know about Barindra Kumar Ghosh 1880-1959



(In 1864 Krishnadhan married Shimati Swarnalata Devi. The wedding was performed according to the rites of Adi Brahmo Samaj, in which Dr. Ghose had aspirations. The girl's wedding was an unforgettable event in the history of Brahmo Samaj. Keshub Chunder Sen. The bride party was full of members of the Bose family. The groom's party had a few, if any, relatives of the young man, because Krishna Dhun Ghose came from a Hindu family. He did not even tell his mother that he was taking a Brahmo bride. Find a father like Rajnarain Bose.
G.Gose and Swarnalata had six children, - five sons and a daughter: Benoybhushan, Manmohan, Aurobindo, a son who died young, Sarojini and Barindra Kumar.). Her mother Swarnalata was the daughter of a Brahmo religious and social reformer, scholar Rajnarayan Basu. Aurobindo Ghosh was a rebel and had faith in later life. His second older brother, Manmohan Ghose, was an English literary scholar, poet and professor of English at Presidency College, Calcutta and Dhaka University.
 (At the end of 1878 the whole family sailed to England - Dr. Ghosh, Mrs. Ghosh, their three sons and their daughter Sarojini. For Indian women it was almost impossible to cross the sea. Swarnalotta was pregnant. he decided to take her to England for examination and treatment. The family arrived at her destination early in 1879 (probably, on January 1).
He had brought his sons to England because he wanted them to be "fully raised by Europeans." He is survived by his sons and a priest from England and his wife, Mr. and Mrs. Drewett in Manchester and his wife - in the care of a London doctor, Dr. Mathew.
In 1880 Dr. Ghose returned alone from England to rejoin his ministry. He left Swarnalata and children in England. That same year Swarnalata returned to India with Barin and the newborn Sarojini. Dr. Ghose found it difficult to stay with his wife, as his attitude had deteriorated. He was therefore given a cottage in Rohini, a village two kilometers from Deoghar, where he lived with Barin and Sarojini while Dr. Ghose lived alone in Khulna. He eventually managed to persuade his wife to give up the Sarojin, but he ended up with Barin until Dr. Ghose stole it from him. He placed the two children in the care of a woman whom he had set up in a house in Calcutta. Every week, Drs. Ghose used to come to town to see his girlfriend and children, but he was always lonely, an unhappy man, and prone to heavy drinking.) Barindranath went to school in Deoghar, even after passing the entrance exams. in 1901, he joined Patna College. He received military training in Baroda. During this time, (late 19th - early 20th century) Barin was influenced by Aurobindo and led to a revolutionary movement. Barin was sent to Calcutta in 1902 to organize a reform movement.
RENEWAL FUNCTIONS
Barin returned to Kolkata in 1902 and began organizing many transforming groups in Bengal with the help of Jatindranath Bandyopadhyay. In 1906, he began publishing Jugantar, a weekly Bengali and a reform movement called Jugantar soon followed. Jugantar was built from the inner circle of Anushilan Samiti and began conversion activities.
Barin and Jatindra nath Bandyopadhyay contributed to the selection of many young reforms from across Bangladesh. The reforms formed the Maniktala faction in Maniktala, Kolkata. It was a secret place where they started producing bombs and collecting arms and ammunition. But they soon began to feel bitter within themselves in the military leadership. Banerjee.
After the attempted assassination of Kingsford by two rebels Khudiram and Prafulla on April 30, 1908, police intensified their investigation into the arrest of Barin Ghosh on May 2, 1908, along with several of his colleagues. The case (known as the Alipore Bomb Case) initially sentenced Barin Ghosh. However, the sentence was commuted to life imprisonment, and Barin was exiled to Andaman's cell in 1909 (released in 1920).
Releases and latest works
Barin was released during a general pardon in 1920 and returned to Kolkata and began his career as a journalist. He soon left journalism and established an ashram in Kolkata. In 1923, he left Pondicherry when his older brother Aurobindo Ghosh had founded the famous Sri Aurobindo Ashram. He was influenced by Aurobindo in terms of spirituality and sadhana, but Barin Ghosh was a student of Sri Sri Thakur Anukulchandra. Sri Sri Thakur had instructed his followers to help secure the release of Barin who used the code name 'Golghar' (behind the monument in Patna) in his revolutionary activities. Barin returned to Kolkata in 1929 and picked up journalists. In 1933 he started English every week, The Dawn of India. He was associated with The Statesman newspaper, and in 1950, he became editor of the Bengali newspaper Dainik Basumati. Barin ghosh who once prepared bombs to liberate his mother's land wrote the book "Bharat Kon Pathe" in 1936, in which he said the road to change was wrong and said it was better to get the unity of Barat Britain. He married a widow in 1933 and joined the Statesmanman where he met Governor Anderson He who died on April 18, 1959.

Post a Comment