Ghosh remembered on birth anniversary

Express News Service Posted: Jun 21, 2008 at 0130 hrs
Kolkata, June 20 Eminent personalities came together to commemorate Bengali journalist and writer Gourkishore Ghosh’s 85th birth anniversary on Friday. At a seminar titled “Crisis of Neighbourhood”, intellectuals

remembered Ghosh as a man who fought for communal harmony throughout his life.

Those who were present included poet Sankha Ghosh, professor Amlan Dutta, historian Amit De and senior IPS officer Najrul Islam.

Poet Sankha Ghosh said that Gourkishore Ghosh was a fearless person, had a free mind and lived a simple life. “When Babri Masjid was demolished, he was in advanced years, but he travelled to remote areas of Bhagalpur to understand the view of Muslims,” said Ghosh.

IPS officer Nazrul Islam said that the author’s works had helped in shaping his thought in his childhood.

“Our community has not been able to progress because neither the British nor the state government has ever taken the question of Muslim education

seriously,” Islam said. He added that all colleges and universities are set up in Hindu majority areas. Thus, Murshidabad with 64 per cent Muslim population or Malda with 50 per cent Muslim population still don’t have any university.

“West Bengal is a secular state yet there has been no Muslim chief minister, or police commissioner or home secretary in the past sixty years,” he added.

Social activist Ayesha Khatun, who spoke on the condition of Muslim women in India, particularly West Bengal, she said: “Muslim women are backward because the state and the society wants them to be backward.”

“Even in the areas surrounding Visva Bharati University like Bhubandanga, Dorjipatti, Goalpara which have Muslim majority population the light of education has not seeped through,” she added.