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Subrat SaurabhAuthor of Kuch Woh Pal“In the ancient times of Chin –Lushai countries, there was a paramount shrine built in honor of Gautama Buddha on the bank of Gat- Shaba, Kolodan river in Arakan, Myanmar, which is obliterated from the human mind and remained unknown and forgotten. Near to this place, Alikadam, on the confluence of the river Matamuri was the ancient capital of Chakma Kings, and the last one was known ‘ Raja’, Shasta. The descendants, are now meandering to look at, which is their life purpose, to be in this world, but not of it. A capsule history of the notion of Buddhism has been explicitly narrated- that is the supreme of their way of living.
Sakya Prasad Talukdar
S.P Talukdar’s life journey began as sea-farer visiting fascinating places around the world on an international sea-broker’s Cargo vessel, but sheered (his) life course by opting an administrative officer post, in the government of Assam in the year 1968 and later on in the government of Mizoram, and in time opted voluntary retirement of the post Director of Relief and Rehabilitation. Further on, he took up the clutch of religiosity that led him to different Buddhist schism outside India, but not engaging with it. Although Buddhism has disappeared from its origin, the notion of original Buddhism has been depicted by him. The macrocosm of the universe of Gautama Buddha’s doctrine through compassion represents the retrieval of human memory of the ancient Buddhist race now taken the shape of a tribe- in what way?
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