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          .Patna, Aug 11 (IANS) They came all the way from West Bengal to   Bihar's Muzaffarpur district to pay homage to Khudiram Bose on his death   anniversary Thursday. One of them has been doing so for 16 years and rues that   the powers that be have forgotten one of India's youngest revolutionaries.
 
 
 |  Seven villagers from Bose's native Bahuvaini village in Bengal's Midnapore   district attended his martyrdom day function in Muzaffarpur in Bihar, where he   was hanged by the British Aug 11, 1908. 
 And they had a special request   for the chief ministers of the two states.
 
 "We have urged the Bihar   government to send a proposal to railway ministry to rename Muzaffarpur junction   as Khudiram junction," said Prakash Haldhar, one of the villagers who arrived   Wednesday.
 
 "We will meet West Bengal Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee, who   is a former railway minister, to help rename Muzaffarpur junction as Khudiram   junction and take up the issue with her Bihar counterpart Nitish Kumar, who is   also a former railway minister," Haldhar told IANS on telephone.
 
 Haldhar   has been visiting Muzaffarpur for 16 years to attend Bose's death anniversary.   "I have been coming since 1995. How can we forget him...he is our hero, an ideal   martyr," he said.
 
 Haldhar and other villagers, including Ashok Dattokhan,   Adhir Kumar Rahi and Madhuri Haldhar, are not happy with the way Khudiram Bose's   sacrifices were noted with just a token official commemoration in Muzaffarpur   town, about 70 km from here.
 
 "He is now just another forgotten hero as   none of the state's ministers attended the function. It was attended by   officials, including the district magistrate, superintendent of police and   deputy inspector general, who paid floral tributes and visited the Khudiram Bose   Memorial Central Jail where he was hanged," Madhuri Haldhar said.
 
 She   said none of the state's ministers, and certainly not Nitish Kumar, honoured   him. His 100th martyrdom day was also low-key affair in Muzaffarpur.
 
 "It   stunned me that ministers missed the occasion to pay homage. They have time to   waste on silly issues, but not to remember a revolutionary," said Arun Singh,   who has written a book on the martyr.
 
 "The state government did not even   come out with an advertisement on the occasion to honour Bose," he   added.
 
 Bose was born Dec 3, 1889 in Bahuvaini village. He was one of the   youngest revolutionaries in the early Indian independence movement and sent to   the gallows when he was just 19.
 
 Disillusioned with the British following   the partition of Bengal, Bose joined Jugantar - a party of revolutionary   activists. He and Prafulla Chaki were sent to Muzaffarpur to assassinate Douglas   Kingsford, magistrate of Calcutta Presidency and later the magistrate of   Muzaffarpur.
 
 On April 13, 1908, assisted by Chaki, Bose threw a bomb at a   carriage that was supposed to be carrying Kingsford, but unfortunately, instead   of the British official, two women travelling in the carriage were   killed.
 
 Chaki was caught after the attack but shot himself. Bose was   arrested a day later and fearlessly confessed that he had thrown the bomb to   punish the British. He was sentenced to death and hanged.
 
 
 
      
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