| 
           | 
      
        | 
            
            
            
            
                      
             |   
          
          
          
          Patna, Jan 15 (IANS) After being neglected for decades, the   birthplace of George Orwell, the legendary British author of cult classics like   "Animal Farm" and "1984", is set for renovation as the Bihar government has   issued a notification declaring it as a protected site. Motihari magistrate Narmadeshwar Lal told IANS over telephone   that the government notification has made it clear that Orwell's birthplace has   been enlisted by the art and culture department for protection. |  
  
      
	  
	  
	  "The district administration has begun renovation work," Lal said.
 Orwell   was born Eric Arthur Blair in 1903 at his ancestral home in Motihari district,   near India's border with Nepal. His father, Richard Blair, worked as an agent of   the opium department of the Indian Civil Service during British rule.
 
 The   single-storey house where Orwell spent his childhood has been lying neglected   for decades. The crumbling building is home to stray animals and vagabonds. A   small portion was taken over by the state government and a schoolteacher now   lives there.
 
 Lal said the state government has sanctioned a sum of Rs.29   lakh (Rs 2.9 million/35,000 pounds) for its renovation. "More money is likely to   be sanctioned in the coming days," he said.
 
 The notification for its   protection has been issued under the provisions of the Ancient Monuments   (Protection) Act, 1976.
 
 According to the notification issued by the   government, the district administration has been directed to start renovation   work immediately with the aim of attracting tourists.
 
 District officials   as well as local residents say Orwell's birthplace was on the verge of ruin.   "The house is in a dilapidated condition," they said.
 
 It has been   reported time and again that the roofline has bowed and buckled due to years of   rain, while a large grapefruit tree has undermined the southern   wall.
 
 Only the stone floor looks solid, though it cracked during an   earthquake that almost levelled Motihari in 1934.
 
 At present, there is   nothing to tell visitors that this modest two-room house was where Orwell spent   the first few months of his life, tended to by his mother, Ida, and an Indian   maid. Orwell and his mother left for Britain soon after.
     
      
     comments... |  
   |