The India Heritage Walk Festival began yesterday with events in World Heritage City Ahmedabad, Delhi's Mehrauli Archaeological Park and a nature walk in Hyderabad.
Twenty-five films will be screened online, exploring the remarkable facet of the subcontinent's heritage in the form of people, arts, traditions and architecture, the orgnaisers today said.
A 1961 documentary on Nobel laureate Rabindranath Tagore, directed by legendary Satyajit Ray, and produced by the Films Division, was the first to be screened on the YouTube page of Sahapedia.
The festival spans 20 cities, including Agra, Bengaluru, Varanasi, Chennai, Kolkata, Srinagar and Itanagar.
Also Read
Titles that will be screened include Weavers of Maheswar (2016) by Keya Vaswani and Nidhi Kamath, which tells the story of people who have worked hard to revive a vanishing handloom craft; and The Sarangi - Story of a Museum (2015) by Manoj Bhandare and Raju Hittalamani, a journey through Kathmandu's museum of music and musical instruments from Nepal.
The Battle of Koregaon was fought on 1 January, 1818 between the British East India Company and the Peshwa faction of the Maratha Confederacy.
Other films lined up as part of the festival are about the legendary Dhrupad maestros of the Dagar family, Dagarvaani (1993), and lesser-known gems like The Shillong Chamber Choir (2008); Mystique of Murshidabad (2014); Little Magazines of Voices (2014) and Hyderabadi Tryst with Ittar (2017).
Preeti Sinha, Glocal Convener, YES Global Institute, said, as "we move towards a Digital India", technology needs to be leveraged for understanding its vast and rich cultural heritage.
"Digital audio guides for heritage walks, videos and info-graphics for social media platforms and high quality images of arts and monuments on app-based platforms are changing the way we consume and absorb India's heritage," she said.
"It is a free festival. We hope our citizens use this opportunity to reconnect with their past and its rich history to build a new digital future," Sinha said.
Disclaimer: No Business Standard Journalist was involved in creation of this content