Accession card

Description

“The tea and snack joints at Mangalwara Chowk have always been very integral to the town of Pipariya. During the 1950’s and 60’s, there were two very popular joints here. One of them was called ‘Bharat Hotel’ and belonged to a Sindhi fellow. Sindhis came to this town after partition and set up small scale confectionary shops. The other one was run by Mr. Shyam Jaiswal. These joints were the hubs of all the political and social gossip in the town. In those years, the place was known as Jhanda Chowk. It is believed that the chowk was built to hoist the Indian flag in the year 1947. Later on, it was renamed as Subhash Chowk (in honour of an Indian Independence Movement figure Subhash Chandra Bose) through the efforts of Mr. Radheyshyam Gupta, who runs a tea shop at the Chowk. In recent years, it has become synonymous with the neighbouring Mangalwara Bazaar and is popularly referred to as Mangalwara Chowk.”

- Quoted from a recorded conversation with Sri Gopal Ganguda (60), a local civil rights activist and a business merchant in Pipariya.     

Code

HAB-1-1506583295

Date

2018

Credits / copyrights

Photo Credits: Kumar Unnayan

Posted by

University

Centre for Community Knowledge, Ambedkar University Delhi

Title

Moving Roundabouts

Medium

  • Image

Image contains

Linguistic translation

Mangalwara Chowk: Chowk is a term used to describe an intersection or roundabout. The Mangalwara Chowk in Pipariya is a busy intersection of roads that leads to the different parts of the town. It is attached to the local marketplace Mangalwara Bazaar.

Jhanda: Flag

Site of knowledge & meaning

Feeling & motive