Panaji: Union minister Meenakshi Lekhi on Tuesday said the Indian government should try to get a facsimile of Portuguese explorer Vasco da Gama's diary, which is in a museum abroad, saying it will help trace India's rich maritime history. She was talking to reporters after laying the keel for the construction of a "stitched ship" at a Goa-based shipyard in the presence of Chief of Naval Staff Admiral R Hari Kumar, member of the Prime Minister's Economic Advisory Council Sanjeev Sanyal and others.
The Union Minister of State for Culture and External Affairs urged the government to get the facsimile of Vasco da Gama's diary, which is in a museum abroad as documented by archaeologist late Dr Vishnu Shridhar Wakankar. "India cannot get the original diary back because Vasco da Gama was not our citizen. But we can get a facsimile of the diary so that we can trace the country's rich maritime history. The aim is to get correct facts based on the narrations by Dr Vishnu Shridhar Wakankar," she said.
Wakankar was a famous archaeologist and recipient of the Padma Shri award. "When late Wakankar went abroad to study, he found the diary of Vasco da Gama in one of the museums there. In that diary, he (Gama) mentioned how he went up to Zanzibar and when he reached Africa, he said he wanted to go to India. He saw a ship which was three times bigger than his," she said.
According to Lekhi, Vasco da Gama took help from a Gujarat-based merchant who was on his way back to India. "That merchant used to go to Africa with pinewood and teak (for trading) and return with diamonds. His name was Chandan. He (merchant) said that he is returning tomorrow and he asked Vasco da Gama to follow him," she said.
The minister said this diary is important to let us understand how big our shipbuilding industry was, how the country's shipping trade was spread across the globe and how the traders were operating. "When we are talking about shared civilisation exchanges, it would be better if we get the diary," she added. The ancient stitched ship is the brainchild of Sanyal, who is also a noted writer, economist and historian.