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Dilip Kumar’s ancestral home declared national heritage in Pakistan

According to some people Shah Rukh Khan was also born in Peshawar and some people says that he still have some relatives here
 
The Kapoor family originate from the very same city. Same should be done to their ancestral home.
 
Screen Name - Hindi author Bhagwati Charan Varma gave him the screen name Dilip Kumar.[13] It is believed that Dilip Kumar could speak a number of languages, including English, Hindi, Urdu, Hindko,[14] and Pashto.
 
Dilip Kumar was born Yusuf Khan into a Hindko-speaking Awan [1] family of 12 children on 11 December 1922 in the Qissa Khawani Bazaar area of Peshawar, in what is now Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, Pakistan. His father, Lala Ghulam Sarwar, was a fruit merchant who owned orchards in Peshawar and Deolali (in Maharashtra, India). Dilip Kumar did schooling from prestigious Barnes School, Deolali, near Nasik.[11] In the late 1930s, his family of 12 members relocated to Mumbai. Around 1940, Dilip Kumar left home for Pune where he started his career as a canteen owner and a dry fruit supplier. In 1943, actress Devika Rani, who owned Bombay Talkies spotted Dilip Kumar in Aundh military canteens Pune,[12] and cast him with a lead role in the film Jwar Bhata (1944), which marked Dilip Kumar's entry into the Hindi film industry. Hindi author Bhagwati Charan Varma gave him the screen name Dilip Kumar.[13] It is believed that Dilip Kumar could speak a number of languages, including English, Hindi, Urdu, Hindko,[14] and Pashto.
================

He never left anywhere, he was in India only
 
:)) why he changed his original name, Any idea ?

Because Yousaf Khan was not suitable name for a romantic hero just read on bbc urdu. It was some poet at bombay talkies who gave him this name.
 
Because Yousaf Khan was not suitable name for a romantic hero just read on bbc urdu. It was some poet at bombay talkies who gave him this name.

Which is why I love my name. Rawal - not only does it rhyme with the Urdu word "chaawal (rice)" and the English words such as "arrival", "revival", "survival" etc., and is hence siutable for poetry, but the names itself sounds romantic. The meaning, "commander", gives away the fact that I would readily fight the world for my girl.

What´s more, if a Brazilian girl happens to fall for me, she can easily convert it into Rawalinho:heart:.....

Some would love such a name ( [MENTION=136588]CricketCartoons[/MENTION] [MENTION=132385]Afridi96[/MENTION] [MENTION=131867]London_Lahori[/MENTION]).
 
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Dilip Kumar's wife Saira Banu reacts to Pakistan's decision of preserving his ancestral home

Legendary Indian actor Dilip Kumar's wife, Saira Banu, heaped immense praise on Pakistan for its efforts in preserving actor's ancestral home in Peshawar.

Upon learning of Kyber-Pakhtunkhwa government's decision to purchase the houses of Dilip Kumar and Raj Kapoor for preservation, Banu said, "Mashallah."


In a chat with Times of India, she shared, "I wish the provincial government success in its efforts and sincerely hope that this time the dream comes true. Mashallah.”

She went on to add, “My heart fills up with joy each time I receive the same news about the ancestral home of Yousuf Saheb in Peshawar in North West Frontier province which the provincial government has been repeatedly trying to turn into a monument for posterity.

"It has come up so many times in the past and I have appreciated the tenacity with which the government is pursuing the mission of turning the house into a museum for the public to visit and feel the vintage charm of the house where Dilip Saheb grew up like any bright boy of the province," Banu added.

The actor's wife went on to reveal that they visited Kumar's ancestral home, situated in Peshawar's Qissa Khwani bazaar area, some years ago.

Kumar became emotional as he recalled his childhood memories, she added.

Meanwhile, the owner of the haveli has reportedly asked for Rs200 crore to sell the historic building to the KP government.
https://www.thenews.com.pk/latest/7...stans-decision-to-preserve-his-ancestral-home
 
Legendary Indian actor Dilip Kumar's wife, Saira Banu, heaped immense praise on Pakistan for its efforts in preserving actor's ancestral home in Peshawar.

Upon learning of Kyber-Pakhtunkhwa government's decision to purchase the houses of Dilip Kumar and Raj Kapoor for preservation, Banu said, "Mashallah."


In a chat with Times of India, she shared, "I wish the provincial government success in its efforts and sincerely hope that this time the dream comes true. Mashallah.”

She went on to add, “My heart fills up with joy each time I receive the same news about the ancestral home of Yousuf Saheb in Peshawar in North West Frontier province which the provincial government has been repeatedly trying to turn into a monument for posterity.

"It has come up so many times in the past and I have appreciated the tenacity with which the government is pursuing the mission of turning the house into a museum for the public to visit and feel the vintage charm of the house where Dilip Saheb grew up like any bright boy of the province," Banu added.

The actor's wife went on to reveal that they visited Kumar's ancestral home, situated in Peshawar's Qissa Khwani bazaar area, some years ago.

Kumar became emotional as he recalled his childhood memories, she added.

Meanwhile, the owner of the haveli has reportedly asked for Rs200 crore to sell the historic building to the KP government.
https://www.thenews.com.pk/latest/7...stans-decision-to-preserve-his-ancestral-home

Wow. What an opportunist. :inti
 
Legendary Indian actor Dilip Kumar's wife, Saira Banu, heaped immense praise on Pakistan for its efforts in preserving actor's ancestral home in Peshawar.

Upon learning of Kyber-Pakhtunkhwa government's decision to purchase the houses of Dilip Kumar and Raj Kapoor for preservation, Banu said, "Mashallah."


In a chat with Times of India, she shared, "I wish the provincial government success in its efforts and sincerely hope that this time the dream comes true. Mashallah.”

She went on to add, “My heart fills up with joy each time I receive the same news about the ancestral home of Yousuf Saheb in Peshawar in North West Frontier province which the provincial government has been repeatedly trying to turn into a monument for posterity.

"It has come up so many times in the past and I have appreciated the tenacity with which the government is pursuing the mission of turning the house into a museum for the public to visit and feel the vintage charm of the house where Dilip Saheb grew up like any bright boy of the province," Banu added.

The actor's wife went on to reveal that they visited Kumar's ancestral home, situated in Peshawar's Qissa Khwani bazaar area, some years ago.

Kumar became emotional as he recalled his childhood memories, she added.

Meanwhile, the owner of the haveli has reportedly asked for Rs200 crore to sell the historic building to the KP government.
https://www.thenews.com.pk/latest/7...stans-decision-to-preserve-his-ancestral-home
So Saira is the new anti national and will be asked to move to Pakistan shortly.
 
A provincial government in Pakistan decided to convert the ancestral homes of two legendary Indian actors Dilip Kumar and Raj Kapoor into museums under the Peshawar Revival Plan, a move that has earned a lot of praise. And when Kumar requested fans from across the border to share pictures of his ancestral home, they didn’t disappoint.

The 97-year-old actor got a glimpse of his ancestral home in the region after Pakistani journalist Shiraz Hassan shared a few images on Twitter. Although they showed the home was in a dilapidated state, the actor said he was grateful to see them.

Responding to the tweet, the veteran actor who has received Pakistan’s highest civilian award, asked if others could share more photos of his home, where he spent days of his life in pre-Independence era.

Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa (K-P) Directorate of Archeology and Museums, in a letter issued on September 23, had said that it plans to declare the Kapoor Haveli as protected antiquity. It has further requested the Peshawar district administration to initiate the process for acquiring land for the ancestral homes of Dilip Kumar and Raj Kapoor.

The K-P Directorate of Archeology and Museums Director Dr Samad told The Express Tribune that the department has dispatched a letter to the Peshawar deputy commissioner to assess the value of the houses to purchase the houses of the two legendary stars and convert them into museums.

Raj Kapoor’s ancestral home, known as Kapoor Haveli, is situated in the fabled Qissa Khwani Bazar. It was built between 1918 and 1922 by the legendary actor’s grandfather Dewan Basheswarnath Kapoor.

Kapoor and his uncle Trilok Kapoor were born in the building. It has been declared a national heritage site by the provincial government. In 2018, the KP government decided to convert the Kapoor Haveli into a museum after a request by the actor’s son Rishi Kapoor.

Kumar’s ancestral house is also located in the same locality. The house is in shambles and was declared as a national heritage site in 2014 by the then Nawaz Sharif government.

Reacting to the news, Kumar’s wife Saira Banu said, “I wish the provincial government success in its efforts and sincerely hope that this time the dream comes true.”

https://indianexpress.com/article/t...ets-showered-with-love-from-pakistan-6663008/
 
Quaint in character and Sufi in spirit, Peshawar was once Dilip Kumar’s home. Or “lost city,” as Salman Rushdie might call it. On September 30, the god of acting urged his Pakistani fans to share pictures of his decrepit former ancestral address in Peshawar’s Qissa Khwani Bazaar — literally, a storyteller’s market in a historic city that has unfortunately gained some notoriety in recent decades. The Taliban, terror, jihad and bombing with the BBC even dubbing it ‘the birthplace of al-Qaeda.’

Yet, in 1922 when Yousuf Khan was born there (he was later reborn in Bollywood as Dilip Kumar), the Northwest Frontier was a different place altogether and very much a part of undivided India. These days, the Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa state government has been focussed on preserving the historic homes in the walled city and the most prominent of these are situated in the bustling Qissa Khwani Bazaar.

This neighbourhood has a rather special connection with Bollywood. Not just Dilip Kumar, Hindi cinema doyens Prithviraj and Raj Kapoor also trace their origin to this part of Peshawar. The iconic but ramshackle Kapoor Haveli was rumoured to be built between 1918-1922 by Kapoor’s grandfather Dewan Basheswarnath. Shah Rukh Khan’s family also hailed from Qissa Khwani Bazaar. Some say one of his paternal uncles owned a shop there until recently. If all goes well, the Pakistani government will rescue this forgotten cultural heritage and hopefully, turn the dusty homes of the Kapoors and Kumar into a shrine for movie-goers.

The news was enough to send Dilip Kumar, now 97, on a nostalgic trip. In a series of tweets, on October 1, the thespian shared fond memories of Qissa Khwani Bazaar, a place that he believes has influenced his craft and style. Commenting on the simpler Peshawar times in his memoir The Substance and The Shadow, the nonagenarian notes that “childhood images cling to the subconscious surreptitiously and they emerge before your eyes like an unexpected visitor through the backdoor to give you a lovely surprise.” Indeed, when Kumar’s family (his father was a successful fruit merchant in Peshawar who scorned the idea of his son entering a disreputable profession called the movies) moved to Nashik’s Deolali, the picturesque setting gave him both “creative impetus” and much-needed solace after losing Peshawar.

Homes Left Behind

The ‘mythical’ Peshawar was central to Dilip Kumar’s lifelong friendship with Raj Kapoor. Famously, the two Bollywood giants were neighbours across the border. Their families knew each other well, as Kumar’s dad was friends with Dewan Basheswarnath (Prithviraj’s father, a police official) and it is said that Kumar and Raj Kapoor, who continued to remain close despite becoming superstars in their respective ways, often reminisced of their childhood days. “He was a born extrovert and charmer,” that’s how Kumar described his best friend. Decades later, in 1990-91 during the making of Henna, Rishi and Randhir Kapoor dropped into the now century-old Kapoor Haveli. Back to their roots, they were “received in our street like royalty and were later feted at the provincial governor’s mansion,” according to the Pakistani columnist Mohammed Taqi.

Along with Kumar and Kapoor, the late Dev Anand had formed a troika that reigned golden-age Bollywood. It should not surprise you that Anand also had strong roots in Pakistan having spent his formative years in Lahore. It’s a city, he reflected in later interviews, that shaped him most. Born in Punjab’s Gurdaspur to a well-to-do lawyer, the evergreen star majored in English literature from Government College, Lahore. In 1943, he left Lahore with “only Rs 30 in his pocket and a stamp collection,” travelling by Frontier Mail on his way to Bombay to try his luck in Hindi cinema. Later, the flamboyant star of Taxi Driver and Guide got a chance to revisit Lahore with the late Prime Minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee in the famous peacemaking bus ride from Wagah that the latter billed as a new chapter in the often-fraught Indo-Pak relationship. On the other side of LoC, a carnival atmosphere awaited the Indian delegation.

Horrors of Partition

While Vajpayee and Nawaz Sharif were rewriting history, Anand — indefatigable as ever — was toying with the idea of making a film in Pakistan. As he announced to journalist Rajiv Bajaj, in his typical flourish, “There’s no reason why a great film can’t be made in Pakistan by Dev Anand on a tremendously human angle without any propaganda in it.” The film never really took off, which must have sounded like music to the ears of hapless viewers who had to bear the brunt of latter-day Dev Anand clunkers like Censor and Love at Times Square. Jokes aside, if Dev Anand had an emotional joyride in Lahore as he toured his alma mater mobbed by news photographers and fans, the people of Pakistan returned the favour. When Anand died in 2011, Pakistani fans mourned the loss as one of their own. Ditto with the death of Rishi Kapoor, earlier this year.

Balraj Sahni, a decade older than Anand, was also a Government College alumnus. The Do Bigha Zamin stalwart originally hailed from Rawalpindi where, recalls his son Parikshat Sahni in The Non-Conformist: Memories of My Father, the family kept a pre-Partition mansion as “our winter home.” It is worth remembering that it was Balraj Sahni’s brother Bhisham Sahni who wrote one of the most powerful Partition novels in Tamas, later made into an era-defining Doordarshan series by Govind Nihalani. Another Partition victim is Gulzar. Memories of his hometown Dina (Jhelum) still haunts the veteran lyricist who best summed up the horrors of 1947 in his famous poem Dastak as, “Sarhad par kal raat suna hai, kuch khwaabon ka khoon hua hai.”

Punjabis (like Kapoors, Sahnis or Anand brothers) ruled the 50s Bollywood and Sunil Dutt was one of them. Like Gulzar, he was born in Jhelum and maintained close ties with his native place, so much so that once when he visited his village Khurd, the locals overwhelmed him by suggesting that his ancestral land “still belongs to you” and that he can have it all back whenever he returns. In 1998, he did agree to accompany Dilip Kumar when the acting legend was honoured with Nishan-E-Imtiaz, Pakistan’s highest civilian award shortly following which a huge controversy erupted with Shiv Sena demanding the Mumbai-based Kumar to return the award. Some of the hue and cry was understandable — even expected. Sentiments always run high on both sides. More than 70 years after the acrimonious split the republic of Gandhi and Jinnah still don’t see eye to eye. What else to expect in nations where even a game of cricket is like going to war? Since Partition in 1947, Pakistan’s relationship with India has only gotten worse. Kashmir has been the most important bone of contention. But our hostile neighbour’s role as a chief terror sponsor and the border skirmishes have further harmed the situation, than healing it. The nuclear-armed states have come to blows, more recently in Pulwama.

Under PM Narendra Modi, it can be argued that we have taken a more belligerent approach towards Pakistan for which he has won praise in some quarters. Yet, Modi’s rise has sparked a wave of jingoism previously unseen in India. Especially to Indian Muslims, ‘Go back to Pakistan’ has become the Hindu hardliners’ standard refrain. Still, optimists hope that the Mahabharat-style dispute between the warring cousins will end someday. Would it be cliche to say that ordinary citizens in both countries want peace? We don’t know Pakistan, but speaking of India, even political propaganda has not stopped some Indians, especially elite Punjabis, from romanticising about Pakistan. This, one assumes, is the Pakistan of Faiz, Iqbal and Manto.

Fast forward to 2020, Dilip Kumar and Raj Kapoor hark back to a time when the two nations were one. As a result, they form a crucial link to the two cultures. When Kumar decided to keep his Nishan-E-Imtiaz, despite the political protests, he reportedly wrote to AB Vajpayee countering that if the PM “thinks that the award injures or lowers the prestige of India then I will surrender it.” He never did. And now, with news coming in of his Peshawar home being turned into a museum, it can be said that life has come a full circle. Probably, it will spell some catharsis to boot.

https://indianexpress.com/article/e...-had-their-origins-across-the-border-6667724/
 
More than super famous, they are superstars.

Thanks. I don't know many Bollywood actors. Genuinley dont see the need to pay homage to actors ( especially gutter level actors of lollywood bollywood)....but fair enough if people enjoy his works it may encourage some small scale tourism.
 
Playing devil’s advocate here but why should taxpayers of Peshawar be wasting their money on such nonsense? It’s not as if Kumar has had a massive positive impact on the lives of the masses (like perhaps a scientist or even sportsperson has). Sure if a government has excess cash to spend then indulge in such projects but who is even going to visit this museum?
 
Awesome. Pakistan should also start honouring Adnan Sami and others. Need to rename historical places as a reversal of what India is doing. Super Nation Pakistan Protective of Minorities Potential Superpower.
 
PESHAWAR: The Khyber Pakhtunkhwa government has decided to purchase the ancestral home of Bollywood icon and legendary actor Dilip Kumar (Yousuf Khan) to convert it into a museum.

The archaeology department has written a letter in this regard to the district administration, who in response has enforced Section-144 in the vicinity of the house.

MPA Kamran Khan Bangash, the special assistant to KP chief minister on Information and higher education, told Geo News on Tuesday that the provincial government is determined to buy the Kumar's house.

He said that the section has been enforced on any sale or purchase of the house as the government is going to buy it. The house has already been declared a national heritage.

Bangash said that in the first stage, the provincial government is providing funds for purchasing the house while in the second phase, repair and renovation work will be carried out to revive it in its original condition, the MPA said.

He said that later, the house will be converted into a museum to pay tribute to the great actor of all times. The museum will feature biography, photographs of Yousuf Khan and his family's affiliation with Peshawar and other records of the legend.

Kumar was born as Yousuf Khan on December 11, 1922 in Khudadad Mohalla, on the back side of Qissa Khwani Bazar of Peshawar. He moved to Bombay (now Mumbai) in 1935 along with his father Lala Ghulam Sarwar and his family for business.

Yousuf Khan joined the film industry in the early 1940s and began his acting career as Dilip Kumar
 
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">Pak State Negotiating To Buy Ancestral Houses Of Dilip Kumar, Raj Kapoor <a href="https://t.co/ODQgDcknNX">https://t.co/ODQgDcknNX</a> <a href="https://t.co/KXQPmk0juJ">pic.twitter.com/KXQPmk0juJ</a></p>— NDTV News feed (@ndtvfeed) <a href="https://twitter.com/ndtvfeed/status/1355562932717953027?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">January 30, 2021</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>
 
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">Pak State Negotiating To Buy Ancestral Houses Of Dilip Kumar, Raj Kapoor <a href="https://t.co/ODQgDcknNX">https://t.co/ODQgDcknNX</a> <a href="https://t.co/KXQPmk0juJ">pic.twitter.com/KXQPmk0juJ</a></p>— NDTV News feed (@ndtvfeed) <a href="https://twitter.com/ndtvfeed/status/1355562932717953027?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">January 30, 2021</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>

Pakistan 'state'. Could have easily written 'government' but it doesn't sound authoritarian enough.
 
Pakistan 'state'. Could have easily written 'government' but it doesn't sound authoritarian enough.

Just like the word regime used by Ind media instead of administration...
Idiots!
 
Bring these old homes of Bollywood stars down then build something over it that benefits the people. It is not as if these are places of worship that need to be protected for historical reason. When these Bollywood people moved to India I don't see why we should preserve these crumbling places. If a Waheed Murad or Mohammed Ali had ancestral homes in India they would never think twice to demolish them.
 
Bring these old homes of Bollywood stars down then build something over it that benefits the people. It is not as if these are places of worship that need to be protected for historical reason. When these Bollywood people moved to India I don't see why we should preserve these crumbling places. If a Waheed Murad or Mohammed Ali had ancestral homes in India they would never think twice to demolish them.

Forget these names which no one knows in india, even Jinnah House in Mumbai is in poor condition and govt is not doing anything to preserve it.
 
Forget these names which no one knows in india, even Jinnah House in Mumbai is in poor condition and govt is not doing anything to preserve it.

Pak actors may not be half as famous as Bollywood ones yet India will destroy their homes knowing exactly who they are. Jinnah being our founding father's home is preserved so that India can show how tolerant they are.
 
Pak actors may not be half as famous as Bollywood ones yet India will destroy their homes knowing exactly who they are. Jinnah being our founding father's home is preserved so that India can show how tolerant they are.

This is not how we work. Why destroy when you can occupy? Destruction is only needed when you want to construct something new.
 
This is not how we work. Why destroy when you can occupy? Destruction is only needed when you want to construct something new.

Whose "we" Pak or Bharat?? Let me tell you India can destroy nothing not even the farmers protest! I didn't know occupation was a good thing!!?:)) Back to the topic Pak should destroy these homes of the Kapoor's or Dilip Kumar.
 
KARACHI: Veteran actor Dilip Kumar's nephew, Fawad Ishaq, has expressed his gratitude to Prime Minister Imran Khan for preserving the Indian legend's ancestral home in the Qissa Khawani Bazaar of Peshawar.

Speaking to Geo News, Ishaq said Dilip Kumar's attachment to his hometown never diminished and that the seasoned actor had wished to donate his house — for which he had also given a power of attorney.

"He loves his hometown very much," the renowned actor's nephew stated, referring to Peshawar and the famous and historical Qissa Khawani Bazaar's Khudadad neighbourhood, which used to be a residential area earlier but is now a big business centre.

Popularly known as Dilip Kumar, Muhammad Yusuf Khan was born in this house on December 11, 1922, and moved to Bombay with his family in 1930. In 2013, the Indian actor's residence was declared a national heritage site by the federal government of Pakistan.

Dilip Kumar had visited his ancestral home in 1988, kissing the doorstep and reminiscing his childhood while speaking to the media.

In 1997, when the Indian legend was awarded Pakistan's highest civilian honour, the Nishan-e-Imtiaz, he had wanted to go to his ancestral home in Peshawar but was unable to do so due to the overwhelming rush of people coming to greet him.

Kapoor Haveli — the former residence of another Indian actor, the late Raj Kapoor — is also located in Peshawar, in the Dilgaran area.

A generation of Kapoor family, which gave many superstars to Bollywood, was born in this mansion that was built between 1918 and 1922 by Raj Kapoor's father, Dewan Kapoor.
 
PESHAWAR: The owners of the ancestral homes of Bollywood legends Dilip Kumar and Raj Kapoor have raised objections over the value of the estates after the Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Archaeology and Museums Department on Friday transferred more than Rs23 million to the district administration.

A lawyer for the Dilip Kumar house's owner, Gul Rehman Mohmand, told Geo News that if the government wishes to purchase the veteran film actor's home, it should pay the market rate of Rs350 million.

Kapoor Haveli's owner Ali Qadir, on the other hand, said the estate had a unique status so the government should pay Rs2 billion. Qadir warned that he would approach the courts over the PTI regime's offered price.

Earlier today, the KP Archaeology and Museums Department transferred Rs23.056 million to the district administration, valuing Kumar's four-marla ancestral home at Rs8.56 million and Kapoor's 6.25-marla estate at Rs15 million.

Also read: Dilip Kumar's nephew thankful to PM Imran for preserving Indian legend's ancestral home

Speaking to Geo News, KP Archaeology and Museums Department Director Dr Abdul Samad said the government had decided to turn Dilip Kumar's ancestral home and Kapoor Haveli — both in Peshawar — into museums and would protect and preserve both the estates.

His department, Samad added, could not back down from the purchase now nor could the owners reject the government's offers. Only the prices of the houses could be negotiated with the owners, he said.

https://www.geo.tv/latest/335979-di...rs-dispute-value-after-transfer-of-over-rs23m
 
Bollywood icon Dilip Kumar was taken to the hospital in Mumbai on Sunday after he complained of breathing difficulty.

The veteran film star’s wife and actor Saira Banu confirmed the news and revealed that he was admitted to PD Hinduja Hospital.

Speaking to Indian Express, Saira said: “After experiencing breathlessness, we took Dilip sahab to the hospital in Khar Road at 8.30 am. Doctors are treating him and we have got a few tests done, we are awaiting reports. Please pray for him that he feels better and we can take him home quickly.”

Kumar had been hospitalized last month as well but his wife had confirmed that the admission was only for the purpose of a routine check-up.

GEO
 
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