The song ends with a determination to keep the unity of the Assamese with other smaller nationalities that are left in the present-day Assam – ‘the Karbis and the Mising brothers and sisters are our dear ones.’ — Sanjib Baruah (a) Which unity is the poet talking about?
Hindustan Times: Remembering Zubeen Garg: His most famous Hindi and Assamese songs that touched millions
Remembering Zubeen Garg: His most famous Hindi and Assamese songs that touched millions
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Capo: 1st fret Play: G Key: Ab For chords in original key transpose this chord sheet +1 (and "use flats"). Play this song with the regular shapes of the chords given in this song or use the
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The Assamese suspected that there were huge numbers of illegal Bengali Muslim settlers from Bangladesh. They felt that unless these foreign nationals are detected and deported they would reduce the indigenous Assamese into a minority.
Also contemporary was Shankaradeva of Assam (late fifteenth century) who emphasised devotion to Vishnu, and composed poems and plays in Assamese. He began the practice of setting up namghars or houses of recitation and prayer, a practice that continues to date.