Mountain Plants to Paper

The Sikkim story

Dastkari Haat Samiti

Dastkari Haat Samiti

Prayer Flags in Sikkim (2018-06-01)Dastkari Haat Samiti

History of handmade paper in Sikkim

The north-eastern parts of India, bordered by the Himalayas, Nepal, Bhutan, Myanmar and China, preserve age-old traditions in paper making which are either dormant or flourishing depending on local enterprise, the people’s love of nature, their attachment to heritage skills and a growing recognition of the value of preservation of their precious environment through the use of natural waste.

Homestay and shop in Sikkim (2018-06-01)Dastkari Haat Samiti

There are many small enterprises in the small state of Sikkim in Northeast India.

An oddly shaped establishment like this on the edge of the mountain road from Rabongla to Borong-Polok where the handmade paper making unit is located, is a homestay and stopping point.

This is indicated by the plants and flowers out front, a tea stall and a counter selling a few provisions for tourists.

Post office at Ralong Lungshing, South Sikkim (2018-06-01)Dastkari Haat Samiti

In the age of smartphones and emails, the post office of yore is almost a relic, except where life still follows old patterns and the internet does not always work.

This branch office of India Post in Ralong Lungshing has a postbox that has an antique-like quality to it, attached to the wooden wall.

The friendly flower pots welcome monks who come from the Palchen Choeling (also referred to as the New Ralong) Monastery on the hill above. It is a fairly new monastery built in 1988.

Women in Sikkim cutting plants from the Hill sideDastkari Haat Samiti

On the winding road to Borong an elderly woman gathers plants for cooking, medicinal use and fodder from the rich hilly foliage that covers most of Sikkim.

Among such flora grows the argeli plant used to make paper at the unit which is just a few kilometers away.

Block printed manuscripts (2018-06-01)Dastkari Haat Samiti

Religious Buddhist manuscripts

Preservation and ecological concerns, especially with increasing worries of melting glaciers and denuded mountainsides, have drawn people to materials like handmade paper, natural yarns and colours, and even the old charms of handwork versus heavy machinery and the use of power. The Monasteries have a stock of old handwritten manuscripts read by monks during prayers and on ceremonial occasions. They are all written in the Tibetan script by hand on handmade paper.

Entry Archway at Ralong Monastery (2018-06-01)Dastkari Haat Samiti

On a day when the mountains are covered with mist, the stately gate to the 300-year old Ralong Monastery is the only structure visible at close quarters.

On a much closer look through the archway, the monastery built in 1730 and recently renovated, appears like a faint ghost.

Ralong Monastery (2018-06-01)Dastkari Haat Samiti

The Ralong Monastery seen on a clearer day has a stock of old handwritten manuscripts read by monks during prayers and on ceremonial occasions.

They are all written in the Tibetan script by hand on handmade paper.

Prayer Flags in Sikkim (2018-06-01)Dastkari Haat Samiti

Closer to Borong, prayer flags in white cloth hang against the mist and mountains. In the time before the advent of paper, Hindu and Buddhist scripts were handwritten on cloth as prayer flags.

Later, scripts were hand printed with carved wooden blocks which had the script carved in reverse so that they could be read straight when reversed.

Statue of Buddha (2018-06-01)Dastkari Haat Samiti

Lord Buddha is the all-pervading presence in most of Sikkim. Inside the Palchen Choeling monastery an imposing image presides over many rows of tables in the main prayer all where monks assemble daily for their prayers.

Monk praying with manuscript (2018-06-01)Dastkari Haat Samiti

One of the monks at the monastery chants from the narrow sheets of a religious manuscript. The paper is handmade but the script is wood block printed.

Sadly, they have begun to use industrial paper for their computers now despite the handmade paper unit being just a few kilometers away.

Decorative case of manuscript (2018-06-01)Dastkari Haat Samiti

Each case of sacred scripts is lovingly packed in brocade cloth and lacquered wood at the Palchen Choeling and Ralong monasteries.

Manuscript with case (2018-06-01)Dastkari Haat Samiti

Manuscripts are laid out on every low table in the Mahakala Hall at the old Ralong monastery.

Monk opens manuscript (2018-06-01) by UnknownDastkari Haat Samiti

The monks at the monastery are helpful and friendly, opening as many manuscript cases as required and even posing for pictures inside the Mahakala Hall, dedicated to Mahakali, a powerful female deity in the Hindu pantheon.

Monk arranging manuscripts (2018-06-01)Dastkari Haat Samiti

On the first floor of the old Ralong Monastery many treasures are stacked carefully, including hand written manuscripts on handmade paper, that are 300 years old.

Such valuable possessions, including carved portions of the old monastery will be carefully preserved in its museum being planned nearby.

Upper lid of old manuscript case (1904-10-15)Dastkari Haat Samiti

This 300-year old manuscript has a hand carved wooden casing which sandwiches the stack of handwritten sheets.

Detail of carving on manuscript lid (1904-10-15) by UnknownDastkari Haat Samiti

The underside of the wooden cover is carved as finely with images of the Buddha surrounded by the Karmapas serving him.

Old handmade paper manuscript (2018-06-01)Dastkari Haat Samiti

The manuscript inside the carved wooden covers, hand written on handmade paper, is said to have been written in 1750.

Detail of old manuscript (1904-10-15) by UnknownDastkari Haat Samiti

Similar script writing is taught to young monks in the monastery school on the premises.

Monks wrapping manuscripts (2018-06-01)Dastkari Haat Samiti

It takes two monks to carefully wrap the precious manuscript and pack it in its casing.

After the silk cord is wrapped around it tightly it is placed back in the cupboard full of manuscripts in this room called the library.

Monks at Ralong Monestry, Sikkim (2018-06-01)Dastkari Haat Samiti

As prayers for the morning are over, the younger monks disperse to play football, admire a motorcycle parked nearby, or pose for a photograph exuding style.

The wooden houses near them are old Bhutia houses, now preserved by the monastery for visitors to see.

Woman making paper at trough (2018-06-01) by Urmila GurungDastkari Haat Samiti

Borong-Polok handmade paper unit and production of daphne paper

Tucked away in the heavily forested areas of South Sikkim is a small but confident establishment called Borong-Polok Handmade Paper Unit, a community based project that sells its plant based papers to well-known Indian artists, and exports them to Australia, New Zealand and Thailand.

Handmade paper making in Sikkim (2018-06-01) by Borong-Polok Handmade paper unitDastkari Haat Samiti

Unlike other handmade paper units that use dung or scraps of textile, the Borung-Polok unit follows the Himalayan tradition of using a local grown plant.

In Nepal, the original paper making tribe called Kagate referred to the paper as kagati. It is also known as argeli, Edgeworthia gardneri, in Sikkim, lokta, Daphne bholua, in Nepal, which is a species of flowering shrub in the genus Daphne of the family Thymelaeaceae.

Whereas in other processes of paper making, each sheet taken out from the pulp is layered in between with a muslin cloth to prevent them from sticking to each other, the process of paper making out of the argeli plant in Sikkim interestingly covers the paper with the mucilage or slime from the okra plant as well as another plant they call chipley.

Each sheet is then pasted on individual trays and dried without any further calendaring.

Argeli plant brush in Sikkim (2018-06-01)Dastkari Haat Samiti

Many argeli plants grow along the roadside between the Ralong monastery and Borong, where the handmade paper making unit it located.

Argeli plant in Sikkim (2018-06-01)Dastkari Haat Samiti

Apart from use to make pulp for paper, the long stems of the argeli plant are also as string to tie bundles of harvested crop. It grows wild so many simply pluck them or grow them as crops to supply to the paper unit.

Inside the paper making workshop in Sikkim (2018-06-01) by Borong-Polok Handmade paper unitDastkari Haat Samiti

The Borong-Polok Handmade Papermaking unit is surprisingly compact and cosy.

Dried argeli plants are stored above the bamboo rafters on the roof.

Pulping machine at Sikkim (2018-06-01) by Borong-Polok Handmade paper unitDastkari Haat Samiti

There is one long work hall with an adjoining shed which houses the boiler, washing trough and pulper.

The pulping ‘machine’, as the head of the unit Jagannath Sharma calls it with a laugh, is the only component that is mechanical in the entire process.

Wooden paper press in Sikkim unit (2018-06-01) by Borong-Polok Handmade paper unitDastkari Haat Samiti

Inside the main work hall, a wooden contraption that looks like a child’s cradle is used to press the stacked sheets evenly after they have been removed from the pulp.

Pulp extracted from argeli plant (2018-06-01) by Borong-Polok Handmade paper unitDastkari Haat Samiti

After the argeli plant has been boiled and pulped it loses its earlier colour.

Handmade paper making in Sikkim (2018-06-01) by Borong-Polok Handmade paper unitDastkari Haat Samiti

The sheet making follows the Japanese practice of hanging the tray above the trough. Urmila Gurung is adept at manipulating the tray in the trough of pulp till it spreads evenly and can be removed.

Unlike in other systems, this needs only one person to work it.

Sheets of plant paper with a bamboo cover (2018-06-01) by Borong-Polok Handmade paper unitDastkari Haat Samiti

The sheets are laid out directly, one on top of the other, without a muslin sheet in between each paper. The application of slime from a plant locally called chitley or the slimy liquid from the uncooked okra is mixed with the pulp to avoid papers sticking together.

Argeli plant pulp in trough (2018-06-01) by Borong-Polok Handmade paper unitDastkari Haat Samiti

The tray that strains the pulp is made out of fine slats of bamboo like a loose mat. This sits in the frame sunk into the trough.

Woman making paper out of argeli plant pulp (2018-06-01) by Urmila GurungDastkari Haat Samiti

Urmila Gurung carefully transfers each sheet of paper from the bamboo tray to form an even pile that can be pressed together in the wooden presser.

Woman making paper out of argeli plant pulp (2018-06-01) by Borong-Polok Handmade paper unitDastkari Haat Samiti

After the papers are pressed they are laid individually onto tin trays with a broad brush. They remain stuck on their own.

The trays are hung inside and outside to become evenly flat as they dry out in the air and sun.

Handmade paper drying in Sikkim (2018-06-01) by Borong-Polok Handmade paper unitDastkari Haat Samiti

A large number of trays are used to dry out the sheets of paper. Some are hung in the clothesline technique inside if the weather is wet and cold outside.

Colours sheets of handmade paper in Sikkim (2018-06-01) by Borong-Polok Handmade paper unitDastkari Haat Samiti

Daphne paper made of Argeli Plant

Daphne paper made in this Japanese technique was used for manuscripts and official documents because of its smoothness on both sides, light weight. It does not get eaten by silver fish when stored over time and is practically acid-free.

Translucent argeli plant paper in Sikkim (2018-06-01) by Borong-Polok Handmade paper unitDastkari Haat Samiti

Argeli-made paper is special for its fine translucent quality. Looking through a sheet against the light, the faint silhouettes of the mountains can be seen, just as when through the mist.

Sheet of handmade paper (2018-06-01) by Borong-Polok Handmade paper unitDastkari Haat Samiti

Paper is made in many gauges according to the thickness required. The latter are used for writing or printing. Even thicker, they are good for book covers or carry bags.

Textured paper, Sikkim (2018-06-01) by Borong-Polok Handmade paper unitDastkari Haat Samiti

A rejected piece of argeli paper has a texture and charm of its own. It would be used as a lampshade or a notebook cover.

Colours sheets of handmade paper in Sikkim (2018-06-01) by Borong-Polok Handmade paper unitDastkari Haat Samiti

Coloured paper uses the only material that is not of natural origin in Borung. This is generally used for gift wrapping.

Handmade paper in Sikkim (2018-06-01) by Borong-Polok Handmade paper unitDastkari Haat Samiti

A pile of papers marked ‘Lama’ indicates it is ready to be dispatched to Rumtek Monastery, located near Gangtok in Sikkim, where monks still use it for sacred script writing.

Women workers at Borong-Polok Handmade paper unit (2018-06-01) by Borong-Polok Handmade paper unitDastkari Haat Samiti

Inside the hall workers come in according to the process that is to be undertaken that day. In this way, each works for 15 days in the month, and all do not need to come in at the same time.

Here Gita Sharma, Rabika Rai and Karnamaya work at the table making carry bags.

Colouring equipment on a tray (2018-06-01) by Borong-Polok Handmade paper unitDastkari Haat Samiti

On another table, equipment for those doing colouring work lies scattered about during their lunch break.

An artistic bird made of paper pulp (2018-07-01) by Jaganath SharmaDastkari Haat Samiti

The paper showrooms

These communities rely almost entirely on local materials that are easily replenished, reusable and recyclable. Everything grows naturally in the forests around them, or are cultivated by farmers in the vicinity. Borong-Polok Handmade Paper Unit sells its plant based papers to well-known Indian artists, and exports them to Australia, New Zealand and Thailand.

Assorted handmade paper notebooks (2018-07-01) by Borong-Polok Handmade paper unitDastkari Haat Samiti

In the brightly lit, cheerful showroom, coloured notebooks in varying sizes await customers.

Notebooks made in Sikkim (2018-07-01) by Borong-Polok Handmade paper unitDastkari Haat Samiti

Dip dyeing or brush painting techniques are used on handmade papers that enhance colours which soak in and spread.

Handmade paper is loved by artists, but cannot be too porous if needed for writing with a modern pen. Bamboo pens, ball points or roller pens are better for this purpose.

An artistic bird made of paper pulp (2018-07-01) by Jaganath SharmaDastkari Haat Samiti

Sharma, the head of the unit does not allow any material to go waste. He fashions waste pulp into birds, nests, twigs and plants and makes them into attractive art pieces for sale at the shop.

An artistic bird made of paper pulp (2018-07-01) by Jaganath SharmaDastkari Haat Samiti

The hillsides on the drive to Borong Polok resound with birdsong. Their music makes even talkative people fall silent. Around 550 species of birds live in the forests of Sikkim.

Handmade paper astrology book (2018-07-01) by Borong-Polok Handmade paper unitDastkari Haat Samiti

Printed book with astrological predictions at the Borong paper shop s demonstrates how well printing can be done on handmade paper made locally.

Handmade paper making unit shop in Sikkim (2018-06-01) by Borong-Polok Handmade paper unitDastkari Haat Samiti

The show room for Sikkim’s handmade paper is a happy jumble of creative expression found on sheets of paper, lampshades, notebooks, carry bags, colourful paper pulp birds and even standing lamps.

Handmade paper notebook (2018-06-01) by Elrhino Eco Industries Pvt. Ltd.Dastkari Haat Samiti

Read more about Handmade paper making in India here:-
-Elephant dung paper in Rajasthan

Rhinocerous dung paper in Assam
Credits: Story

Text: Jaya Jaity
Photography: Chirodeep Chaudhuri, Subinoy Das, Charu Verma, Rajeev Kumar,
Artisans: Kumarappa National Handmade Paper Institute, Salim Kagzi,Vijender Singh Shekhawat, Mahesh Bora, Borung-Polok, Jamyang Dorjee, Rajeev Kumar, Qamar Dagar, Irshad Hussain Farooqi, Ram Soni
Ground Facilitator: Jaya Jaitly, Charu Verma, Subinoy Das
Documentary Video: Charu Verma, Chirodeep Chaudhuri, Subinoy Das, Jaya Jaitly
Curation: Ruchira Verma


Read more about handmade paper and calligraphy here:

-Research and Technology
-Production
-Products
-Calligraphy in Sikkim
-Rajeev Kumar
-Qamar Dagar
-Irshad Farooqui
-Sanjhi

Credits: All media
The story featured may in some cases have been created by an independent third party and may not always represent the views of the institutions, listed below, who have supplied the content.
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