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Jangpura


FieldValue
nameJangpura
settlement_typeColony
pushpin_mapIndia New Delhi
pushpin_map_captionLocation in Delhi, India
coordinates
subdivision_typeCountry
subdivision_nameIndia
subdivision_type1State
subdivision_name1Delhi
subdivision_type2District
subdivision_name2South East Delhi
subdivision_type3Metro
subdivision_name3Jangpura
established_title
unit_prefMetric
population_density_km2auto
demographics_type1Languages
demographics1_title1Official
demographics1_info1Hindi
timezone1IST
utc_offset1+5:30
postal_code_typePIN
registration_plateDL3C
blank3_name_sec1Planning agency
blank3_info_sec1MCD

Jangpura is a neighbourhood in South East Delhi district of Delhi. Beginning from the east and moving clockwise, it is bordered by the Mathura Road, Ring Railway line, Silver Oak Park beyond the Defence Colony Flyover, and the Barapulla Nullah. It encompasses the residential areas of Jangpura A and B on either side of the Mathura Road, Jangpura (Bhogal) extending west from the Mathura Road until Jangpura Extension, which in turn extends along the northern side of the Ring Railway line to the east side of the Defence Colony Flyover on Josip Broz Tito Marg. The small colony of Pant Nagar along the Barapulla Nullah is contiguous with Jangpura Extension.

Jangpura is a Delhi Legislative Assembly constituency within the South Delhi Lok Sabha seat, following the delimitation of the parliamentary constituencies.

History

In the early 1900s, British officer Captain Young was tasked with preparing the area for settlement.Residents (predominantly villagers){{Cite journal A grand edifices of state to come up along Rajpath, established the colony of 'Youngpura', which was colloquialised as Jangpura. Later in 1950–51, it grew with many Sikh and Hindu migrants from present-day Pakistani Punjab who arrived in Delhi at the time of Partition of India settling here. That accounts for Jangpura Extension's high Punjabi and Sikh population to date. This includes people from the villages in Rawalpindi district, including Thoa Khalsa, which witnessed a mass suicide by women during the Rawalpindi riots in March 1947, apart from Thamali and Mator Nara villages. Community head Charan Singh Randhawa was prominent figure in 1950s who started the Sikh community commemorates the event as Shahidi Diwas (Martyrs' Day) on 13 March. Jangpura Extension has a number of beautiful parks.

Its image along with neighbouring Lajpat Nagar across the railway line as a haven for migrants continues, with several Afghan and Iranian refugees, among others, finding shelter in the cheap housing offered in Bhogal and Lajpat Nagar (which is nicknamed 'Afghan Nagar'). Bhogal and Jangpura Extension's many old Punjabi eateries as Lahorian Di Hatti and Sachdeva Dhaba today share space with Afghan bakeries, and new Punjabi arrivals. In the 1970s, as artists living in Jangpura Extension grew, it became a well-known artists’ colony.

Jangpura-Bhogal is home to a number of places of worship which represent every major religion including Bhagwan Shiv Mandir, Gurudwara Singh Sabha, Sanatan Dharm Mandir, Sanatan Da Dera Gurudwara and Bhogal Boddh Vihar.

Landmarks

  • Jawed Habib Hair and Beauty
  • Mediplex health
  • Rama Tent House
  • Sonu Electrical and Electronics
  • Eros Cinema
  • Om Hotel
  • Hawker's House, aka Novelty Stores
  • Kadimi Chaat
  • Netram Puranmal
  • Sanatan Dharam Mandir, (Gufa Wala) Pant Nagar
  • Barbeque Nation
  • Guru Ravi Das Mandir
  • St. Micheal's Church
  • Bodh Vihar
  • Arya Samaj Mandir
  • Design arch group
  • Toys Gallery
  • Haldiram's, EROS Cinema Ground Floor

Vicinity

  • Dargah of Hazrat Nizamuddin Auliya in Nizamuddin West
  • Tomb of Humayun, 2nd Mughal Emperor, a UNESCO World Heritage Site
  • Chausath Khamba, tomb of Mirza Aziz Koka
  • Barakhamba
  • Jawaharlal Nehru Stadium
  • Lodhi Gardens
  • Khan Market
  • Defence Colony
  • Nizamuddin East

References

References

  1. "Book release takes people to Jangpura through the decades". Hindustan Times.
  2. Kaur, Ravinder. (2007). "Since 1947: Partition Narratives among Punjabi Migrants of Delhi". [[Oxford University Press]].
  3. [[#Bh. Bhutalia, p. 156]]
  4. [[#Bh. Bhutalia, p. 287]]
  5. (17 August 2021). "'Our future unknown': Afghan nationals in India wary of Taliban". [[Al Jazeera English.
  6. Pablo Bartholomew. (13 August 2012). "The death of a man so young, in the prime of his life". Hindustan Times.
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