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Subrat SaurabhAuthor of Kuch Woh PalDr. Jyoti Chandra, former head and associate professor of the Department of History, Arya Girls College, Ambala Cantt, is an academician with rich teaching experience. She is a teacher and scholar of wide interdisciplinary interests and is constantly engaged in research activities and regularly contributes articles on various subjects in journals and magazines. She has been invited to many universities abroad to give lectures and has attended and presented many papers in China, Sweden, Norway, Mauritius, Bangladesh and Singapore. She has to her credit many books, famous being Annie Besant fromRead More...
Dr. Jyoti Chandra, former head and associate professor of the Department of History, Arya Girls College, Ambala Cantt, is an academician with rich teaching experience. She is a teacher and scholar of wide interdisciplinary interests and is constantly engaged in research activities and regularly contributes articles on various subjects in journals and magazines. She has been invited to many universities abroad to give lectures and has attended and presented many papers in China, Sweden, Norway, Mauritius, Bangladesh and Singapore. She has to her credit many books, famous being Annie Besant from Theosophy to Nationalism and Revisioning of Indian Nationalism. She is also working on other projects and books and is continuously updating her knowledge with further research and studies in the areas of her interest.
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The journey of a lifetime unfolds as 4,50,000 people from different parts of India and 136 from Haryana state signed contracts as indentured labourers in Mauritius, with dreams in their eyes, not knowing what the future had in store for them. With an expression of pain and frustration writ large on their faces, they carve a niché for themselves amidst all things alien. They passed these hurdles with aplomb due to their strong cultural roots. This important pa
The journey of a lifetime unfolds as 4,50,000 people from different parts of India and 136 from Haryana state signed contracts as indentured labourers in Mauritius, with dreams in their eyes, not knowing what the future had in store for them. With an expression of pain and frustration writ large on their faces, they carve a niché for themselves amidst all things alien. They passed these hurdles with aplomb due to their strong cultural roots. This important part of history must be reanalysed and reconstructed.
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