Heartiest congratulations, deepest gratitude to our friend Bhagiram 
Baruah of Gwahati who not merely saved the endangered Assamese 
Adivasi woman,in essence, Bhagiram saved the conscience of our 
human 'civilisation'. The precarious situation had been a horrific 
trauma to the assaulted women on that day, the situation also gifted 
us with the rise of a common man to the tower of moral achievement.
Viva Bhagiram. Viva Humanity. Viva moral intervention.



Muhammad Hilaluddin.

]ANGIKAR BANGLADESH.













--- In [email protected], "Jharkhand News" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> *Guwahati:* Bhagiram Baruah is 36 years old, an MA in History from 
Guwahati
> University and a family man running a tea shop.
> 
> He seems an unlikely candidate for a braveheart, the kind that any 
society
> will look up to.
> 
> Bhagiram's shop is located in Guwahati's Beltola that's now on the 
national
> map after last Saturday's violent Adivasi rally and the subsequent 
mob
> retaliation. Over a cup of tea just outside his shop he rewinds to 
that day.
> 
> "A lady came running. She was naked. There were photographers 
behind her. I
> ran to her. Held her. Told her, do not be afraid, I will save you. 
I had no
> time to think. I took off my shirt and put it round her waist. 
After that I
> picked up two *dupattas* that had been left on the streets by women 
who were
> running. I put one round her waist and one on the upper part of her 
body.
> Then I took her to the police station," says he.
> 
> However, Bhagiram also believes that the incident has been blown 
out of
> proportion and Adivasis are an inseparable part of Assamese society,
> something that also is reflected in a photograph that shows an 
unidentified
> man risking his life to save another Adivasi woman.
> 
> "Be it India, America, Jharkhand or Assam, there are bad people 
everywhere.
> Assamese people respect women," says Barman.
> 
> Meanwhile, far removed from Guwahati, the tea gardens of Upper 
Assam remain
> tense. Though life is moving on, it is hard to believe what 
happened on the
> senseless Saturday.
> 
> As a protest rally took an ugly turn, one man stood for his city's
> conscience with an exemplary act that stands out in this cycle of 
mistrust
> and violence.
> 
> ibnlive.com/news/meet-the-man-who-saved-tribal-woman-from-mob/53301-
3.html
> 
> 
> -- 
> [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Jharkhand Online Network
> http://www.jharkhand.org.in
> 
> 
> [Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
>


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