What Madhav says is very true. I was fortunate that someone who happened to be 
Pakistan obtained copies of two manuscripts of the Manusmṛti in the lat 1990s 
from the Panjab University Library in Lahore (La1 and La2 in my edition). I do 
hope some international funding will be available to digitize these before they 
all turn to dust.

Patrick



On Dec 13, 2025, at 10:07 AM, Madhav Deshpande via INDOLOGY 
<[email protected]> wrote:

Thanks, Antonia,

    This is a nice detailed article. Many years ago, when I was searching for 
manuscripts of the Śaunakīya Caturādhyayika, I saw a reference to a manuscript 
in the Lahore University library. I contacted the librarian, and he responded 
by saying that there are many rooms filled with Sanskrit manuscripts, but no 
one knows what they are. He was generous in offering to help me if I could come 
to Lahore. Due to my home circumstances that did not materialize. I hope 
someday the collection of Sanskrit manuscripts in Pakistan would be digitized 
and made available for researchers.

Madhav

Madhav M. Deshpande
Professor Emeritus, Sanskrit and Linguistics
University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan, USA
Senior Fellow, Oxford Center for Hindu Studies
Adjunct Professor, National Institute of Advanced Studies, Bangalore, India

[Residence: Campbell, California, USA]


On Sat, Dec 13, 2025 at 7:26 AM Antonia Ruppel via INDOLOGY 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
The Tribune article shows up for me without any issues, but perhaps that's 
because I am in the EU? At any rate, I've pasted the text below:



The teaching of Sanskrit has quietly returned to classrooms in the Islamic 
Republic of Pakistan for the first time since Partition, with the Lahore 
University of Management Sciences (LUMS) introducing a course in the classical 
language. What began as a three-month weekend workshop gradually evolved into a 
full four-credit university course after the overwhelming response it received.


Dr Ali Usman Qasmi, Director of the Gurmani Centre, told The Tribune that 
Pakistan houses one of the richest but least-studied Sanskrit archives at the 
Punjab University library. “A significant collection of Sanskrit palm-leaf 
manuscripts were catalogued in the 1930s by scholar JCR Woolner, but no 
Pakistani academic has engaged with this collection since 1947. Only foreign 
researchers use it. Training scholars locally will change that,” he says.


The LUMS also plans to offer courses on the Mahabharata and the Bhagavad Gita. 
“Hopefully, this sets a momentum,” says Dr Qasmi. “In 10-15 years, we could see 
Pakistan-based scholars of the Gita and the Mahabharata.”


Dr Qasmi said initially, a weekend programme was offered that was open to 
everyone--students, researchers, lawyers and academics. “After we saw the 
response, we decided to introduce it as a proper university course. Even though 
the number of students is still small, we hope it will grow over the next few 
years. Ideally, by spring 2027, we should be able to teach the language as a 
year-long course.”

At the heart of the initiative is Dr Shahid Rasheed, Associate Professor of 
sociology at Forman Christian College, whose interest in Sanskrit began long 
before the LUMS approached him. “Classical languages contain much wisdom for 
mankind. I started with learning Arabic and Persian, and then studied 
Sanskrit,” he told The Tribune. With no local teachers or textbooks, he turned 
to online platforms, studying under Cambridge Sanskrit scholar Antonia Ruppel 
and Australian Indologist McComas Taylor. “It took almost a year to cover 
classical Sanskrit grammar. And I’m still studying it.”

After Dr Qasmi reached out, Dr Rasheed took a sabbatical from FC College to 
teach the course at the LUMS. “I mainly teach grammar. When I was teaching 
‘subhashitas’, the wisdom verses or shlokas, many of my students were 
fascinated to discover that so many Urdu words come from Sanskrit. Many didn’t 
even know that Sanskrit was different from Hindi. In the first week, they found 
it a challenging language. But once they grasped the logical structure, they 
started enjoying it. The pleasure of solving something difficult is immense,” 
he says.

“Modern languages derive from classical traditions. There is just a veil that 
separates them--once you cross it, you realise they are all our own,” adds Dr 
Rasheed.

Dr Qasmi explains that the initiative also aligns with the university’s broader 
language ecosystem, which includes Sindhi, Pashto, Punjabi, Baluchi, Arabic and 
Persian. “We understand the importance of connecting with this incredible 
tradition, which is part of the Pakistani-Indian global heritage. So much of 
our literature, poetry, art and philosophy go back to the Vedic age. Many 
historians believe that the Vedas were written in this region. It then becomes 
even more important to read the classical texts in their original language.”

Despite the political sensitivities involved, both scholars believe the 
intellectual climate is shifting. Dr Rasheed often encounters curiosity about 
his own study of the language. “People ask me why I’m learning Sanskrit. I tell 
them, why should we not learn it? It is the binding language of the entire 
region. Sanskrit grammarian Panini’s village was in this region. Much writing 
was done here during the Indus Valley Civilisation. Sanskrit is like a 
mountain--a cultural monument. We need to own it. It is ours too; it’s not tied 
to any one particular religion.”

“If we want people to come closer, then it’s essential to understand and absorb 
our rich classical traditions. Imagine if more Hindus and Sikhs in India 
started learning Arabic, and more Muslims in Pakistan took up Sanskrit, it 
could be a fresh, hopeful start for South Asia, where languages become bridges 
instead of barriers,” concludes Dr Rasheed.

On Sat, 13 Dec 2025 at 14:55, Shrinivas Tilak 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
Members of the Indology group often provide links to very interesting topics 
pertaining to Sanskrit etc to a newspaper in India. Unfortunately, there is a 
torrent of ads that you need to negotiate before you finally are able to reach 
to the story. I am often tempted to give up and not proceed. Is there some way 
to archive the story in an ads-free location?

On Saturday, December 13, 2025 at 12:20:39 a.m. EST, Ananya Vajpeyi via 
INDOLOGY <[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> 
wrote:


Congratulations are in order then, Antonia!
Warm best,
AV.

On Sat, Dec 13, 2025 at 2:02 AM Antonia Ruppel via INDOLOGY 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
Dear Madhav,

Thank you for sharing this! Here's the original piece in the Tribune that The 
Wire is referring to:

https://www.tribuneindia.com/news/india/sanskrit-returns-to-pak-varsity-first-time-since-partition/

Shahid Rasheed, who is behind this initiative, is a true polymath and 
co-founder of a school trust 
(https://i-care-foundation.org/charity/zaawiya-trust-school/). I think he began 
learning Sanskrit with McComas and has been doing Latin and Greek (and some 
more Sanskrit) with me at Yogic Studies for a while now.

Antonia

On Thu, 11 Dec 2025 at 17:05, Madhav Deshpande via INDOLOGY 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
A Welcome Development: 
https://thewire.in/south-asia/in-a-first-since-independence-a-pakistan-university-is-teaching-sanskrit

Madhav M. Deshpande
Professor Emeritus, Sanskrit and Linguistics
University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan, USA
Senior Fellow, Oxford Center for Hindu Studies
Adjunct Professor, National Institute of Advanced Studies, Bangalore, India

[Residence: Campbell, California, USA]

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--
Ananya Vajpeyi
https://www.csds.in/ananya_vajpeyi





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