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Showing posts from April, 2023

Dehradun Jail: Blood, Tears & Greater Good

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“The man who has a conscience suffers whilst acknowledging his sin. That is his punishment.” - Fyodor Dostoyevsky As an urban township, Dehradun was a rather late phenomenon. The genesis for it was due to the efforts of the Udasi institution, the Darbar of Guru Ram Rai. A distinguished spiritual head of the Udasi order, Ram Rai, came to Dehradun in 1676 and a form of urbanisation in the late medieval style influenced by Mughal and emerging Sikh styles in architecture was used. However, this urbanisation was spread across a limited area around the Darbar and a few neighbouring streets, auxiliary establishments to the Darbar. The next significant step towards the gentrification of Dehradun took place a decade after the British East India Company annexed Dehradun to its dominions in 1815-16 displacing with difficulty the Gorkhali occupation of Uttarakhand and Himachal and parts of United Provinces, Bihar and Bengal. Both, Guru Ram Rai in the late seventeenth century and the British admini...

Glorious Past of Dehradun’s Race Course

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A remembered glorious past is a cultural feature of almost all societies. Its foundation is based on myths and oral traditions far before historical knowledge was adopted as an essential tool for exploring the past on the strength of facts through rational examination and accepted by those devoted to the study of history as a scientific subject. Dehradun as an inhabited region is a fairly recent phenomenon. It was considered “terra incognita”, neither mapped nor explored till a few centuries ago. It was associated with a mythical past and legends. However, around the fourteenth century it came to be noticed but not with significant political developments – hedged between the Himalayas on the northern side and the near parallel lesser ranges of the Siwaliks, which drew their name from Shiva stories in these verdant hills. The rivers Yamuna and Ganga defined the Valley in the west and east, respectively. But in the not too distant past, in the second half of the nineteenth century in Deh...