Bhakta Bir Singh Tuladhar

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Bhakta Bir Singh in a Fiat in Kalimpong, ca 1949.
Image of Dipankar Buddha being brought to Bhuikhel, Kathmandu for Samyak in 1952.

Bhakta Bir Singh Tuladhar (Nepali: भक्तवीरसिंह तुलाधर) (1912 - 1989) was a Nepalese merchant and philanthropist. He held a special Samyak (सम्यक) ceremony in 1952 when the country was passing through a political crisis, and the Buddhist alms-giving festival became of crucial importance for both sides in the power struggle.[1]

Bhakta Bir Singh was born to father Samyak Singh (also known as Samek Ratna)[2] and mother Sānu Māyā Tuladhar in Kathmandu. The family home was located at Nhyokhā (न्ह्योखा), a neighborhood in the historical section of Kathmandu. He was married to Laxmi Hirā Kansakar, and was popularly known as Bhagat Sāhu.[citation needed]

The Tuladhars owned a business house in Lhasa, and following in the footsteps of his merchant ancestors, Bhakta Bir Singh went to Tibet to manage the family shop at a young age. He divided his time between Kathmandu, Lhasa and Kalimpong in India, a trade center and staging point for mule caravans to Tibet.[3]

Samyak and the revolution

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