Then rumours started flowing in. Any and everyone coming from any direction was telling one story or another and some of which was that the muslims were mustering all around the town and the outskirts for attacking the Hindus in the town. In Jalpaiguri town the Hindus were a vast majority. There were hardly more than ten percent muslims after independence and partition of the country. Some ares in the outskirts and adjoining villages there were a number of muslims who were mostly poor farmers with one or two landholders among them. The elders congregated in a meeting on the varanda of Ghatak Bari and after much deliberation it was decided that all women and children would be sent inside the jail compound for their safety and all youngmen would stand on guard at all the places of entrance to our locality with whatever weapons they could gather. Though we were college students but we and all our friends were given the duty of guarding the streets, lanes and by-lanes within the
Thursday, December 16, 2010
Finchu Mama
Tuesday, December 14, 2010
Finchu Mama
It was end 1949 or early 1950. I was in Ist year. Gora was my class mate but in science stream. Finchu Mama was in class IX. He was two years my junior. He left
Friday, November 26, 2010
Finchu Mama
Wednesday, November 24, 2010
Finch Mama
Finch Mama
Tuesday, November 23, 2010
Finchu Mama
Thursday, August 26, 2010
Finch Mama.
Wednesday, August 25, 2010
Finchu Mama
Saturday, August 21, 2010
Busy.
Friday, July 2, 2010
Memoirs of another day - A. Roy Mukherjee.
The other most exciting event of this period was the 1942 movement. We were then at Rampurhat, a small town in the Birbhum district. One day a procession was passing through the street in front of our house. I was standing at the gate of our house. Bhola Da, my father’s official orderly was also standing beside me. There were a number of Santhal adibashis joining the procession and shouting slogans. Suddenly a very tall and stout person from those people took me away on his shoulder and started dancing and chanting slogans. I enjoyed it very much. Bhola Da was running side by side and urging the person to leave me alone. The procession halted near the local Police Station. The agitation increased to a crescendo. Bhola Da, somehow, managed to take me away from that person and we came back home. But we could see everything clearly from our house, as the Police Station was not very far. However, nothing much happened that day and after sometime the procession passed peacefully.
Thursday, May 20, 2010
Memoirs of another day - Arun Roy Mukherjee
During this period the most exciting news was the sudden disappearance of Subhas Chandra Bose from their house in
Sunday, May 9, 2010
Memoirs of another day - Arun Roy Mukherjee
The world war broke out sometime in September, 1939. In the next two years it spread into
Monday, April 19, 2010
Memoirs of another day - Arun Roy Mukherjee
XXIV : While in this school at Rampurhat, a fuuny incident happened and I still enjoy a hearty laugh whenever it come up in my mind. I was then a student of class IV. A notice was circulated that a high government official was coming to visit our school. So the Headmaster and the teachers started preparing for the impending visit by the official. The Headmaster, who knew my father and also knew that my mother can sing songs, requested that a few boys be trained by my mother in singing a good song of welcome. My mother accepted the proposal and started training four of us, all students of the school. My mother selected “ Swagato, Swagato he aji atithi”, a Bengali song of Rabindranath for the occasion. It so happened that the said government official was also to visit some other institutions also. The organizers and officials of those institutions got the message of our music training and approached my mother to allow the boys to sing the same song at their functions when the government official visited their places. My mother told them to take up the matter with the school headmaster for such permission. Any way, permission was granted. It was so arranged that we, the four of us, would first attend the school when the officer arrives and after completing the song, shall immediately leave for the next venue of his visit and so on. On the appointed day, the officer arrived at our school first. We sang the song and then was almost snatched away for the next venue. We arrived and sang our song and so completed three such places one after the other. The incident happened at the forth spot. The officer arrived, was welcomed and garlanded and took his chair on the temporary dias. We were all ready with our harmonium et all. As soon as we started to sing, the officer jumped on his fit. He was in state of fury. He raised a finger at us and shouted in chaste Bengali “Ei chorara, tora tham to. Sei sakal theke jekhane jachchi, seikhanei ei choraguno amar pechon pechon giye suru korch Hagoto, Hagoto. Jathesto hoyeche. Ar noy.” (You boys, just stop your music. From early morning wherever I am going these boys are following me and starting their song “defecate, defecate”. I had had enough of that.)
Sunday, April 18, 2010
Memoirs
Friday, March 26, 2010
Memoirs of another day - Arun Roy Mukherjee
XXIII : My father was transferred to Rampurhat, a small town then in Birbhum. Initially we put up at a mud-built two storied house in a locality near the “Chal-dhowani” pond. This was a very big pond and was the source of water for drinking and cooking for all the residents of the locality. Our first acquaitance there was with the Ganguly family who lived very near to the “Chal-dhowani” pond. The family consisted of an elderly couple and their only son who was my name-sake “Arun”. After a few months we shifted to a new brick-built house near the local police station. A mosque was just beside our house and a very big pond was also there at the back of our house. This is for the first time that I was admitted to a school. I became a student of
Memoirs of another day - Arun Roy Mukherjee.
XXII : Sejomama in those days was staying at Belakoba. Belakoba was a remote village and very few people lived there. Sejomama lived in a house the walls of which were made of bamboo. One local man used to attend to Sejomama’s all personal needs. The man had the habit of taking opium. He used to boil some milk with his dose of opium every evening and drink it and keep the vessel somewhere outside the kitchen. One night a tiger came to that place and somehow had a taste of the remains in the vessel. From then on the tiger would come every night and taste the opium-milk left in the vessel. One day the attendant took leave and went somewhere else. There was no opium-milk that night. The tiger came and having not found the opium-milk started howling and roamed around the place till morning. Sejomama was very much afraid and left the place at the first opportunity and came back to Jalpaiguri and did not go back to Belakoba again In winter tigers used to come even to Jalpaiguri town almost every other night. (Posted)
Sunday, March 14, 2010
MEMOIRES OF ANOTHER DAY -XXII -Arun Rou Mukherjee
XXII : Sejomama in those days was staying at Belakoba. Belakoba was a remote village and very few people lived there. Sejomama lived in a house the walls of which were made of bamboo. One local man used to attend to Sejomama’s all personal needs. The man had the habit of taking opium. He used to boil some milk with his dose of opium every evening and drink it and keep the vessel somewhere outside the kitchen. One night a tiger came to that place and somehow had a taste of the remains in the vessel. From then on the tiger would come every night and taste the opium-milk left in the vessel. One day the attendant took leave and went somewhere else. There was no opium-milk that night. The tiger came and having not found the opium-milk started howling and roamed around the place till morning. Sejomama was very much afraid and left the place at the first opportunity and came back to Jalpaiguri and did not go back to Belakoba again In winter tigers used to come even to Jalpaiguri town almost every other night.
Tuesday, March 9, 2010
Saturday, February 27, 2010
Sickness
Wednesday, February 3, 2010
Sunday, January 24, 2010
Sunday, January 17, 2010
Wednesday, January 6, 2010
Memoirs of another day - XXI - Arun Roy Mukherjee.
XXI : Community Durga Puja of Raikutpata, in those days, were used to be celebrated on the open field belonging to Jiban Gati Ray which was adjacent to his ancestral house. Wrestling competition and such kind of games were organised on the Mahastami morning at the Puja venue. I was accompanying Didima to the Puja pandal on the Mahastami morning when we saw that the wife of Heramba Mama (Heramba Bose, father of Nirmal Kunar Bose, who in later years became a forward Bloc leader and a minister in the Left Front Government in West Bengal) was returning from the puja venue and tears were rolling down her eyes. Didima asked her for the reasons of weeping on such an auspicious day. She replied that she had made a great mistake that morning at the puja pandal. She stated that she being a kayastha ( a non-brahmin) went inside the puja enclave and touched some puja materials and at that the brahmin ladies who were helping the priests chastised her. Didima became furious to learn that she had been virtually driven out of the puja enclave for this so called mistake. Didima told the lady not to weep and come to the puja pandal with us. Didima virtually dragged her to the puja pandal and after arriving at the site demanded to know who had driven the lady out from the puja enclave. She emphatically stated that this being a community puja, every person of the locality, irrespective of caste, creed or any other consideration had an equal right to participate in every aspect of the puja. She then dragged the lady along with her inside and asked her to join her in helping the priest. All the people present there were dumb-struck and did not either utter an word of objection or shown any resentment openly. Instead, the youngmen present appreciated her move.