The earthquake that shook the Himalayan nation on January 15, 1934 is considered to be Nepal's worst tragedy ever, which not only claimed nearly 12,000 lives but also destroyed thousands of buildings and severely damaged the country's architectural fabric, including the three famous Darbar Squares and the iconic Dharhara Tower.
Parsuram Upadhyay, 90, considers the previous earthquake "scarier".
"I feel lucky to have survived not just one but two killer quakes. But the one that hit us in 1934 was scarier. Jets of water sprouted from the ground, and the earth shook like it was possessed by some demon," Upadhyay told PTI.
And, Upadhyay was indeed lucky to survive the current earthquake as Bhaktapur district in the Kathmandu Valley suffered massive damage with rows and rows of houses flattened by the fury, and the immense loss of architectural heritage at Darbar Square.
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Siraha and Saptari districts were among the worst-affected in the Terai Belt in the 1934 temblor.
Devi, his 84-year-old wife, who was just a three-year-old child back then, has very faint memories, but she says, "her parents have told many stories about the '90 saal ka bhukampa', and she feels blessed to have lived through both of them.
92-year-old Bhotu Thapa, who survived the tragic event, called the previoys quake "a harsh reality, a nightmare."
"The bodies were buried as there were so many and they were unable to cremate," reminisces Thapa, who was a 11-year-old boy then.
After the April 25 earthquake too, the funeral pyres on banks of Bagmti burnt for two continuous days, from dusk till dawn.