This book focuses on the rich cultural and spiritual heritage of Haryana, besides tracing its existence to prehistoric times and its role in the subsequent stages of the Siswal civilisation, Indus Valley Civilisation and the Vedic Civilisation of the Aryans that flourished around Haryana’s sacred Saraswati River. Haryana is projected as the place where the Mahabharata, several Puranas and the Smritis were composed, the battle of Kurukshetra was fought and the eternal message of the Geeta revealed. Some Haryana-centric events highlighted in the book are the three battles of Panipat and the 1857 struggle for India’s independence of which the first spark was ignited at Ambala in Haryana on the morning of May 6, 1857 several hours before the flare-up at Meerut in Uttar Pradesh. The original texts of the Vedas, the epics and the scriptures are liberally cited to bring out the religious significance of Haryana’s numerous pilgrimages. There is a learned piece on how Haryana’s Vedantic tradition was kept alive by Gaudapada of Kurukshetra and Totapuri, Baba of Ladhana. The book is interspersed with references to several political issues including some that grabbed public attention in 1989 -1990 such as how V.P. Singh became the Prime Minister Of India after Ch. Devi Lal abdicated in his favour even after being elected as the leader of the ruling front and how the latter ended up becoming the Deputy Prime Minister, thus paving the way for his son O.P. Chautala being sworn in by the author as the Chief Minister of Haryana.
A Governor’s Tryst with Haryana
by H.A. Barari
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ABOUT THE AUTHOR H.A. Barari
H.A. Barari hails from a rural outback of what later become Bangladesh. He spent the years of his youth (1945-1953) in Kolkata, studying in colleges and winning many academic laurels. He taught Economics at the Central Calcutta College in 1952 and then briefly switched over to a career in the briefly switched over to a career in the prestigious Imperial Bank of India. He later found his m?tier in the Indian Police Service and ended up as India’s topmost police officer when he became the head of the Intelligence Bureau (1984-1987) in the aftermath of the assassination of prime Minister Indira Gandhi. After retirement, he emerged out of the shadowy world of intelligence to become the Governor of Haryana (1988-1990). In between, he doubled as the Governor of Himachal Pradesh for a brief while.
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Bibliographic information
Title
A Governor’s Tryst with Haryana
Author
Edition
1st ed.
Publisher
Gyan Publishing House, 2007
ISBN
8121209196
Length
446p.
Subjects
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