Setting a novel example, people of this nondescript village in Nadia district stops all works for 52 seconds at 10.50 am every weekday to sing the National Anthem.
People at home and those in moving motorbikes, auto-rickshaws, cycles and pedestrians on road stand still wherever they are and start singing.
At that particular hour, students of the state run Abhainagar Primary School sing the 52-second-long National Anthem and it is echoed to nearby areas through loudspeakers.
"We thought this would instill patriotism among the students and the people. We had requested the villagers, wherever they are, to sing the national anthem along with their children at the school. They agreed and the practice continues," said the school Headmaster Safikul Islam.
A loudspeaker has been fitted around 100 feet away from the school building and those who hear the National Anthem being sung through it, join the chorus, Islam said.
"I and two others were passing by the school with crops on our head on Wednesday. At that time we heard the National Anthem in the loudspeaker. We stopped walking and started to sing along. It felt good," said 50-year-old farmer Maijuddin Biswas.
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Champa Bibi, 26, used to bring her two daughters to the school and leave at once for home.
"Now my daughters asked me to wait and leave the school only after singing the Jana gana mana along with them. This is a nice job done by the school," she said.
Narsina Bibi cooks mid-day meal in the school. "When the bell rings for the National Anthem, I stand up and sing it from the kitchen," she said.
The head master said the school has two loudspeakers and two sound boxes. He also has a plan to fit more loudspeakers and is trying to collect funds for it.
"We can make announcements using this and it will also help us make faster communication with guardians," Islam said.
The school has 115 students and most of them belong to very poor families, he said adding that it has won a few government awards including the Shishumitra Vidyalaya Purashkar in 2016 and the Nirmal Vidyalaya Purashkar in 2012.
Abdul Mannan Seikh, member, Tehatta 2 Panchayat Samity, said he is aware of the effort.
"The people of the area is basically illiterate. If the locals response to the appeal of the school, it is most welcome. The idea is good for instilling patriotism," he said.
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