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          Purnea (Bihar), Nov 24 (IANS) Days after the execution of   Pakistani national Ajmal Amir Kasab for the 2008 Mumbai terror attack, the   people of Pakistan are in a celebratory mode.There is a village in Bihar   that bears the same name as India's neighbour, Pakistan, and in that little   village, with about 35 households and a total population of about 250, residents   are happy that justice has finally been done to a man responsible for so many   deaths four years ago.
 
 |  Pakistan is the name of a village in Singhiya panchayat, Srinagar block, Purnea   district, Bihar. It is about 30 km from Purnea town, the district   headquarters.
 "People in Pakistan not only distributed sweets and burst   crackers but also plan to organise a feast soon to celebrate the hanging of the   terrorist," said a police officer in Purnea, about 350 km from the state   capital.
 
 Surya Murmu, an upbeat Pakistan villager, said: "We were in a   festive mood after hearing of the hanging and we celebrated the event with   singing, dancing and distribution of sweets."
 
 Another villager, Banjua   Hembram, said: "We have to get together and have a feast. This is an event that   calls for celebration."
 
 Murmu recalled that after 26/11, when 166 people   were killed by Pakistani terrorists in Mumbai, the villagers had even considered   changing the name of their village.
 
 That terrorist strike had been one   that had shaken up the village community, Hembram agreed.
 
 "We were so   terribly affected by the events of November 26, 2008 that we had decided that it   would be best to change the name of the village. The matter was discussed, but   we later dropped the idea," Murmu recalls.
 
 District officials say that   government documents record the name of the village as Pakistan.
 
 So how   did the village get its name? What is interesting is that there is not one   Muslim family in the village, which comprises mostly Santhal tribal households.   There is not one mosque in this Pakistan.
 
 Elders in the village recall   that the village was named soon after India's partition in 1947.
 
 "Many   Muslims who earlier lived here chose to leave for East Pakistan (now   Bangladesh), when the country was partitioned. We decided then that the village   could be named in their memory," one elderly villager said.
 
 An official   in the chief minister's office told this correspondent that when Chief Minister   Nitish Kumar informed a visiting 21-member Pakistani delegation in August that   there was a village named after their country in the state, the delegation   expressed surprise.
 
 In that visiting Pakistani delegation there were 13   members of the Pakistan parliament, who had never heard of the   village.
 
 The official told IANS: "The chief minister showed the map of   Pakistan village to the Pakistani delegates and explained that when all the   Muslims of the village, then in Islampur district of Bengal, had migrated to   East Pakistan (now Bangladesh), the villagers left behind decided to name a   village in memory of those who left.
 
 Prior to the the States   Reorganisation Act of 1956, Purnea too was part of Islampur, which now lies in   the state of West Bengal.
 The Muslims who left the village for East Pakistan   had handed over their property to Hindus in neighbouring areas.
 
 The   Santhal tribe, to which the villagers belong, is the largest tribal group in   India.
 
 Pakistan village is poor and illiterate; the literacy rate in   Purnea district as a whole is just 31.51 percent. There is hardly a literate   person in Pakistan village, where proper roads, a school or a hospital is hard   to come by.
 
    
	
	
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