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UP woos expatriates with 'Discover Your Roots' scheme

The scheme has so far located the native places of at least 20 people who had migrated centuries earlier, as indentured labourers to colonised countries.

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Uttar Pradesh tourism department is wooing tourists not only with picturesque locales and heritage sites, but also helping descendants of expatriates locate their native places through a scheme to discover their roots.

The 'Discover your Roots' scheme, launched on the directives of the ministry of overseas Indian affairs, has so far located the native places of at least 20 people who had migrated at the end of the 18th and beginning of 19th century, mostly as indentured labourers to Mauritius, South Africa, Fiji and Trinidad and Tobago.

Neeraj Pahuja, who looks after the scheme in the department, told PTI that the latest to be helped by the department find his roots in a nondescript village in Basti is Sarran Ramautor from Trinidad, who was united with his distant relatives in Adampur village on November 13.

Ramautor and his son had been trying to reach their relatives since 1995, but it was only this September that they sought the help of the department after seeing the details of the scheme available on the website. For identification, they presented an immigration pass of his forefather Autar, who had migrated as "girmitiya labourer" through Kolkata, Pahuja said.

Besides putting the details of the scheme on the department's website, the tourism department has also tied up with the embassies of these countries. There is growing interest among the third or fourth generation of the expatriates who want to visit the place of their origins.

Those seeking the help of the service have to submit a fee of USD150 besides some identification like an old letter, school certificate or immigration receipt which could provide some kind of lead to locate the place, Pahuja said.

Most of the applicants are the descendants of the people hailing from the various eastern districts of the state. Only yesterday, the department had received an inquiry for finding a remote place in or around Patna in Bihar, he said, adding that with permission of senior officials, he might offer help, as no such facility is available in that state.

The department's task is not just limited to locating the villages, it also helps them plan and arrange their visit; besides, its staff also accompanies them on arrival to overcome language-related problems.

Pahuja said that all immigrants who have discovered their roots have also expressed their desire to contribute towards the development of their villages.

Though the scheme was launched in 2003, it has recently generated a lot of interest among the migrants after some families were successfully reunited.

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