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          New Delhi, July 1 (IANS) He might have been forgotten in his   homeland, but poet, writer and doyen of Bhojpuri theatre Bhikhari Thakur's   ballads and folk songs are garnering huge appreciation in places as far apart as   Mauritius and France.
 A musical album titled "The Legacy of Bhikhari   Thakur" was released by Mauritius Prime Minister Anil Kumar Bachoo at a function   in Port Louis in Mauritius earlier this month.
 
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        Singer Kalpana Patowary launched the musical documentation album with nine   tracks together with London-based Virgin Records/EMI Music. It will be launched   in London in August and later in the year in Trinidad and South Africa. The   album is even available online and has evoked a lot of interest on the   web.
 Kalpana says Bhojpuri is spoken in 14 nations around the world. The   language, primarily, spoken in Bihar and Eastern Uttar Pradesh spread to across   the world as Indians were taken to the British, French and Dutch colonies around   the world. It was the language and cultural traditions that gave the Indian   workers their identity.
 
 Bhojpuri is understood and spoken in Mauritius,   Trinidad, South Africa, Suriname, Guyana, Fiji as well as among the migrant   communities in Canada, the US, Britain and Australia.
 
 "I want Bhojpuri   music to go international. In Mauritius people of Indian origin speak   traditional Bhojpuri - the original Bhojpuri as it was spoken a hundred years   ago. It is now mixed with some Creole and French words," said Kalpana.
 
 "The people in Mauritius understand the songs; the 'bidesi' songs of   migration - of leaving the family home and going away to find work, touch a deep   chord among the listeners. They get emotional listening to the songs from   India," she added.
 
 Legendary cultural personality Bhikhari Thakur was   often called the Shakespeare of Bhojpuri literature for he led the renaissance   in Bhojpuri folk music and launched a folk theatre movement.
 
 Bhikhari   Thakur was born in a backward, barber community in Kutubpur village of Saran   district in Bihar in 1887. Unlettered and practically illiterate when he left   home and went to Kolkata for work, he educated himself and began writing poetry   with an emphasis on social issues.
 
 After returning to native Bihar,   Thakur wrote about social-ills such as child marriages and wove them into folk   songs. His best known work is the creation of the theatre form 'Bidesia' on the   lines of 'Jatra' in Bengal.
 
 Kalpana tried to locate the old songs of   Bhikhari Thakur talking to folk artists and singers in the small towns and   villages of Bihar. But it was a fortuitous meeting with an old man in a remote   village called Bakhorapur in Arrah district, Bihar that opened the wealth of   Bhikhari Thakur's oeuvre for her.
 
 Kalpana was in the village for a   cultural show when a few local artists were called to sing a few songs before   she began her own performance. Among the singers was a 95-year-old artist, whose   rustic songs had a very different presentation that had a powerful   appeal.
 
 It turned out that he was from the original Bhikhari Thakur   mandali. He helped Kalpana record many of the legendary poet's songs in their   original 'thekas' (rhythms) and style of presentation.
 
 Kalpana could   extract additional information through "Bhikhari Thakur Rachnawali", the only   written material about the great folk traditionalist.
 
 "I am trying to   bring out the original vibrancy and richness of the Bhikhari Thakur folk forms   so that people from the world over can experience the originality and richness   of Bhojpuri music," said Kalpana.
 
    
	
	
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