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French whose great grandfather served under Maharaja Ranjit Singh loves India

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French whose great grandfather served under Maharaja Ranjit Singh loves India

Saint Tropez, a picturesque town in southeast France which attracts about five million tourists annually, is all set to dedicate 2012 as the year of India - all for a love story that binds the two in history.

Claude Maniscalco, director of Saint Tropez Tourism, who addressed the media in the capital Tuesday, said they were in talks with the Indian ministry of tourism and are hopeful of drawing up the plans for celebrations by the first half of 2011.

A Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) is also expected to be signed between the two around the same time.

'We met the Indian tourism minister Monday and she is very positive about the Year of India celebrations in Saint Tropez in 2012. We don't want the celebrations to be a one-event thing. It will be a year-long affair so a lot of planning has to go behind before we sign an agreement,' Maniscalco said.

According to him, history is the reason why they have chosen India, despite the fact that only a miniscule of their tourists come from India.

'My great grandfather, the famous General Allard of Saint Tropez, was a Napolean officer. After the Waterloo battle, he visited Persia and then India where he served under Maharaja Ranjit Singh, sovereign of the Lahore empire, then Punjab and today Pakistan,' Maniscalco said.

'He married the daughter of the Raja of Chamba, Bannu Pan Dei. He brought his family back to Saint Tropez and returned to Punjab after being named Legate of France under Ranjit Singh by King Louis Phillipe. He died and was buried in Lahore, after which his wife converted to Christianity. She later died and was buried in Saint Tropez,' he added.


'It is on the basis of this love story that we want to reaffirm the relations between India and Saint Tropez,' he said.

According to Maniscalco, the celebrations will include polo competitions, golf tournaments, film festivals, fashion shows, music concerts, dance and other cultural programmes.

'It will be an opportunity for India too since its diversity will be showcased to all our tourists,' he said.

French tourist town to dedicate 2012 as the Year of India
 
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Lahore, Punjab and then Pakistan... and then died and buried in Pakistan! well celebrations will be incomplete without Pakistan what say did he forget Pakistan?

Rather it should be a joint venture of IndoPak festival some polo events and cultural aspect of this side will make the picture complete...:tup:
 
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Its very simple at that time maharaja ranjit singh was not a pakistani & lahore was not in pakistan..
 
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means he is commemorating 'that' India...then we can also participate because we are also 'part' of that India...technically case is so
 
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means he is commemorating 'that' India...then we can also participate because we are also 'part' of that India...technically case is so
yes yes, technically.... so ur also a bharati now:yahoo::cheers:
 
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Lahore, Punjab and then Pakistan... and then died and buried in Pakistan! well celebrations will be incomplete without Pakistan what say did he forget Pakistan?

Rather it should be a joint venture of IndoPak festival some polo events and cultural aspect of this side will make the picture complete...:tup:

Actually, you are right. MRS belonged more to regions in Pakistan than India. Its another story that he's revered as a historical figure more in India than in Pakistan. In Pakistan, people often go to the extent of villifying him as an oppressor of Muslims rather than see him as Punjabi hero. It should be a joint Indo-Pak thing, but for that the people of Pakistan would have to stand up and accept him as their own.
 
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why are soo many india worship articles here..have we renamed to india defence or indopak defence?
 
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THERE WAS NO PAKISTAN BEFORE 1947...
AND RANJIT SINGH WAS THE EMPEOR OF LAHORE,AND HE WAS A INDIAN..
SO THEY RESPECT INDIA..
SUCH A SIMPLE THING TO UNDERSTAND...
 
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THERE WAS NO PAKISTAN BEFORE 1947...
AND RANJIT SINGH WAS THE EMPEOR OF LAHORE,AND HE WAS A INDIAN..
SO THEY RESPECT INDIA..
SUCH A SIMPLE THING TO UNDERSTAND...
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Here's more on General Allard -

ALLARD, BANNOU PAN DEI

ALLARD, BANNOU PAN DEI (1814-1884), born of Raja Menga Ram of Chamba and Banni Panje Dei at Chamba on 25 January 1814, married Jean Francois Allard, one of Maharaja Ranjit Singh's French generals, in March 1826, and bore him seven children, two of whom died in infancy and are buried in Lahore along with their father. Allard and his wife also adopted a little orphan, Achille. In 1834, Bannou Pan Dei, her children and two of her female attendants accompanied Allard to France.

The reason given to Maharaja Ranjit Singh for the journey was that the children needed a Christian education. However, in a newspaper interview in France, Allard spoke of another reason. His wife being much younger than him and belonging to a strict Hindu family, he feared she would be obliged to commit sati if he died in the Punjab. In July 1835 Bannou Pan Dei settled down in Saint Tropez and remarried Allard in a French civil ceremony. Since she was a Hindu, they could not be married in a church.

The children were legitimatized, and Allard made arrangements for their education between December 1835 and April 1836. He then left France for the Punjab, never to see his family again. There are several descriptions in contemporary French press of Bannou Pan Dei Allard Jter guests at Saint Tropez (Garcin de Tassy, Mme de Salle, an Indian prince), her travels and her connections with the high society of her time. In 1841 after the demise of her husband at Peshawar, she decided to convert to Christianity (Roman Catholic) and was baptized in the church of Saint Tropez, the King and the Queen of France having accepted to be her godfather and godmother.

The ceremony took place in grand style, and General Ventura, who had just arrived in Marseilles for one of his trips to Europe, attended on her and assisted her in receiving the guests at her residence in Saint Tropez. On 25 July 1845 Madam Allard lost her younger daughter, Felicie (born at Calcutta, 2 February 1835) and she got a special permission to bury her in her garden, according to the Punjabi custom. She had purchased a new estate in Saint Tropez along the sea, where she lived among her souvenirs and paintings. These paintings, in the possession of the Allard family for five generations, were stolen in 1979. In her bedroom, she got reproduced on a larger scale the painting of the Allard family showing their seven children all sitting in their garden at Anarkali.

This included the two deceased children, whereas the original, signed Paris 1836, represented the five living children. Her faithful maid, Darana, also shown in the paintings, died in 1861 .Her children married into good families. The tradition is still alive in Saint Tropez that she never accepted the death of her husband in Peshawar in 1839, and every evening she walked to the seaside to wait for him. In 1853, the fortune of the Allard family was estimated at 462,000 Francs (Rs 184,800) of which 134,OOO F belonged to Bannou Pan Dei and 82,000 F to each of the four children. She died at Saint Tropez on 13 January 1884, and is buried in the Allard family tomb in the 'Cimetiere Marin' of Saint Tropez.

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