Let바카라s us not forget that modern Bihar was born not of normal labour pain but a suspect Caesarean operation supervised by colonial administrators and fostered by upper caste western-educated liberal nationalists. Therefore, it is crucial to remember that the poverty of Biharis also reminds us about the absence of Dalits and the marginalised in the initial moment of founding of Bihar. UnraÂvelling poverty in Bihar is about peeling off layer after layer of multiple narratives of the history, politics and social mores of the Bihar and Biharis. And this inevitably calls for unpacking the identity of Bihari. Are all Biharis feudal landlords? Is it a land of so-called criminal castes such as Maghiya Doms? Are all Biharis gangsters? Are all Biharis Ranvir Sena warriors or Naxalites? Or they are all bureaucrats? May be, all Biharis are rickshaÂw-pullers. Not quite sure. 바카라Do Biharis really eat rats?바카라 Rats? You know what I mean. The often loud, diligent Bihari, one-who-tells-it-like-it-is-with-no-sugar-coating clichĂ© is not a singular persona. Despite their poverty, Frantz Fanon would have loved the 바카라many and miscellaneous바카라 Biharis, forever masking and unmÂasking their identities and resisting injustices. Biharis are notoÂriously ancient, and yet retro-packaged modern at the same time. Hierarchy runs deep in Bihar. All the same, you have no idea how deeply entrenched the idea of equality is in Bihar. Visit 바카라the flaming fields바카라 in Bhojpur for a taste of liberation. Biharis are Homo hierarchicus and Homo equalis; they are villagers and urbanites, coolies and babus, parochial and cosmopolitan, secular and bigots. The ancient land of Buddha may have exiÂsted alongside the fabÂled Vaishali repÂublic, but the contemporary Bihar or Beharee is a modern construct, possessing none of the attÂributes of past or present; constantly separating herself from familiar and moving on to unfamiliar identity-in-making. Agree, Texas-style 바카라bounty-hunting바카라 model of empÂowerment has not served Bihar well but shedding stereotypes of rustic kisan, poor mazdoor, power-hungry babu, feudal bahubali or the miserable rat-eater, the now quintessential Bihari has resurrected herself: dapper, stylish, bold, though often kitschy with an accÂent. With false eyelashes and lip fillers, the new Bihari selfie has spread far and wide in real and virtual world simultaneously. Â