New Delhi: It's a virtual library where some 90,000 titles in Urdu - including the Mahabharata and the Quran, as also autobiographies, fiction, travelogues, translations, manuscripts and pop magazines - have been digitised and made available on an internet portal for academicians, scholars and researchers to benefit from. In addition, the Rekhta.org (also Rekhta.com) portal offers a collection of 'shers' and 'shayaris' and an essential collection of iconic poets - all this for free!
"Our e-book project took birth in 2013 after the idea of an Urdu virtual library was discussed by me and a few university professors when the absence of an Urdu archive was collectively felt by all. We then embarked on a journey to overcome the barrier of inaccessibility and lack of resources in Urdu learning and reached out to various sources, both public and private across India, majorly covering cities like Delhi, Lucknow, Rampur, Bhopal, Allahabad, Hyderabad, Aligarh, Patna and others," the portal's founder, Noida-based entrepreneur Sanjiv Saraf, told IANS in an interview.
"Without archiving, an ageless language with its long due recognition and respect would have died long ago, depriving our future generations from cherishing the rich heritage of Urdu," Saraf added.
The 90,000 e-books - a staggering 19 million pages - are classified into diverse categories including children's literature, banned books, diaries and translations and can then be accessed by students, scholars, researchers, litterateurs and lovers of the language anytime and from anywhere around the world.
"We are continuing to scout libraries and private collections for more books that can be digitized and made accessible to readers across the world. Rare, out of print books that are totally inaccessible to the masses as they are stored in various libraries all across the country which are prone to damage and destruction due to termite, water and fire damage are being sought," Saraf explained.
Most of the books were secured through camps organised by Rekhta at which several publications and private parties willingly donated century-old Urdu scripts. Lucknow's Naval Kishore Press, founded in 1858 and arguably Asia's oldest printing and publishing concern, was a major contributor, rendering some 2,000 books which included translations of the Mahabharata and the Quran and rare manuscripts starting from the 17th century.
"Many of the texts received were tattered and torn due to negligence and poor handling. Rekhta assembled all such texts which were then reprinted, re-dyed and recreated for audience consumption," Saraf said.
"The same kind of archival has begun for Hindi readers with a different team attending to Hindi texts and scripts available for digitization. The project has been running successfully in its attempt to virtually reincarnate Urdu literature as Western scholars and professors make use of Rekhta's e-library in their studies," Saraf pointed out.
Some of the institutions associated with the project are Idara-E-Adabiyat-E-Urdu (Hyderabad), University of Allahabad, Ghalib Academy, Ghalib Institute, Jamia Hamdard (all three from New Delhi), Government Urdu Library (Patna), Khwaja Moinuddin Chishti Urdu, Arabi-Farsi University (Lucknow), Saulat Public Library (Rampur), Darul Musannefin Shibli Academy (Azamgarh) and Rampur Raza Library (Rampur).
For all the latest News, Opinions and Views, download ummid.com App.
Select Language To Read in Urdu, Hindi, Marathi or Arabic.
'No sympathy only action': Politicians barred from gang-rape, murder victim's house
Also Read
"Hang Rapists": Twitterati vent anger over Hyderabad rape-murder
Ram Temple: The Original Game Plan
Maharashtra formula in Karnataka? Cong-JD (S) to give it a try after by-elections
"Rarely Seen": Ex-Finance Secretary on GDP slipping down to 4.5 pc
India’s GDP growth slips to slowest in more than six years
Why Indian Economy is slowing down: Manmohan Singh explains
Indian Railways net revenue surplus decreased by 66.10 per cent
Modi govt's 'Education Reforms' are taken from Birla-Ambani report
JNUSU: No decision yet on boycotting exams
Jio, Vodafone, Airtel announce new tariff plans "to cover losses"
At Airbnb, get 3000 unique recipes, chance to study with experts
Why Delhi's food scene is changing: Historian-turned chef explains
GST collection up 6% in November 2019: Ministry
'Tools To Divide The Society': Chorus against NRC, CAB becomes louder
"Flawed, Divisive": Leading English Daily on Amit Shah's NRC