Bihar

Patnamuseum_small Cowsreturninghome_small Nalanda48_small_2 Mahabodhitemple22_small Gayaghats03

The State of Bihar, in the eastern part of the Indo-Gangetic Plain, is amply watered by the Ganga and its tributaries, and there is no denying that the landscape here—particularly during the early monsoons when we visited—is among the loveliest in India. So many views of the land, rich in untapped mineral wealth, are crossed by broadly curving, slow rivers. Roads and fields are fringed with palm trees and a profusion of wild, tropical vegetation. Rural vistas end along the curves and jags of low, green hills under a soaring sky, blue in the sun or darkening with the promise of rain.

This land also claims an illustrious history as the onetime center of the subcontinent’s culture and politics. Its name, Bihar, is derived from the Sanskrit vihara (Buddhist monastery), and it was here, 2,500 years ago, that the Buddha is said to have achieved enlightenment sitting under the Bodhi tree. His Jain contemporary, Mahavira, the quintessential master of non-violence whose teachings reach into modern times in the form of ahinsa (ahimsa) and Gandhi’s ideals, also originated from this region.

Gayaghats02   Patna07   Gayatobodhgaya04  Patna06   Vishnupadtemple03

By 300 BCE, the Mauryan Empire had arisen in Bihar, stretching from modern day Afghanistan southward into the Deccan, and from modern Pakistan to the east coast of India. A few hundred years later came the illustrious Guptas, who founded a Buddhist university here at Nalanda, considered one of the most prestigious centers of learning in the world of the 1st millennium. Both the Mauryas and Guptas are associated with “Golden Ages” in India and for many centuries Bihar was the source of India’s highest cultural refinements in art, music, math, science, and philosophy. But as Buddhism began to decline in the latter centuries of the 1st millennium, so did Bihar.

Patnamuseum02  Patnamuseum03  Sonbhandarcaves03  Patliputra01

The rich and glorious history of Bihar stands in sharp contrast to its condition today. While much of India is seeing a huge economic boom, Bihar is still mired in abject poverty and political corruption. About 83 million people live in Bihar, a state close to half the size of Germany. Literacy stands at 33% for women (one of the lowest in India) and 60% for men. Electrical wires stretch to all the villages we passed, but other basic infrastructure is clearly lacking. Most villagers live in houses made of stacked bricks mortared only with mud, the kinds of structures that kill and maim thousands whenever earthquakes or floods strike. Plumbing and sanitary facilities are meager; fetid water, waste, and piles of unprocessed garbage blight every town and village. The potbellies of malnourished children are more visible here than anyplace else I’ve been in India in recent years. On top of this, crime runs rampant, as thugs plunder and murder with impunity; highway and train robberies are common. Travelers are advised to get off the highway before dark.

It’s not only the poverty and crime that make Bihar feel like a tragedy. It’s the sense of futility, of a widespread hopelessness, as if the mindset and the expectations of the people have slipped down to meet the level of their condition. There is little sense of dignity, little stirring of curiosity, little energy for ambition. Never before have I so realized the power and value of hope as a necessary tool or ingredient for the upliftment of people. But how to jump-start a sense of hope from futility and powerlessness? Of all the places I have seen in the world, though Bihar is not materially the poorest, it is the most squalid. It’s difficult to visit Bihar without shaking one’s head and wagging a finger, without moralizing about this story that reads like an object lesson in history: greatness and power, achievement and renown—no matter how glorious and great—always prove fickle and transient.

Today there are plans to give a second birth to Nalanda, honoring its former glory by building a new international university on the same spot. Also, a new Indian Institute of Technology (IIT) is to be built near the capital, Patna. Still I wonder, how will they attract and retain quality instructors in this forsaken spot? How will they make these universities thrive? And again, maybe this is really what is needed to begin a change: that someone should take a chance and do something big, that someone might have a little hope.

Gayatobodhgaya03 Venuvan1  Gayatobodhgaya02

(More photos of Bihar can be found here.)

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3 responses to “Bihar”

  1. Usha & Namit, nice travel pics on your posts (Bihar, Thanksgiving, Desert etc.). One request: if it’s possible to embed a photo-album in the post, that will make it much more user-friendly, reduce # of mouse clicks and actually make me want to see them all. 🙂
    Thanks.
    Regarding a new IIT, don’t they have their own campus, including residential quarters for teachers and staff? I’d think that the brand-name itself would probably be enough to attract professors, and maybe it’ll bring about some +ve changes around it.

  2. Glad you like Namit’s photos, Amit :^) As for the photo album: I’ve wished myself I could do that, but I don’t think it’s an option on Typepad. Perhaps more investigation needs to be done.
    IIT Bihar will have their own campus about 30 km from Patna, and I hope you’re right that it brings positive changes. But to me, it’s not at all obvious that it’ll all just work out. One hears stories of successful professionals having to flee Bihar to escape extortion; some professors may be hesitant to go there, or be forced to leave.

  3. Thank you Usha for visiting Bihar and your comments. While your research on its ancients history is commendable; your feedback on its current status appears to be old. During the time of your visit in the year 2007 Bihar was in transition. Bihar is fast changing for better now with the highest growth rate in the country. The crime rate is lower than Delhi & Mumbai. And people feel amazing safer at night than what we feel at Delhi.
    The problem with Bihar has been more with its perception. The perception has been negative while in reality it had been as good or as bad as any other state. You were naturally critical of the crime situation but did something happened during your travel ?? You commented what you have been hearing from others and that is the problem – every outsiders makes a comment on Bihar on heresay – while a place like Delhi has become more cary now. Talking about the economy Also Note that there are no suicide cases of farmers or of youth as it took places in Keral or Mahrasthrea. even with the so called bad economy. Investments had been a problem which is fast improving.
    The Perception that Bihar is no good is not fair as it takes away the credit which it deserves – In December 2011 Kalchakra event took place in Bodhgaya attended by 7 Lakh visitors among whom around 50% were from abroad Hollywood stars like Richard Gere and several other western personalities. Not a single unpleasant incident happen during the 12 days long ceremony. The central government played no rule to help in any arrangements. All the facilities where arranged privately by local organisations and little bit by state govt. No publicity was made in media. Compare this with the Commonwealth games where for mere 10000 estimated visitors Delhi govt created scandals after scandals and still brought negative image. Did the above fact will make any change in your perception No – because perceptions are often more credible than reality. And that is the problem with many of us in India.

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