A portion of the museum’s interior
It is important to have a strong sense of history to preserve and protect a culture, its heritage and legacy. The past would be unknown without it, the present nothing to be proud of and the future as bleak as the past. Nations who value their history and legacy are torch bearers to the world.
This mysterious and yet beautiful world that we live in since time immemorial has had plenty to offer throughout the generations. Civilisations have vanished and new ones keep emerging as the world marches on. It is indeed astonishing to observe how mankind and things around us developed over the years to bring us where we are today. If those who, over the years, had not cared to preserve things as evolution took place we in this world would have been lost souls.
Archives, museums, galleries have no doubt contributed immensely towards preserving that heritage and its prized possessions to remind us of what we were and what we are. Europeans, including the British, the South Americans and the Antipodeans have done a remarkable job in this direction. And having travelled the world as a cricket writer I am lucky to have had the opportunity to browse around whenever possible.
The Lahore Gymkhana Cricket Club Museum located in Bagh-e-Jinnah is a labour of love
A visit to British Museum and its library is an eye opener. There must be a museum for everything in England. A stroll in the Louvre Gallery in Paris is as much a mind-boggling experience. It would be difficult to tell you about all that I have seen so it is better that I restrict myself to a subject that I deal with on a day-to-day basis — cricket and cricket museums.
From the MCC Museum at Lord’s, the best, no doubt, in the world to the ones in Melbourne and Wellington, I have seen them all along with a number of private collections of cricket memorabilia, which I happened to see in different countries. It is like a treasure trove that enriches my mind. To add to all that, I am pleased to say we also have a cricket museum in Pakistan, the first of its kind in the country, which I recently visited on my trip to Lahore and was rather pleased that I did. The museum is a labour of love by Najum Latif, its curator.
I shall indeed throw some light on it but first a bit about the museum at Lord’s, which has history written all over it. Well-preserved and well-kept it has the original 138-year-old urn of ‘The Ashes’. Whether it is England or Australia who win The Ashes, they are only presented a replica of this urn as a trophy. There are bats and blazers, shoes and caps of the greats of the game such as W.G. Grace, Sir Don Bradman, Sir Jack Hobbs, Sir Garfield Sobers, and the sparrow mounted on the ball which killed it (bowled by Dr Jahangir Khan in a match between MCC and Cambridge University in 1936 at Lord’s). There are many more artifacts, ephemera and paintings belonging to the greats of the game like Hanif Mohammad, Sunil Gavaskar, Zaheer Abbas and Sachin Tendulkar, to name a few. Those who have, over the years, scored a hundred at Lord’s and taken a haul of five wickets and more in an innings at the famous venue have also been made immortal here.