<p>The city’s iconic Lalbagh was once five separate gardens, later unified to be nurtured as a serene collective of botanical species.</p>.<p>This unknown, almost lost history was pieced together from old maps, topographical drawings and paintings by heritage scholar Meera Iyer and team.</p>.<p>Meera’s recollection at the Bangalore Litfest on Sunday of the city’s heritage was part of a conversation centred around her recent book ‘Discovering Bengaluru’. </p>.<p>But it was also about how such histories, often buried in government archives, were shut off from public view.</p>.<p>Moderator ecologist Harini Nagendra articulated that frustration by drawing attention to parks that were closed from 10 am to 4 pm. “You are made to feel like public enemy number one, a security threat,” chipped in Meera.</p>.<p>This inaccessibility to the city’s living heritage has contributed greatly to the lack of a heritage consciousness among the public. An impression has been cultivated that only Mysuru has heritage and not Bengaluru.</p>.<p>Meera felt this can change only if there is a mindset change in the government. “Old buildings, for instance, are memories. You feel disoriented when they are gone.”</p>.<p>For Harini, heritage was not just about buildings and parks, but a lived experience. Lately, she observed, there have been groups looking at old stone inscriptions in neighbourhoods, not moving them to museums, but showing them as living proof of local histories.</p>.<p>There is a clear need to recreate an obsession with the city’s past.</p>.<p>This, Harini said, can happen only if people walked around the city, rediscovered forgotten nuggets.</p>.<p>That discovery, she said, would also unravel the contributions of Hyder Ali and Tipu Sultan to building and nurturing Lalbagh.</p>
<p>The city’s iconic Lalbagh was once five separate gardens, later unified to be nurtured as a serene collective of botanical species.</p>.<p>This unknown, almost lost history was pieced together from old maps, topographical drawings and paintings by heritage scholar Meera Iyer and team.</p>.<p>Meera’s recollection at the Bangalore Litfest on Sunday of the city’s heritage was part of a conversation centred around her recent book ‘Discovering Bengaluru’. </p>.<p>But it was also about how such histories, often buried in government archives, were shut off from public view.</p>.<p>Moderator ecologist Harini Nagendra articulated that frustration by drawing attention to parks that were closed from 10 am to 4 pm. “You are made to feel like public enemy number one, a security threat,” chipped in Meera.</p>.<p>This inaccessibility to the city’s living heritage has contributed greatly to the lack of a heritage consciousness among the public. An impression has been cultivated that only Mysuru has heritage and not Bengaluru.</p>.<p>Meera felt this can change only if there is a mindset change in the government. “Old buildings, for instance, are memories. You feel disoriented when they are gone.”</p>.<p>For Harini, heritage was not just about buildings and parks, but a lived experience. Lately, she observed, there have been groups looking at old stone inscriptions in neighbourhoods, not moving them to museums, but showing them as living proof of local histories.</p>.<p>There is a clear need to recreate an obsession with the city’s past.</p>.<p>This, Harini said, can happen only if people walked around the city, rediscovered forgotten nuggets.</p>.<p>That discovery, she said, would also unravel the contributions of Hyder Ali and Tipu Sultan to building and nurturing Lalbagh.</p>