ID :
35822
Tue, 12/16/2008 - 12:50
Auther :
Shortlink :
http://m.oananews.org//node/35822
The shortlink copeid
Woman 'remarries' husband after 46 years
Kolkata Dec 15 (PTI) A woman in India's eastern state of west Bengal who presumed her husband to be dead after he had left home 46 years ago following a spat with his father, married him a second time when he was found to be alive and well.
Annapurna Hazra, a resident of Bhatpara municipality
in North 24 Parganas district, said her husband Panchkari left
home in 1952 after a quarrel with his father, leaving her and
two sons, Arun and Tarun, then aged five and two,
respectively.
Panchkari went to Dhanbad, Asansol and Howrah before
he moved to Roy Bahadur Road in Behala in the metropolis in
the late 1980s.
As the years passed without news about him, Panchkari
was taken to be dead and Annapurna said she began to live the
life of a widow.
During the Durga puja festival this year, her husband
was spotted by a family friend at Chanditala in Behala, who
informed her younger son Tarun.
"Relatives and friends then tried desperately to
convince me to return home before I finally agreed," Panchkari
said.
Asked whether he missed his wife and children, he
replied "I remember their faces."
He had also not forgotten why he had left home. "My
father's words still rankle."
On Sunday, nearly half a century later, Annapurna
'remarried' Panchkari. PTI SAG
Annapurna Hazra, a resident of Bhatpara municipality
in North 24 Parganas district, said her husband Panchkari left
home in 1952 after a quarrel with his father, leaving her and
two sons, Arun and Tarun, then aged five and two,
respectively.
Panchkari went to Dhanbad, Asansol and Howrah before
he moved to Roy Bahadur Road in Behala in the metropolis in
the late 1980s.
As the years passed without news about him, Panchkari
was taken to be dead and Annapurna said she began to live the
life of a widow.
During the Durga puja festival this year, her husband
was spotted by a family friend at Chanditala in Behala, who
informed her younger son Tarun.
"Relatives and friends then tried desperately to
convince me to return home before I finally agreed," Panchkari
said.
Asked whether he missed his wife and children, he
replied "I remember their faces."
He had also not forgotten why he had left home. "My
father's words still rankle."
On Sunday, nearly half a century later, Annapurna
'remarried' Panchkari. PTI SAG