Centuries Old Technology of Building Boats To Be Preserved Digitally for Posterity
A hand-tooled seagoing boat is being reconstructed on a tiny football field called Amberia by the only remaining artisans who can construct such ships, just across the river Rupnarayan from the old port of Tamralipta or Tamluk in West Bengal. The know-how of building such boats was disappearing as they were replaced by motorized boats. A group of craftsmen led by 70-year-old Panchanan Mondol, one of the last master boat builders, has attracted big crowds of river craft drivers and fishermen for whom the attempt to construct the antiquated boat has become a source of pride. According to Zeeshan Sheikh, a marine archaeologist from Britain who is collaborating with Bhattacharyya, the V-shaped structure of the 'Chhot' gives it the ability to navigate high waves which indicates it is a fast ship which suggests there could have been military usage for it. On completion of the boat project which started in early October the ship, with a single mast and square sail, may then sail down the river Rupnarayan in the presence of a host of dignitaries before being transported to the National Maritime Museum at Lothal. Up until now, shipbuilders have passed this knowledge on to their sons through practical training and word of mouth. This ancient technology will now be digitized and kept at the British Museum for future generations to learn from.