Sarai Kale Khan ISBT chowk renamed after tribal icon Birsa Munda

| | New Delhi
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Sarai Kale Khan ISBT chowk renamed after tribal icon Birsa Munda

Friday, 15 November 2024 | PTI | New Delhi

Sarai Kale Khan ISBT chowk renamed after tribal icon Birsa Munda

Union Minister of Housing and Urban Affairs Manohar Lal Khattar on Friday announced that the chowk outside Sarai Kale Khan ISBT here has been renamed after tribal icon and freedom fighter Birsa Munda.

The announcement, coming ahead of the Delhi Assembly polls, was made by Khattar on the occasion of the unveiling of a statue of Birsa Munda by Union Home Minister Amit Shah at the Baansera Bamboo Park near Sarai Kale Khan inter-state bus terminus (ISBT) in south-east Delhi.

The unveiling of the 3,000 kg statue of Birsa Munda marked the 150th birth anniversary of the tribal icon who spearheaded a tribal movement that started in the Bengal Presidency (now Jharkhand) in the late 19th century, making him an important figure in the history of the country's independence movement.

Khattar said Bhagwan Birsa Munda is a very big name for the country's tribal community as he waged a huge struggle against the British for snatching away their natural resources.

"To preserve the memory of such an inspiring personality, especially for the youth, a statue of Bhagwan Birsa Munda was unveiled by Union Home Minister Amit Shah and the ISBT Chowk has been named after him," Khattar told reporters.

Sarai Kale Khan, one of the busiest areas of the city particularly due to the ISBT from where buses ferry travellers to destinations across north India, has a medieval-era origin.

According to Volume III of 'Monuments of Delhi: Lasting Splendour of the Great Mughals and Others', compiled by Maulvi Zafar Hasan and first published in 1920, "The sarai of Kale Khan which was constructed of rubble masonry was originally surrounded by arched cells, with their outer walls crowned by battlements".

The sarai seemed to be one of those which are known to have been built by Sher Shah at the distance of a "Kiroh (nearly 3 km) on the road from Bengal to the Indus", it said.

"In each of these sarais, travellers, Muhammadans as well as Hindus, were entertained, at the public expense, by the order of the Emperor, and horse posts were established there for quick communication, so that news from Bengal reached him daily," the Volume mentioned.

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