Goodbye India: Ganga's Entry Into Bangladesh
Jun 6, 2026•Channel
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Video Overview
Video Details
Published1 month ago
Duration35:33
Video IDOWg-MlO2xp4
Languageen
CategoryPeople & Blogs
PrivacyPublic
Made for KidsNo
Video TypeRegular Video
Performance Metrics
Views140.3K
Likes4.7K
Comments471
Engagement Rate3.66%
Likes per 100 views3.33
Comments per 1K views3.36
Description
In this episode, we reach the exact geographical point where the Ganga leaves India and crosses into Bangladesh. This isn't just a line on a map; it is a raw look at life on the extreme edge of the border, the vastness of the river, and the local wildlife that frequents this specific village on the riverbanks.We also explore the Nimtita Zamindar Bari, a mid-19th-century palace in the Murshidabad district. Built by the Chowdhury family, it stands today as a decaying relic of massive wealth, heavily damaged by river erosion and time. Walking through these ruins provides the perfect backdrop to discuss the post-British land reforms in India, explaining how the abolition of the Zamindari system permanently shifted land ownership and rural power dynamics away from these estates. Further along the river, I break down the engineering and geopolitical purpose behind the Farakka Barrage, a 2,245-meter-long structure built to regulate the massive flow of the Ganges. Beyond the geography and history, this video dives into the current reality of the people in Murshidabad. The district is a massive hub for India's beedi industry. It is a heavily labor-intensive cottage industry where you will see locals, predominantly women, rolling beedis by hand right inside their homes to make a living. To get the full West Bengal ground experience, I also bought some of the local state lottery tickets that you see everywhere here. Spoiler: I lost.Main Topics Covered:The final village where the Ganga enters BangladeshLocal wildlife and border environmentThe history and ruins of the Nimtita Zamindar BariPost-British land reforms and the fall of the ZamindarsThe mechanics of the Farakka BarrageInside Murshidabad’s household beedi industryTrying my luck with West Bengal lottery tickets