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Patna, May 5 : The Bihar government has received more than   a dozen requests from people in Mauritius to help trace their roots in the rural   areas of the state ever since it launched its programme to foster closer   cultural ties with the Indian Ocean country. The search for roots received a fillip in Mauritius after Prime   Minister Navinchandra Ramgoolam visited his ancestral village in Bhojpur   district during his February tour of Bihar. His visit to Harigoan attracted a   great deal of attention in Mauritius and moved many people of Indian origin to   begin a search for their roots.
 Indians were taken to Mauritius as   indentured workers to work on the sugar plantations during the 1830s- 1890s. The   Mahatma Gandhi Institute at Port Louis, which has the records of the indentured   workers who came to work in Mauritius, is working on an agreement with the Bihar   culture department to help locate the original villages from where the   indentured workers left for Mauritius.
 
 It is part of the programme to   enhance cultural and economic ties between Mauritius and Bihar launched by Chief   Minister Nitish Kumar. However, even before the tie-up could be formalised,   requests from descendents of the indentured workers have started coming in.   People from Mauritius have been writing to the Indian High Commission in Port   Louis as well as the state government with copies of the documents and records   pertaining to their ancestors who arrived in Mauritius over a century   ago.
 
 
    
    
    
    
     The culture department of the Bihar government has been assigned the   task of identifying the villages named in these personal records. Many people of   Indian origin have tried to locate the places from which their ancestors   originated on their own.
 But most of them have come up against several   difficulties in identifying the places. Old districts that are listed in the   documents had been bifurcated, the names of districts have changed in the past   decades and there are several villages of the same or similar names. Some of   them have even hired private detectives to carry out the search for them. Now,   Prime Minister Navin Ramgoolam's visit to his ancestral village has sparked off   a new interest in tracing one's roots.
 
  A request for locating the   Mauritius prime minister's ancestral village had been made a few years ago, but   things began moving only after Nitish Kumar initiated a special focus on   Mauritius which included a visit to the country last year. However, locating   Ramgoolam's ancestral village was also not an easy task. Once it became known   that the Bihar government was seeking to locate his village, there were about 20   claimants who asserted that the Mauritius leader's ancestor had belonged to   their village according to popular belief in the region. 
 One of the   claims came from a village in Bhojpur district. The villagers produced the   'vanchavali' - the village inheritance record that forms part of the revenue   record - to show that one Ramgulam Ojha from that village had gone to Mauritius.   Ramgulam Ojha was claimed to be the ancestor of Sir Seewsagar Ramgoolam, the   towering leader of Mauritius who led the country to independence and the father   of Prime Minister Navin Ramgoolam.
 
 But the name of Ramgoolam's ancestor,   who went to Mauritius in 1871 was Moheeth and the claim was rejected. The   documents stated Arrah district, Bihiya pargana and Harigoan village,   fortunately there was only one Harigaon village in that district and the   sub-division revenue records listed the name of Moheeth.
 
 Harigaon is to   have a new hospital, a school and new roads for which the Mauritius prime   minister laid the foundation stone, while the foundation stone of the hospital   to be named after Navin Ramgoolam was laid by the chief minister. In order to   assuage the feelings of other claimants, Nitish Kumar also announced that   similar development would take place at all the villages which had been   claimants of the Ramgoolam ancestry.
 
 The Bihar government has decided to   mark the birthday of Sir Seewsagar Ramgoolam (prime minister of Mauritius from   1968 to 1982) with a state function every year. A cultural troupe was sent to   Mauritius last month for the Mauritius Day celebrations, and a Mauritian   cultural troupe had accompanied the prime minister to Bihar.
 
 Faced with a   shortage of skilled workmen, Mauritius is looking at Bihar to locate trained   workers for the construction industry. A team from Port Louis was in Bihar   recently and visited several ITIs and other institutes to get a view of Indian   training programmes. Private companies are interested in hiring workmen for   their projects.
 
 The majority of the indentured workers were from Bihar   and there are plans to connect their descendants with the land of their origin   and to preserve the Bhojpuri language which is beginning to lose ground to Hindi   and the Creole language.
 
 Though most people of Indian origin speak   Bhojpuri in Mauritius, the younger generation is getting more fluent in Hindi   because of the influence of the popular Hindi film industry. While the   governments of Mauritius and Bihar are keen to strengthen their ties, with Bihar   also showing interest in attracting investment from Mauritius, the ordinary   people are keen in connecting with their roots. As an official of the Mauiritius   High Commission said, "Nazdiki aur ho gayi hai, to zaada interest hai" (there is   a sense of closeness so the interest has increased).
 (IANS)
 
    
    
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