India has signed an agreement with British auction house Sotheby's and
Isa Sarid, the grand niece of Mahatma Gandhi's aide Herman Kallenbach,
to acquire the Gandhi-Kallanbach archives, which have now been withdrawn
from a proposed auction.
The ministry of culture said payment of
825,250 pounds were released to Sotheby's and the archival papers sold
to the Indian government.
Union Minister of Culture, Housing and
Urban Poverty Alleviation Kumari Selja said the government attached the
highest importance to archival material and artefacts relating to the
leaders of the national movement.
"The acquired material would be housed in the National Archives of India," she said.
The
agreement was finalised in consultation with the Ministry of External
Affairs and National Archives of India and signed by three parties -
Government of India, Sotheby's and the Sarid family.
The ministry
in its statement said: "It may be recalled that in the light of the
opinions expressed by (historians) Ramachandra Guha and Sunil Khilnani
regarding the historical value of Gandhi-Kallenbach papers which were in
the possession of the grand niece of the German-born Jewish architect
Hermann Kallenbach, efforts were initiated to acquire the papers".
The Sarid family had quoted $5 million for the archives but the offer was was considered unacceptable by the Indian government.
The deal was finally settled at 825,250 pounds, equal to $1.28 million.
A
five-member committee, led by Mushirul Hasan, director-general of the
National Archives of India, was deputed to Sotheby's in London to
examine the archival material for authenticity and historical value.
The
committee recommended that in view of the historical importance of the
material, the entire archive may be acquired as a matter of highest
priority.
After discussions with Sotheby's, a final offer for the
entire Gandhi-Kallenbach archival material was made and the deal was
clinched.
Kallenbach met Gandhi, who was working in South Africa
in 1904. They had long discussions on religious issues and Kallenbach
was influenced by Gandhi's ideas of 'satyagraha'. He became a friend of
Gandhi and a dedicated devotee.
Kallenbach, a rich, sports-loving
bachelor, donated 1,000 acre farm near Johannesburg to Gandhi which
became the famous Gandhian retreat, Tolstoy Farm.
Kallenbach gave up his life of luxury and adopted a simple life on the farm.
Gandhi had described Kallenbach as a soulmate.




