomenal evolution of human civilisation.

The Chief Minister, before flying to the British capital on Friday, had said the JSW group of companies has been playing a leading role in facilitating this "homecoming" of the tapestry that displays tales from Lord Krishna's life in the hand-woven silk piece.

The group took the initiative of putting the Assam government in contact with the British Museum and is also taking the responsibility of building a museum of international standards in Guwahati to display the Vrindavani Vastra, he had said.

The piece of textile was routed out of Assam through Tibet, with major fragments of it ending up on display in London and Paris museums, with some parts also in Boston and Los Ange-les museums, Sarma said.

He had said that it would be the first time that the Vrindavani Vastra would be brought to Assam in at least over a century, with many generations of Assamese people missing on the opportunity to view it first-hand.

PTI

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