Gave light to the country, darkened the house

Suvas, fleeing from Dhangadhi due to the vicious cycle of poverty, reached India from Kathmandu, and was preparing to return and go to Japan.

Bhadra 28, 2082

Basanta Prasad Singh

Gave light to the country, darkened the house

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Born on 4 Baisakh 2061 in Khaptadchanna Rural Municipality-7, Gorkhaligaon, Bajhang, Subas Bohra was sharp from an early age. After passing the 8th grade from the village school, his parents sent him to Satyawadi in the headquarter to study because he could study well.

From there, Suwas, who had passed SEE, went on to study law. Even in the village society, he got along with everyone and had a helpful nature. He came to Dhangadhi with the dream of becoming a judge in the future.

He passed plus two in law faculty and enrolled in LLB at Kailali Multipurpose Campus in Dhangadhi, but the poor financial condition of his family changed the path of his dream. Even after paying the loan for two years, it was difficult for the family to pay for Kailali's stay and education.

He said that he would do some work in Kathmandu and teach his brother while learning Japanese, so he ended his legal studies there. He came to Kathmandu with his brother. 

He has been living in Sundarijal in Kathmandu with a tent and passed the Japanese language test. He was happy to be able to go to Japan, but his happiness did not last long. His father Deepak disappeared within a few days of getting his visa to Japan.

Even though he got a visa to fly to Japan on March 21, he could not raise the expenses after his father, who was financially supporting the house, disappeared. He could not fly to Japan after the amount of 1 million was insufficient. Distraught by this incident, I took Suwas Bhai to his relatives and reached Bengaluru, India a few days later. 

Kaili Devi, the mother who left her son and came to India, could not bear it. She left the village house in charge of her 80-year-old father-in-law and came to Bengaluru. She sent Subas back to Kathmandu saying that she would earn the expenses to go to Japan even if she had to work.

Last Monday, Suwas cooked breakfast himself. While sending his brother Sandeep, who is in class 8, to school, he said goodbye saying, "I am going to the market to meet my friend, if I am late to come back, I will cook lunch and eat it." Sandeep will never see his brother again who returns to the Dera every evening to cook breakfast and lunch wherever he goes.

Subas died on Monday after being shot at the gate in front of the Parliament building. The Rudraghanti cheddar of the neck was from the back of the bullet that hit him. He died before the protesters could take him to the hospital. 

After hearing the news of his brother's death, Sandeep is in a state of unconsciousness in Dera. Mother Kaili, who reached Kathmandu from Bengaluru via Lucknow, is even more vulnerable. Kaili, who went abroad to send her son to Japan, trampled on the grief of her husband's disappearance, is gripped by the pain of losing her son.

'That was the light of our house. That's why I left home and went to India to wash dishes, a grief-stricken Kaili said, 'That's when the light went out. My life has become dark.''A young man's dream of going to Japan and bringing happiness to his family ended with the suppression of the state.

'Poverty and the state became enemies at the same time,' said Pradip Khadka, a neighbor of Subas, 'If we had the money then, we would not have seen this day. He used to say that I would bring my mother to Kathmandu after I decided to go to Japan. Now he is not himself. The family will be separated.'

- details updated and edited.

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