Gurusaday Dutt: Difference between revisions
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===Artistic=== | ===Artistic=== | ||
Dutt was mostly known for his interest and contributions to Bengal's folk art, folk dance and folk music.<ref name="prideofbengal'sfolkart"> Kakoli Biswas, 'Pride of Bengal's Folk Art: Gurusaday Dutt', Karnavati University at http://karnavatiuniversity.edu.in</ref> He spent a lifetime collecting and studying art objects and handiwork from the remotest corners of undivided rural Bengal collecting items of folk art such as Kalighat paintings, ''patuas'' ('পটুয়া') scrolls, embroidered ''kanthas'' ('কাঁথা'), terracotta panels, stone sculptures, wooden carvings, dolls and toys, moulds used for making patterns on sweets or mango-paste etc.<ref name="championofbengal'sfolkart"> Soumyadeep Roy, Gurusaday Dutt: Champion of Bengal's Folk Art', 07 December, 2020 at https://www.livemintmyindia.com</ref> Gurusaday Dutt also wrote extensively on folk culture. Rabindranath Tagore and C.F. Andrews wrote in the foreword of the biography of his wife, Saroj Nalini Dutt, which he wrote. Gurusaday Dutt also wrote a good deal about the Bratachari movement. | Dutt was mostly known for his interest and contributions to Bengal's folk art, folk dance and folk music.<ref name="prideofbengal'sfolkart"> Kakoli Biswas, 'Pride of Bengal's Folk Art: Gurusaday Dutt', Karnavati University at http://karnavatiuniversity.edu.in</ref> He spent a lifetime collecting and studying art objects and handiwork from the remotest corners of undivided rural Bengal collecting items of folk art such as Kalighat paintings, ''patuas'' ('পটুয়া') scrolls,<ref name="speakingwithpictures"/> embroidered ''kanthas'' ('কাঁথা'), terracotta panels, stone sculptures, wooden carvings, dolls and toys, moulds used for making patterns on sweets or mango-paste etc.<ref name="championofbengal'sfolkart"> Soumyadeep Roy, Gurusaday Dutt: Champion of Bengal's Folk Art', 07 December, 2020 at https://www.livemintmyindia.com</ref> Gurusaday Dutt also wrote extensively on folk culture. Rabindranath Tagore and C.F. Andrews wrote in the foreword of the biography of his wife, Saroj Nalini Dutt, which he wrote. Gurusaday Dutt also wrote a good deal about the Bratachari movement. | ||
==Organisations founded== | ==Organisations founded== |
Revision as of 14:29, 17 January 2022
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Gurusaday Dutt | |
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Born | 10 May 1882 |
Died | 25 June 1941 Calcutta, India | (aged 59)
Occupation | Civil servant, folklorist |
Spouse(s) | Saroj Nalini Dutt (nee De) (সরোজ নলিনী দত্ত) (দে) |
Gurusaday Dutt (Bengali: গুরুসদয় দত্ত) (10 May, 1882– 25 June, 1941) (Bengali: ২৮ বৈশাখ, ১২৮৯- ১১ আষাঢ়, ১৩৪৮) was a civil servant, folklorist, and writer.[1] He was the founder of the Bratachari Movement in the 1930s.[2]
Early life and education
Dutt, born to Ramkrishna Dutta Chaudhuri and Anandamayee Debi, was a member of the zamindari family of Birasri (বীরশ্রি) village in Karimganj (করিমগঞ্জ) sub-division of Sylhet district, in eastern Bengal (present day Bangladesh). Members of his family were followers of the Vaishnavite sect.
After completing his Entrance examination at Government College, Sylhet, in 1898, Dutt completed his F.A. examination from Presidency College, Calcutta in 1901. He obtained a scholarship raised by the Sylhet Union to study in Emmanuel College, Cambridge. He passed the Open Competitive Service examination in 1905. Subsequently, he was called to the Bar by the Honourable Society of Gray's Inn.
He was married to Saroj Nalini Dutt and they had one son.[1]
Career and political views
He was the district magistrate of Howrah, Mymensingh and Birbhum,[3] director of Industries, chief whip in the Bengal Legislative Council, member of the Council of States and of the Central Legislative Assembly (1930-1933) and secretary, Local Self Government and Public Health, Government of Bengal.[4]
In 1928, at Howrah, in connection with the Bamangachi Firing case, he condemned the firing on a crowd of protesters by the police led by a British officer. The matter was raised in the House of Lords in London and as a punitive measure he was transferred to Mymensingh. In Mymensingh he refused to take against those who were protesting against the government's Salt Act, which led to his transfer to Birbhum.[5]
Social, cultural and artistic contributions
Social
Dutt's social work for the development of villages and improvement of agriculture led to the foundation of the first Rural Reconstruction Movement in India in Birbhum in 1918, extending the movement to several districts, such as Bankura, Howrah and Mymensingh. In 1922, he started a society for co-operative irrigation in Bankura, which he later extended to Mymensingh and Birbhum. In 1924, he headed an Indian delegation to a meeting of the Agricultural Institute in Rome. In December, 1929, he started Gramer Daak ('গ্রামের ডাক')that dealt with agrarian and rural matters.
His contribution to the empowerment of mostly rural women was evident in the establishment of the Saroj Nalini Dutt Memorial Association, as a Central Training Institute for training women, deprived of formal education, in the crafts and basic education in February, 1925. In October 1925, he started a monthly magazine entitled, Bangalakshmi ('বঙ্গলক্ষী') to give voice to village women.
Cultural
Dutt contributed immensely to the development of rural dance forms. In Mymensingh he started a Folk Dance Revival Society, which revived the secular Jaari ('জারি') dance. In 1930, he discovered the Raibeshe ('রায়বেশে') folk dance, a martial dance of un-divided Bengal, in Birbhum. Subsequently, he also revived the Kaathi (কাঠি), Dhamail (ধামায়েল), Baul (বাউল), Jhumur (ঝুমুর), Brata (ব্রত) and Dhali (ঢালি) dances from different parts of undivided Bengal. In 1931, after meeting Cecil Sharp, who had revived Morris dancing in England, he set up the Bangiya Palli Sampad Raksha Samiti (বঙ্গিয় পল্লি রক্ষা সমিতি) (Cultural Heritage Protection Society of Bengal).
All these efforts culminated in the founding of the Bratachari movement in 1932. In 1934, the Bangiya Palli Sampad Raksha Samiti was renamed as The Bengal Bratachari Society. In 1936, he started Banglar Shakti ('বাংলার শক্তি'), a journal on behalf of the Bengal Bratachari Society.
Artistic
Dutt was mostly known for his interest and contributions to Bengal's folk art, folk dance and folk music.[6] He spent a lifetime collecting and studying art objects and handiwork from the remotest corners of undivided rural Bengal collecting items of folk art such as Kalighat paintings, patuas ('পটুয়া') scrolls,[3] embroidered kanthas ('কাঁথা'), terracotta panels, stone sculptures, wooden carvings, dolls and toys, moulds used for making patterns on sweets or mango-paste etc.[7] Gurusaday Dutt also wrote extensively on folk culture. Rabindranath Tagore and C.F. Andrews wrote in the foreword of the biography of his wife, Saroj Nalini Dutt, which he wrote. Gurusaday Dutt also wrote a good deal about the Bratachari movement.
Organisations founded
- Mymensingh Folk Dance and Folk Music Society (1929)
- Pallisampad Raksha Samiti (পল্লি রক্ষা সমিতি) (1931)
- Bratachari Loknritya Samiti (ব্রতচারি লোক নৃত্য সমিতি) (1932)
- South India Bratachari Society (1932)
- Sarbabharatiya Bratachari Society (সর্ব ভারতীয় ব্রতচারি সোসাইটি)
- Bratacharigram (ব্রতচারি গ্রাম) (1941)
- Bratachari Janashiksha Pratishthan (ব্রতচারি জনশিক্ষা প্রতিষ্ঠান) (1941)
Awards
Publications
- Agricultural Organisation and Rural Reconstruction in Bengal (1919)
- Bhajar Banshi (ভজার বাঁশি) (1922)
- Palli Sangskar (পল্লী সংস্কার) (1925)
- Village Reconstruction (1925)
- Ganer Saji (গানের সাজি) (1932)
- Indian Folk Dance and Folklore Movement (1933)
- Bratachari Synthesis (in Bengali) (1937)
- Patuya Sangit (পটুয়া সঙ্গীত) (1939)
- Bratacharir Marmakatha (ব্রতচারি মর্মকথা) (1940)
- A Woman of India (1941)
- Bratachari: Its Aim and Meaning (1942)
- The Folk Dances of Bengal (1954)
- Shrihatter Lokasangit (শ্রীহট্টের লোকসঙ্গীত) (1966)
- Folk Arts and Crafts of Bengal (1990)[9]
- Art of Kantha (1995)
- Banglar Lokashilpa o Lokanritya (বাংলার লোকশিল্প ও লোকনৃত্য) (Calcutta: Chatim Books, 2008)
- Goraey Golod (গোরায় গলত)
- Gramer Kaajer ka kha Ga (গ্রামের কাজের ক, খ, গ)
- Saroj Nalini
- Palli Sanskar O Sangathan (পল্লী সংস্কার ও সংগঠন)
- Paaglamir Puthi (পাগলামির পুঁথি)
- Purir Mahathwa (পুরির মাহাত্ম্য)
- Banglar Samrik Krira (বাংলার শ্মরিক ক্রীড়া)
- Chaander Buri (চাঁদের বুড়ি)
- Bratachari Shakhaa (ব্রতচারি শাখা)
- Bratachari Parichoy (ব্রতচারি পরিচয়)
- Banglar Bir Jodha Raebeshe (বাংলার বীর যদ্ধা রায়বেশে)
Legacy
A road in Calcutta, a gold medal and a cash prize, awarded to the first ranked student of geography of Calcutta University and a scholarship given by the Sylhet Union (Srihatta Sammilani) (শ্রীহট্ট সম্মিলনী) are named after him. His portrait hangs on a wall of Mahajati Sadan, Calcutta.
See also
References
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 Tapati Dasgupta, 'Social Thought of Rabindranath Tagore: A Historical Analysis, (Calcutta, Abhinav Publications, 1993), p. 138
- ↑ Sayantani Adhikary, The Bratachari Movement and the Invention of a 'Folk Tradition', in South Asia: Journal of South Asian Studies, Vol.: 38, 2015, Issue 4, pp. 656-670
- ↑ 3.0 3.1 Roma Chatterjee, 'Speaking with Pictures: Folk Art and the Narrative Tradition in India', New Delhi: Routledge, 2012)
- ↑ Waltraud Ernest, 'Colonialism and the Transnational Psychiatry: The Development of an Indian Mental Hospital', (London: Anthem Press, 2013), p. 243
- ↑ 5.0 5.1 Bratachari Sports Federation at https://www.martialyogaarts.com
- ↑ Kakoli Biswas, 'Pride of Bengal's Folk Art: Gurusaday Dutt', Karnavati University at http://karnavatiuniversity.edu.in
- ↑ Soumyadeep Roy, Gurusaday Dutt: Champion of Bengal's Folk Art', 07 December, 2020 at https://www.livemintmyindia.com
- ↑ New Years Honours List, 1938 at https://www.hmoob.in
- ↑ Publications of G.S.Dutt
External links
- 1882 births
- 1941 deaths
- Presidency University, Kolkata alumni
- Alumni of Emmanuel College, Cambridge
- Bengali politicians
- Indian barristers
- Indian civil servants
- Indian Civil Service (British India) officers
- Bengali writers
- Bengali people
- Bengali Hindus
- People from Karimganj district
- Museum founders
- University of Calcutta alumni
- Members of Central Legislative Assembly of India
- 20th-century Indian lawyers
- 20th-century philanthropists