Nepal after 40 years searching for that

As he left home at an early age, his memories of his family and village are dim, he came with the hope of meeting his relatives and is trying to find his family.

Poush 11, 2081

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Nepal after 40 years searching for that

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Bam Bahadur Dangi was 13 years old when he left home. He from Surkhet Birendranagar Municipality-4 reached Birendranagar market an hour away while playing with his friends. From there, along with an unknown Indian, he accidentally wandered towards India.

Bam Bahadur, who was living in poverty, was allowed to cross the border after the Indian showed his desire to get a job. 

was the Indian's mistrust till the border. However, when he reached Gadwal, he was stranded. "Only after I got there did I know that the man was a contractor for smuggling children to India," Bam Bahadur remembered, "He would get money by taking me to India." 

Bam Bahadur's sad days began then, when he was stranded in the deserted Indian bazaar Gadwal. They could not even return home. Having spent nearly 40 years of his life in India, he is now 53 years old and has returned home looking for that. However, so far he has neither found his home nor his family members. 

He arrived in Birendranagar with his two daughters and is in a state of shock. Since he left home at a young age, his memories of family and village are dim. He came with the hope of meeting his relatives and is trying to find his family. Bam Bahadur said, "I have not been able to find a family even after a week of coming to Birendranagar." After not meeting his family, he is preparing to return to India. "I came with great hopes, but I could not be reunited with my family, now I am going back to India," he says.

Stranded in Gadwal, he got a job as a rent collector in a hotel. Later became a porter. After a few years of struggle in Gadwal, after saving the money, he went to the Himachal. His financial status also improved there. In the same month, he got acquainted with a family from Rolpa who had gone from Nepal for employment. 

Mayapirati lived with the daughter of that family. And got married. After that, Nepal's families and villages were almost forgotten. He would try to return home during festivals like Dasain-Tihar. But they could not return. After getting married, we had children, we didn't have any expenses before we came home. It was difficult to support the family with the money earned there. He got caught in the same mess, he said. 

He has five daughters and one son. He came to look for his family when his children also started asking him about Nepal. Bam Bahadur felt that he had to find his way. And he has been living in Shimla, Himachal Pradesh, India and came to Nepal looking for a family. 

Miley's daughter Kiran, who has been helping her parents at home after passing class 12, has been working in a pharmacy company in India since a few years ago. It was Miley Kiran who took the main interest in finding a family. After studying, he got interested and asked his father about his home, and he came to know that it is Surkhet in Nepal. She said, 'And I started to inquire about it on the net. We are here now. But we haven't been able to find a family.'

They are Nepalese, but due to separation from their families, they have not been able to become Nepali citizens. They do not have any official document except Indian Ration Card.

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