[A gang of barbaric raiders launching a vicious attack on the very soul of
Bengal.

The RSS/BJP is the very antithesis of all that Tagore had so very glowingly
stood for.

About time to stand up erect and show them their place.

<<“Having been born and brought up in Santiniketan, I could comment on the
big gap between Santiniketan culture and that of the VC, empowered as he is
by the central government in Delhi, with its growing control over Bengal. I
would prefer to use Indian laws as they exist,” said Sen, whose family has
been an integral part of the Visva-Bharati community since the days of
Rabindranath Tagore.
...
Earlier in the day, in response to a series of questions from this
newspaper, Sen said: “We are being told by Visva-Bharati university that
its vice-chancellor Bidyut Chakrabarty is busy arranging the ‘eviction of
unauthorised occupation’ of leased land on the campus and that I have also
been named in the ‘list of occupants’, even though Visva-Bharati has never
complained about any irregularity of landholding to us.”
“The Visva-Bharati land on which our house is situated is entirely on a
long-term lease, which is nowhere near its expiry. Some additional land was
bought by my father as free hold and registered in land records under mouja
Surul,” Sen added.
Tagore had invited Kshitimohan Sen, the maternal grandfather of the
economist and Sanskrit scholar of repute, in 1908 and he played a key role
in building the university along with the Bard. It is well-known that Sen,
born in 1933, was named Amartya by Tagore.
...
Many felt that (Bidyut) Chakrabarty (the incumbent VC) is deliberately
trying to malign Sen. “I am ashamed that such allegations are being hurled
at the eminent Sen family. I can only say it is unfortunate, very
unfortunate,” said Supriya Tagore, a descendent of the Tagore family and
former Patha-Bhavana principal.
Some veterans lamented that under Chakrabarty, Tagore’s abode is losing its
legacy. “The culture of Santiniketan has changed so much that even Amartya
Sen is not spared from humiliation. It is nothing but a degeneration of
culture and tradition under this vice-chancellor,” said Swapan Kumar Ghosh,
a writer.>>

(Excerpted from Sl. No. II below.)

<<In reply to the mail, Sen denied making any phone call to the
vice-chancellor. Prof Sen wrote, "I am very surprised to hear about what
the Vice-Chancellor of Visva-Bharati apparently has declared in an online
faculty meeting. I do not think I have had such a conversation with him. I
should also mention that I have never referred to myself as ‘Bharat Ratna.’
I also don’t think I could have referred to my daughter buying vegetables
from the hawkers and that being a reason for keeping the hawkers
undisturbed. I don’t know where my daughters buy vegetables! That would be
no reason anyway to bring in the question of how the hawkers should be
treated. Finally, there are no hawkers outside my home in Santiniketan."
Prof Sen further said in his email, "I do think, however, that
Visva-Bharati often interferes too much with the normal life of ordinary
people, of which setting up walls to interfere with ways and passages of
people is a good example. I remember once writing about that some years ago
in a newspaper. I also remember my mother, who of course lived in our home
(Pratichi), did try to help hawkers from eviction, not outside our home
(since there are no hawkers there), but near Pearson Palli. All this is, of
course, quite unrelated to the absurd statement that the Vice-Chancellor
has allegedly made."
...
"The Visva-Bharati land on which our house is situated is entirely on a
long-term lease, which is nowhere near its expiry. Some additional land was
bought by my father as free hold and registered in land records under mouja
Surul.">>

(Excerpted from Sl. No. I below.)]

I/II.
https://indianexpress.com/article/explained/amartya-sen-santiniketan-house-illegal-occupancy-visva-bharati-controversy-7120969/

Explained: The controversy surrounding Nobel Laureate Amartya Sen’s house
in Santiniketan
On Friday, West Bengal Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee wrote a letter to
Amartya Sen after Visva-Bharati University (VBU), a central university,
 named him in its list of illegal occupants on the campus.

Written by Santanu Chowdhury |

Kolkata | Updated: December 27, 2020 11:54:19 am

Prof Amartya Sen said in his email, "I do think, however, that
Visva-Bharati often interferes too much with the normal life of ordinary
people..." (File Photo)

On Friday, West Bengal Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee wrote a letter to
Amartya Sen after Visva-Bharati University (VBU), a central university,
 named him in its list of illegal occupants on the campus.

Expressing solidarity with him, Banerjee highlighted Sen’s deep ancestral
roots with Santiniketan (a neighbourhood of Bolpur in Birbhum district
where Nobel Laureate Rabindranath Tagore had set up Visva-Bharati in 1921)
and said some “nouveau invaders” in VBU are raising question on his
familial properties.

How did the controversy begin?
During a meeting with faculty members on December 9, VBU vice-chancellor
Bidyut Chakraborty claimed that Amartya Sen had identified himself as
“Bharat Ratna Amartya Sen” and requested that hawkers around his house not
be evicted as his daughter, who visits Santiniketan often, would be
inconvenienced. The vice-chancellor further claimed that Prof Sen suggested
giving space to the hawkers inside his property in Visva-Bharati University
campus upon which the Nobel Laureate hung up the phone.

Visva-Bharati University Faculty Association (VBUFA) president Sudipta
Bhattacharyya, who was present during the virtual meeting, wrote an email
to Sen to find out if what the V-C said was true.

In reply to the mail, Sen denied making any phone call to the
vice-chancellor. Prof Sen wrote, “I am very surprised to hear about what
the Vice-Chancellor of Visva-Bharati apparently has declared in an online
faculty meeting. I do not think I have had such a conversation with him. I
should also mention that I have never referred to myself as ‘Bharat Ratna.’
I also don’t think I could have referred to my daughter buying vegetables
from the hawkers and that being a reason for keeping the hawkers
undisturbed. I don’t know where my daughters buy vegetables! That would be
no reason anyway to bring in the question of how the hawkers should be
treated. Finally, there are no hawkers outside my home in Santiniketan.”

The Indian Express had reported the news.

Prof Sen further said in his email, “I do think, however, that
Visva-Bharati often interferes too much with the normal life of ordinary
people, of which setting up walls to interfere with ways and passages of
people is a good example. I remember once writing about that some years ago
in a newspaper. I also remember my mother, who of course lived in our home
(Pratichi), did try to help hawkers from eviction, not outside our home
(since there are no hawkers there), but near Pearson Palli. All this is, of
course, quite unrelated to the absurd statement that the Vice-Chancellor
has allegedly made.”

Amartya Sen’s link with Santiniketan
Rabindranath Tagore had invited Kshitimohan Sen, the maternal grandfather
of the economist and Sanskrit scholar of repute, to Santiniketan in 1908
and he had played a key role in building the Visva-Bharati along with
Tagore. Visva-Bharati was set up in 1921.

It is well-known that Sen, born in 1933, was named Amartya by Tagore. On
the campus, several plots were given to many eminent persons on 99-year
lease since the time of Tagore. Sen grew up in Pratichi, the house built by
his father in Santiniketan, and visits it frequently. In May 1951, Visva
Bharati was declared a central university and an institution of national
importance by an act of Parliament.

The fallout of the controversy
VBU issued a show cause notice to the president of its faculty association,
Sudipta Bhattacharyya, for allegedly violating the varsity’s code of
conduct by reaching out to the media with internal correspondence.
University authorities, through the notice issued on December 19, accused
Bhattacharyya of interacting with the media (about VBU vice-chancellor
Bidyut Chakraborty criticising Amartya Sen on December 9) without the
approval of the university authorities.

On Thursday, VBU authorities wrote to the West Bengal government alleging
that dozens of its plots have been recorded wrongly and that the list of
unauthorised occupants includes eminent economist Amartya Sen.

According to the Visva-Bharati estate office, it had recently prepared a
list of illegal occupants that includes the name of Sen as his house,
Pratichi, occupying around 138 decimals while the original lease was given
on 125 decimals.

The university alleged that Sen has reportedly occupied 13 decimals of
land, in addition to the 125 decimals of legally leased land given to his
father by the university.

On Friday, chief minister Mamata Banerjee wrote a letter to Sen to express
solidarity with him and said that she would always be by his side as his
sister. Banerjee also claimed that such allegations were being made against
him as he “is not inclined towards BJP’s ideology”.

Sen, Nobel laureate and the Thomas W. Lamont University Professor at
Harvard University, has been a vocal critic of some of the policies of the
BJP-led NDA government at the Centre.

Addressing Sen as “Respected Amartya da”, Banerjee wrote in the letter, “We
are all aware about your family’s deep and organic linkages with
Santiniketan. Your maternal grandfather, the revered scholar Kshitimohan
Sen, was one of the early leading settlers in Santiniketan, while your
father Ashutosh Sen, a noted educationist and public administrator, had his
famed house Pratichi built up in Santiniketan about eight decades back.
Yours have been a family weaved in the culture and fabric of Santiniketan,
inalienably.”

Response from Amartya Sen
Speaking to an English language newspaper (The Telegraph), Sen has said
that a big gap exists between the Santiniketan culture and that of the VBU
vice-chancellor.

“Having been born and brought up in Santiniketan, I could comment on the
big gap between Santiniketan culture and that of the VC, empowered as he is
by the central government in Delhi, with its growing control over Bengal. I
would prefer to use Indian laws as they exist,” said Sen.

The Nobel Laureate further said, “We are being told by Visva-Bharati
university that its vice-chancellor Bidyut Chakrabarty is busy arranging
the ‘eviction of unauthorised occupation’ of leased land on the campus and
that I have also been named in the ‘list of occupants’, even though
Visva-Bharati has never complained about any irregularity of landholding to
us.”

“The Visva-Bharati land on which our house is situated is entirely on a
long-term lease, which is nowhere near its expiry. Some additional land was
bought by my father as free hold and registered in land records under mouja
Surul.”

II.
https://www.telegraphindia.com/west-bengal/gap-between-santiniketan-culture-and-that-of-visva-bharati-vc-empowered-by-delhi-amartya-sen/cid/1801694

Suspicion of attempt to malign Nobel laureate
Visva-Bharati VC doesn't align with Santiniketan culture: Amartya Sen
The varsity estate office recently prepared a list of “illegal occupants”
that includes the renowned economist's name

Amartya Sen
Amarnath Dutta

Snehamoy Chakraborty   |
Santiniketan   |
Published 26.12.20, 02:37 AM

A big gap exists between the Santiniketan culture and that of the
Visva-Bharati vice-chancellor, “empowered as he is by the central
government in Delhi, with its growing control over Bengal”, economist
Amartya Sen has suggested in response to a question from The Telegraph on a
land controversy kicked up by the varsity establishment.

“Having been born and brought up in Santiniketan, I could comment on the
big gap between Santiniketan culture and that of the VC, empowered as he is
by the central government in Delhi, with its growing control over Bengal. I
would prefer to use Indian laws as they exist,” said Sen, whose family has
been an integral part of the Visva-Bharati community since the days of
Rabindranath Tagore.

According to the Visva-Bharati estate office, it had recently prepared a
list of “illegal occupants” that includes the name of Sen as his house,
Pratichi, occupies around 138 decimals while the original lease was given
on 125 decimals.

The way a section of the varsity has gone about making public the
information through innuendoes has fuelled suspicion that an attempt is
being made to malign Sen, whose indefatigable pursuit of scholarship and
stellar accomplishments in academia reflect the highest ideals that
prompted Tagore to set up what eventually became a central varsity.

Ever since vice-chancellor Bidyut Chakrabarty assumed office two years ago,
the varsity has taken some controversial steps that have given the
impression that efforts are on to try out the Sangh parivar agenda. Sen,
Nobel laureate and the Thomas W. Lamont University Professor at Harvard
University, has been a vocal critic of some of the policies of the Modi
government.

On Friday, chief minister Mamata Banerjee also wrote a letter to Sen to
express solidarity with him and say that she would always be by his side as
his sister.

Earlier in the day, in response to a series of questions from this
newspaper, Sen said: “We are being told by Visva-Bharati university that
its vice-chancellor Bidyut Chakrabarty is busy arranging the ‘eviction of
unauthorised occupation’ of leased land on the campus and that I have also
been named in the ‘list of occupants’, even though Visva-Bharati has never
complained about any irregularity of landholding to us.”

“The Visva-Bharati land on which our house is situated is entirely on a
long-term lease, which is nowhere near its expiry. Some additional land was
bought by my father as free hold and registered in land records under mouja
Surul,” Sen added.

Tagore had invited Kshitimohan Sen, the maternal grandfather of the
economist and Sanskrit scholar of repute, in 1908 and he played a key role
in building the university along with the Bard. It is well-known that Sen,
born in 1933, was named Amartya by Tagore.

It’s also common knowledge on the campus that several plots were given to
many eminent persons on 99-year lease since the time of Tagore.

On Friday, Sen said: “For mental strength, I may clutch the beautiful old
picture of our home by Abanindranath Tagore, among others.”

Pratichi, his house in Santiniketan. The nameplate on the right refers to
Ashutosh Sen, Amartya Sen’s father
Amarnath Dutta

In his inimitable style, Sen also responded to an account attributed to the
vice-chancellor at a faculty meeting on December 9 that the Nobel laureate
had called him up, identifying himself as “Bharat Ratna Amartya Sen”, and
requested him not to evict hawkers from the varsity land near his home as
it would inconvenience his daughter who buys vegetables from them.

In response to a related question on the matter, Sen said on Friday: “The
vice-chancellor would be spared the necessity of inventing completely
imagined conversations with me, beginning impossibly with my introducing
myself as Bharat Ratna — something that no one has ever heard me do. The
VC, of course, is an inventive artist as well.”

A few hours later, Mamata wrote to Sen: “Kindly count me as your sister and
friend in your just war against intolerance and totalitarianism. Let us not
be daunted by their untrue accusations, and unfair attacks. We shall
overcome.”

Addressing Sen as “Respected Amartya da”, Mamata said in the letter: “We
are all aware about your family’s deep and organic linkages with
Santiniketan. Your maternal grandfather, the revered scholar Kshitimohan
Sen, was one of the early leading settlers in Santiniketan, while your
father Ashutosh Sen, a noted educationist and public administrator, had his
famed house Pratichi built up in Santiniketan about eight decades back.
Yours have been a family weaved in the culture and fabric of Santiniketan,
inalienably.

“Some nouveau invaders in Visva-Bharati have now started raising surprising
and completely baseless allegations about your familial properties, etc.
This pains me, and I want to express my solidarity with you in your battles
against the bigotry of the majoritarians in this country, the battles that
have made you an enemy of these forces of untruth.”

Several old-timers in Santiniketan and some of Sen’s relatives said VC
Chakrabarty’s purported claim that Sen introduced himself as Bharat Ratna,
an honour conferred on him in 1999 after he received the Nobel Prize in
economics in 1998, sounded preposterous.

“He never speaks like that. It is sad for us, the descendents of
Kshitimohan Sen, that such false allegations and humiliation are coming
from the varsity and its present VC,” said Shanta Bhanu Sen, a cousin of
the Nobel laureate.

Many felt that Chakrabarty is deliberately trying to malign Sen. “I am
ashamed that such allegations are being hurled at the eminent Sen family. I
can only say it is unfortunate, very unfortunate,” said Supriya Tagore, a
descendent of the Tagore family and former Patha-Bhavana principal.

Some veterans lamented that under Chakrabarty, Tagore’s abode is losing its
legacy. “The culture of Santiniketan has changed so much that even Amartya
Sen is not spared from humiliation. It is nothing but a degeneration of
culture and tradition under this vice-chancellor,” said Swapan Kumar Ghosh,
a writer.
-- 
Peace Is Doable

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