India is the name given to the vast peninsula which the continent of Asia throws out to the south of the magnificent mountain ranges that
stretch in a sword like curve across the southern border of Tibet. Shaped like an irregular quadrilateral, this large expanse of territory,
we call India, deserves the name of a subcontinent. Ancient Geographers referred India as being “constituted with a four-fold conformation”
(chatuh samasthana samsthitam), “on its South and West and East is the Great Ocean, the Himavat range stretches along its north like the
string of a bow”.
The name Himvat in the above passage refers not only to the snow capped ranges of the Himalayas but also to their less
elevated offshoots -the Patkai, Lushai and Chittagong Hills in the east, and the Sulaiman and Kirthar ranges in the west. These go down to
the Sea and separate India from the wooded valley of Irrawady, on the one hand, and the hilly tableland of Iran, on the other. The Himalayas
standing tall in breathtaking splendor are radiant in myth and mystery. These, the youngest and tallest mountain ranges, feed the Ganga with
never-ending streams of snow. The Himalayas are home to the people of Kashmir, Himachal Pradesh, Uttaranchal, Sikkim and Arunachal Pradesh.
Indians love these snow-capped peaks because they are a part of every Indian's life. Indian's revere the mountains, as they would, the
father. Even today, when Urban india is racing against time, in the caves of the snow-clad peaks, live hermits - seeking the divine.
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