RE:bihar should be made national museum
by Mind Your Business on Feb 03, 2008 11:26 AM Permalink
Please include West Bengal for its mad ideologies and laziness.
RE:bihar should be made national museum
by your name on Feb 03, 2008 11:50 AM Permalink
@ I agree with you soma, and in support I have following arguments..
Bihar, the ancient land of Buddha, For its geographical location, natural beauty, mythological and historical importance, Bihar feels proud of the assets it has been gifted by time. And for its moral contributions in the fields of arts-literature and religion and spiritualism. The state is the same kingdom, which once upon a time ruled the country as well as the neighbouring countries . Many great rulers have lived here and it fills us with a sense of pride when we think of Bihar as the 'Karmabhumi' of Buddha and Mahavir.It is the same land where the seeds of the first republic were sown and which cultivated the first crop of democracy. It was from Bihar that Mahatma Gandhi launched his civil-disobedience movement, which ultimately led to India's independence.
The state as it is today has been shaped from its partition from the province of Bengal and most recently after the separation of the tribal southern region now called Jharkhand. When separated from the Bengal Presidency in 1912, Bihar and Orissa comprised a single province. Later, under the Government of India Act of 1935, the Division of Orissa became a separate province; and the Province of Bihar came into being as an administrative unit of British India. At Independence in 1947, the State of Bihar, with the same geographic boundary, formed a part of the Republic of India, until 1956. At that time, an area in the south-east, predominantly t
RE:bihar should be made national museum
by your name on Feb 03, 2008 11:48 AM Permalink
Yes ofcourse and in support here is the argument
Bihar, the ancient land of Buddha, For its geographical location, natural beauty, mythological and historical importance, Bihar feels proud of the assets it has been gifted by time. And for its moral contributions in the fields of arts-literature and religion and spiritualism. The state is the same kingdom, which once upon a time ruled the country as well as the neighbouring countries . Many great rulers have lived here and it fills us with a sense of pride when we think of Bihar as the 'Karmabhumi' of Buddha and Mahavir.It is the same land where the seeds of the first republic were sown and which cultivated the first crop of democracy. It was from Bihar that Mahatma Gandhi launched his civil-disobedience movement, which ultimately led to India's independence.
The state as it is today has been shaped from its partition from the province of Bengal and most recently after the separation of the tribal southern region now called Jharkhand. When separated from the Bengal Presidency in 1912, Bihar and Orissa comprised a single province. Later, under the Government of India Act of 1935, the Division of Orissa became a separate province; and the Province of Bihar came into being as an administrative unit of British India. At Independence in 1947, the State of Bihar, with the same geographic boundary, formed a part of the Republic of India, until 1956. At that time, an area in the south-east, predominantly the district of Purulia