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A native’s return to Chandigarh and its heart, Sector 17

Tribuneindia.com invites contributions to SHAHARNAMA. Share anecdotes, unforgettable incidents, impressionable moments that define your cities, neighbourhoods, what the city stands for, what makes its people who they are. Send your contributions in English, not exceeding 150 words, to shaharnama@tribunemail.com Do include your social media handles (X/ Twitter, Instagram, Facebook, LinkedIn)
Illustration: Sandeep Joshi

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After a long stint in Sri Lanka, Australia and the New Delhi, I recently returned home to the City Beautiful with a friendly warning from someone: “Chandigarh has changed a lot”. But then which city has not changed, so what would be so alarming about Chandigarh? Surely, there were visible changes everywhere — traffic volume being the first and the obvious one.

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I visited Sector 17 after a long, long time, the heart of City Beautiful, to pay homage to an old icon — much against the unsolicited advice that who goes to 17 these days! Standing in front of Neelam Theatre, I was overwhelmed by the memories of early 70’s, when I was a student at PEC (Punjab Engineering College).

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As if in a trance, I could still hear the horn of a CTU bus at the bus stop behind Neelam, and felt as if it was yesterday — the traffic buzzing through the sector’s centre road, a dust track going towards the Jagat Theatre, someone saying tickets are not available at Neelam, let us try at Jagat.

I was jostled out of my reverie with a tug on my arm by a vendor, Surely, Chandigarh has changed or has it really?

Prof G S Bajwa, Mohali

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