New mission for manuscripts announced in Union Budget
The Hindu
To accommodate the ‘Gyan Bharatam Mission’, budget allocation for the National Manuscripts Mission (NMM) has been hiked from ₹3.5 crore to ₹60 crore.
The Union Budget 2025-26 announced a special mission for the survey, documentation, and conservation of India’s manuscript heritage. Launched as the ‘Gyan Bharatam Mission’, it intends to cover more than one crore manuscripts.
The ‘Gyan Bharatam Mission’ is for undertaking the “survey, documentation and conservation” of India’s manuscript heritage lying with academic institutions, museums, libraries, and private collectors, Union Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman said in her budget speech.
To accommodate this new initiative, the budget allocation for the National Manuscripts Mission (NMM), whose aim is to identify and document manuscripts and make the manuscript heritage accessible across the country, has been hiked from ₹3.5 crore to ₹60 crore.
The Hindu had reported last October that the Union Ministry of Culture was set to “revive and relaunch” the National Mission for Manuscripts (NMM) and was mulling the formation of an autonomous body to help preserve ancient texts in India.
Presently, NMM is a part of the Indira Gandhi National Centre for Arts. It was set up in 2003, but had not taken off as expected.
Welcoming the move, Union Culture Minister Gajendra Singh Shekhawat said that the new mission “announced by Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman today will enable Bharat to preserve and protect the invaluable wisdom and knowledge held by these manuscripts found across the country”.
The overall allocation for the Culture Ministry has been increased by approximately ₹100 crore with a total outlay of ₹3,360.96 crore as against the revised estimate of ₹3,260.93 crore in the current fiscal.
The Budget has proposed the setting up of a Maritime Development Fund to support India’s maritime sector by providing financial assistance, via equity or debt securities, which will directly benefit in financing for ship acquisition and aims at boosting Indian-flagged ships’ share in the global cargo volume up to 20% by 2047.