Wednesday, March 11, 2026
ADVT 
India

India's self-proclaimed 'history hunter' is on a drive to salvage the past for future generations

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 02 Jun, 2025 01:48 PM
  • India's self-proclaimed 'history hunter' is on a drive to salvage the past for future generations

NEW DELHI (AP) — Cameras from a bygone era. Rusty typewriters. Vintage radios. Matchboxes once used to light contraband cigarettes.

In an age of new technology and artificial intelligence, a visit to the New Delhi home of Aditya Vij is like stepping into a time machine. Every corner of his museum feels like a carefully constructed history chapter.

The anthropologist is an avid collector of artifacts and has dedicated his life to antiquities. Over decades, he has doggedly collected thousands of items that span several centuries and documented their relevance and the impact they have had on society.

Each collectable he has salvaged feels like a victory against time, Vij says, underscoring his belief that maybe one individual's attempts can quietly resist their erasure from people’s memory.

The deepest emotion I feel while collecting these items is the sense of satisfaction that I managed to save a piece of history,” said Vij, during an interview surrounded by his priceless collection of vintage cameras and gramophones.

The excitement of the hunt

Fossils of fish, snails, tadpoles and fern leaves that date back millions of years are Vij's most ancient items. But he has a passion for another trove of objects that date back to around 1915: thousands upon thousands of matchboxes.

His obsession began at the age of 8 when he discovered his first matchbox while wandering on the roads with his father. Today, the 51-year-old possesses more than 22,000 matchboxes.

A few of them are over a century old and their cover labels showcase different forms of religious representations and political scenarios of the times they were produced.

“It is not just the possession of these trinkets, but the process of hunting for them is what adds a layer of excitement for me,” Vij said, adding that matchboxes symbolize different cultures at different times.

'Vigilance and quick action'

He says the preservation of memory through these collectables pushes people to think about the craftsmanship of a time where life was slower and decisions were more deliberate.

Some of his possessions were acquired by a chance.

Many years ago, Vij says, he spotted a scrap dealer about to break an old radio with a hammer. He shouted from across the street and stopped the man. The scrap dealer, taken by surprise, explained how he would get good money out of the parts. Vij offered to buy it. Today, that radio sits amongst his existing collection of vintages.

“Thirty more seconds and I would have lost it, and sometimes that’s what it takes — vigilance and quick action,” he said.

Vij describes his journey that of a man "who links the past to the future" and aspires to create a museum out of his house that will act as a physical space where younger generations get to learn about innovations from the past.

Otherwise, Vij says, these unassuming objects would be forever lost in the vast expanse of new technology.

“What was once familiar has become rare, often forgotten, and has left behind only traces of nostalgia and memories," he said.

‘Urgency to preserve history

Vij also gets requests from parents who want him to show their children how his collectables were put in use during the past. Some want their children to see how a typewriter works, or how pictures were clicked using a film camera.

Others come to see how some household devices used to operate, like the rotary telephones, tube radios, pressing irons, ice cream makers, and lanterns.

“When they (kids) tell me how they had no idea about the existence of these objects, that is when I feel a stronger urgency to preserve history," he said.

Over the past few years, Vij says, technology has evolved rapidly and the gadgets from his childhood were made obsolete overnight. He believes archiving them is necessary.

"I hope the younger generations realize the importance of history and carry it forward by preserving it,” he said

Picture Courtesy: AP Photo/Manish Swarup

MORE India ARTICLES

Punjab to be developed as most preferred tourist destination: Mann

Punjab to be developed as most preferred tourist destination: Mann
Punjab Chief Minister Bhagwant Singh Mann on Monday announced the development of the state as the most preferred global tourist destination. Addressing the gathering during the inaugural function of first Tourism Summit and Travel Mart in Mohali, near here, the Chief Minister said he firmly believes that governments will come and go but the works of public welfare must be given topmost priority so that you get good wishes and prayers from the public.

Punjab to be developed as most preferred tourist destination: Mann

9 looted arms, huge quantities of explosives recovered in Manipur

9 looted arms, huge quantities of explosives recovered in Manipur
Combined security forces recovered nine looted arms, two locally made guns, 10 different types of ammunition, and a large quantities of explosives from Manipur's Churachandpur, Imphal East and Thoubal districts, it was announced on Monday. Manipur Police also said on Monday night that the situation in different parts of the state was more or less normal except some sporadic incidents.

9 looted arms, huge quantities of explosives recovered in Manipur

Mumbai's 'fugitive scam couple': Police freeze more bank accounts, properties

Mumbai's 'fugitive scam couple': Police freeze more bank accounts, properties
Moving ahead in the investigations, the Mumbai Police’s Economic Offences Wing (EOW) has frozen another 11 banks accounts and five prime properties purportedly owned by absconding scamster couple Ashesh Mehta and his wife Shivangi Lad-Mehta, officials said on Monday. The five residential properties, worth an estimated Rs 16 crore, are in Kandivali, Goregaon, and Santacruz, while 11 bank accounts of the Mehta couple and their companies have also been frozen.

Mumbai's 'fugitive scam couple': Police freeze more bank accounts, properties

1984 anti-Sikh riots case: Delhi magisterial court commits case against Jagdish Tytler to sessions court

1984 anti-Sikh riots case: Delhi magisterial court commits case against Jagdish Tytler to sessions court
A Delhi court on Monday said that offences against Congress leader Jagdish Tytler, an accused in the Pul Bangash killings during the 1984 anti-Sikh riots here, are exclusively triable by the sessions court and committed the file to Principal District and Sessions Judge of Rouse Avenue Court.

1984 anti-Sikh riots case: Delhi magisterial court commits case against Jagdish Tytler to sessions court

Punjab fails to rein in drug abuse: Congress leader Bajwa

Punjab fails to rein in drug abuse: Congress leader Bajwa
The Leader of Opposition in Punjab, Partap Singh Bajwa, on Monday condemned the Aam Aadmi Party government in Punjab for its sheer inability to rein in the rapidly growing drug abuse in the state. “Under the 18-month regime of AAP, Punjab has been on the verge of becoming a drug capital of the country,” Bajwa said in a statement here.  

Punjab fails to rein in drug abuse: Congress leader Bajwa

Air India deploys SAOs at 16 major Indian airports for on-ground assistance

Air India deploys SAOs at 16 major Indian airports for on-ground assistance
This comes under Air India ‘Project Abhinandan’ aimed at providing personalised and hassle-free on-ground experience to its guests at airports. The officers will be deployed at Ahmedabad, Bengaluru, Calicut, Chennai, Delhi, Goa, Guwahati, Hyderabad, Kochi, Kolkata, Lucknow, Mumbai, Nagpur, Pune, Varanasi, and Visakhapatnam.

Air India deploys SAOs at 16 major Indian airports for on-ground assistance