試す - 無料

MANDAL VERSUS MILLENNIAL

THE WEEK India

|

November 09, 2025

As Bihar heads into a crucial election, Tejashwi Yadav is wooing the restless youth with promises of employment, while the ruling NDA banks on Nitish Kumar's loyal base of women voters to see him through what many believe could be his last political battle

- PRATUL SHARMA

MANDAL VERSUS MILLENNIAL

The ghats of Patna hum with their usual mix of ritual and routine.

The Ganga moves slow and heavy with silt as workers scoop out slush to ready the steps for the annual Chhath festival. This year, the cleanup is hurried, as devotees will also be voters in a few weeks.

A few steps away, a cluster of young men and women sit cross-legged solving question papers. One student, seated slightly apart, looks up from his sheet. “We are doing a mock test for the sub-inspector exam,” says Sumit Kushwaha, taking a break from his general knowledge paper. “The government has advertised 1,799 posts, the biggest recruitment drive in years. Already 14 lakh people have applied.”

The scene repeats itself across Bihar—students studying in open spaces, on railway platforms and in parks. In Patna’s Gandhi Maidan, hundreds gathered daily for physical training until the ground was taken over for election rallies. In recent months, Bihar has seen several student protests over question paper leaks and job scams. For a state long known for its civil service aspirants but poor in job opportunities, the elections have become an occasion for cautious hope.

Sumit, a political science graduate, says the group has been studying together for months because of the lack of quiet spaces. Beside him sits Pradeep Kumar, who completed his postgraduate degree in mathematics in 2019. Both are preparing to become darogas, or sub-inspectors, a title that carries significant weight in the popular imagination across the Hindi heartland.

THE WEEK India からのその他のストーリー

THE WEEK India

The buzz is real

The investment announcements by Google and other companies in Andhra Pradesh are already yielding tangible results, triggering a real estate surge across Visakhapatnam's IT zones and adjoining districts.

time to read

1 mins

January 18, 2026

THE WEEK India

THE WEEK India

Legacy reloaded

From sugar mills in Uttar Pradesh to Mumbai's high-street retail, a new generation of scions is reshaping India's old businesses

time to read

7 mins

January 18, 2026

THE WEEK India

THE WEEK India

TRIAL IN THE US IS THE ONLY WAY TO GET RID OF MADURO

Mercedes Baptista Guevara is an attorney and diplomat based in Spain.

time to read

3 mins

January 18, 2026

THE WEEK India

THE WEEK India

Wrong decisions, right places

Sometimes a film, a book, and a bottle of vodka blend in ways so unexpectedly perfect that you feel grateful simply for having been present.

time to read

4 mins

January 18, 2026

THE WEEK India

THE WEEK India

TRUST FACTOR

Lokesh's willingness to listen, his comfort with detail, and his bias for execution create confidence

time to read

3 mins

January 18, 2026

THE WEEK India

THE WEEK India

March to Caracas—Yankee oil doo

Lefties and liberals want Narendra Modi to condemn Don Trump's invasion of Venezuela. All invasions are bad; innocents get shot. But if we condemn one, shouldn't we condemn all?

time to read

2 mins

January 18, 2026

THE WEEK India

THE WEEK India

Revision before the exam

BJP and Trinamool use SIR to kick-off state election campaign, but those affected by the exercise remain anxious about their future

time to read

5 mins

January 18, 2026

THE WEEK India

Nuclear governance: caution to confidence

Nuclear power has long occupied a singular and somewhat uneasy place in Bharat's public imagination. It has been viewed, often with pride, as proof of scientific achievement and strategic resolve, yet governed with a restraint that reflected a deeper discomfort with the diffusion of risk.

time to read

2 mins

January 18, 2026

THE WEEK India

THE WEEK India

I WANT TO BE KNOWN AS CHIEF JOB CREATOR

Historically, the Telugu Desam Party has been a regional party but it has always had the nation’s interest at heart.

time to read

12 mins

January 18, 2026

THE WEEK India

THE WEEK India

The battle of words

As young adults we certainly used abbreviations and cryptic phrases. But MC and BC did not stand for the master of ceremonies and the era before Christ. They stood for something else which, if said in full, would certainly have made our mothers make us rinse our mouths with soap. Once you have tasted soap, you would not want to taste it ever again.

time to read

4 mins

January 18, 2026

Listen

Translate

Share

-
+

Change font size