[Assam] /Avibasi politics
DR BIKASH KUMAR DAS
biku006 at yahoo.co.in
Thu Dec 13 08:16:55 PST 2007
Dear Santanoo-
You did go more further to the drilling well now.
Yes then I would like to say about the most ugly part of Numaligarh refienery interview.All the candidates from Darrang, Kamrup & Nalbari was beaten up left and right by the so caled locals!! This was true.They were asked to take the immediate next bus.Can anyone in US imagine?
While we fought for local etc, the Jha jee, Ojha jee,Sinha jee,Bose dada,Chattopadhyay kaku,Mukhopadhyay dadu, Sen dada got the job.
In another point I would be clear that for Assam concerned I am very straight.All state got their official language strictly imposed and all need to speak and write.But in Assam???? Even some one can see the APSC application form- how many Indian language including Nepali and Bangladeshi mentioned on it!! Can anyone say how many state in general got school /colleges in other states? How many Assamese medium schols in any one state of India??? Not a single one.What ever was in Barak valey was burnt down in 1972.WE have large Nepali medium schools, Bengalee is as its going on,Now Bihari mediums too including new new Madrasas!!! This is why I said Assam is the only place to apply Indian constitutional rights. ALL BECAUSE THE STATE MACHINERY/BABUS/NETA'S ARE HOPELESS.All wanted the Delhi Laddu to live.(Grant/sanctions). One fine day again we will see Assam as it was from 1832-1876- while al was controlled from then Decca. And those people are still dominating the region
badly. I dnt fear to anyone as its my birth right.
"Our Assamese language no doubt is one of the most oldest languages supposed to come from Europe.Ironically it does not resemble with any languages and Bengalee also derives from it.The following links will give some scientific data.
Through the numerous websites containing historical information, I find that both Assamese and Bengalee scripts belong to the Brahmic family of scripts. The script was originally not associated with any particular language, but was prevalent as the script of choice in east India. Among the various different regional variations within this script, only the Assamese and Bengali variations exist today in the formalized system.
Probably members of here would like to throw some light on this.
On Assamese script : http://en.wikipedia .org/wiki/ Assamese_ script
On Bengalee script : http://en.wikipedia .org/wiki/ Bengali_script
Lets know our past too.
Bikash
Santanoo Medhi <khun_santa at hotmail.com> wrote:
on the contray, I had faced "local" and "non local" problem while I was working in Duliazan. you see I am from guwahati and hence not local.
santanoo
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