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I hate my village – i hate my village
I hate my village – i hate my village












i hate my village – i hate my village

The state government, then headed by current Prime Minister Narendra Modi, said a majority of the dead were karsevak (volunteers) who had gone to Ayodhya to campaign for the construction of a temple dedicated to Hindu God Ram at the exact site where a Mughal-era mosque was demolished by a Hindu mob in 1992. On February 27, 2002, a train carrying a large number of Hindu pilgrims returning from the northern holy town of Ayodhya stopped at Godhra, a small town in Gujarat’s Panchmahal district, about 150km (93 miles) from the state capital, Gandhinagar.įollowing a reported altercation between the Muslim vendors working at the station and passengers inside the Sabarmati Express, the details of which are still not clear, a fire engulfed one of the coaches of the train, killing 59 people. Leaving village ‘our ancestor once saved’

i hate my village – i hate my village

Reason: a pogrom against Gujarat’s Muslims in 2002. Nearly 165 years later, Makrani’s kin cannot return to the village of their illustrious and celebrated forefathers. The British saw him as the last man standing in the battle and fired cannonballs at the tower.

i hate my village – i hate my village

The shrine of freedom fighter Shah Beg Makrani in Mudeti village Īs the British forces attacked Mudeti to topple its ruler and crush his supporters, Makrani stationed himself on top of a tower from where his arrows took down the British soldiers. And Makrani – who according to legend was a master archer despite having leprosy in the lower part of his body – was its hero. One such battle was fought in Mudeti, a tiny princely state ruled by a Hindu Thakur family. The many battles fought in 1857 against the colonial forces – often called India’s first war of independence – have become subjects of folklore in the country.

i hate my village – i hate my village

In 1857, a rebellion against the British rule spread across the Indian subcontinent, with many mutineers pledging allegiance to either their regional kings or the crumbling Mughal throne. Mudeti (Gujarat), India – Tucked away in a corner of Mudeti, a village 124km (77 miles) from Gujarat state’s main city of Ahmedabad in western India, lies a mazaar (shrine) of Shah Beg Makrani, a Muslim freedom fighter revered in the region.














I hate my village – i hate my village