Begunkodar Railway Station in West Bengal's Purulia district holds a unique distinction — it was closed for approximately 40 years because the railway employees refused to work there, citing intense haunting. The station, located in a remote area of the state, was reportedly haunted by a woman in white who appeared on the platform at night, terrifying staff and passengers. The haunting became so severe that railway workers walked off the job entirely, and the station was formally closed. The surrounding village also reported supernatural phenomena — doors of houses near the station opening and closing at night, the sound of an arriving train when no train was scheduled, and the apparition of the woman walking along the tracks toward the village. The station was eventually reopened after decades, and the reported activity has apparently diminished, though locals still treat the station with caution. Begunkodar's story — an entire railway station shut down because of a ghost — is one of the most remarkable cases in Indian paranormal history, representing an official acknowledgment by Indian Railways that supernatural activity made the station inoperable.
