February 23, 2021
The volume zeroes in on the multi-faceted figure
Satyajit Ray’s growing up years are touched upon fleetingly in a book that is
dominated almost entirely by his father, grandfather, grand uncles and his
neonatal doctor. Perceiving the same event from different angles (the recurrent
mention of the birth of Satyajit Ray under the supervision of Kadambini being a
case in point) could be a bit repetitive but by and large the book comes across
as nearly flawless. An entire section of the book is devoted to the discovery of
a native tea plant in Assam, the subsequent rise of tea plantations, the
procuring of labour from nearby places and the atrocities committed by the tea
planters on the bonded labourers, facts frequently swept under the carpet by
historians. Such lack of blind adulation on the part of the writer for his
celebrated subjects is rare and refreshing. Sengoopta dwells on the oddity of
the Ray family who sidestepped the three most popular professions of the time
(law, engineering and medicine), opting to follow off-beat occupations instead.
The lives of Dwarkanath and the woman he married, Kadambini Basu, entwine
constantly and the figure of Kadambini stands out by sheer merit of her personal
achievements. The Tagores and the Rays have always evoked interest, the two
premier families of Bengal having spawned multiple luminaries over the decades.
The family history begins with Harikishore Ray, a member of the new landed
gentry adopting Kamadaranjan Ray, the five year old son of a cousin, and
renaming him Upendrakishore Raychaudhuri (1863-1915). No luminary or ideology is
exalted enough to be above a spot of criticism (the social work done by the
Brahmos was immense, writes Sengoopta, and yet they could frequently descend
into "narrow-minded puritanism"). Spanning many generations and embracing a wide
sweep of events that occurred around the time the first stirrings of the
swadeshi movement were being felt and much before, the book etches an intricate
picture of a crucial period in the nation’s history. Along with densely
informative passages about prominent figures like Brajaram, Lokenath and
Kalinath (Sukumar Ray’s grandfather) and Saradaranjan Ray (the father of Bengali
cricket) we learn how sports blossomed in Bengal in retaliation to the
colonists’ disdainful opinion of the Bengali gentleman as being intellectually
endowed but physically weak and effete. Likewise, for most of us, Sukumar Ray
will always be associated with the nonsense rhymes of Abol-tabol while his son
Satyajit will be synonymous with the Apu trilogy of films and his path breaking
forays into the areas of illustration and fonts. But there was a wealth of
fascinating family history before these popular figures made their way into
public consciousness and Chandak Sengoopta enlightens us about this in his
exhaustive work, The Rays before Satyajit: Creativity and Modernity in Colonial
India.
The volume zeroes in on the multi-faceted figure of Upendrakishore,
taking a tertiary route to dwell on Dwarkanath Ganguli — a remarkable Brahmo
crusader and Upendrakishore’s father-in-law — who worked tirelessly for women’s
emancipation. Firmly debunking the historian’s view of Indian modernity being
"western wisdom poured into an oriental void", Sengoopta dives into the heart of
Bengal’s checkered history. Enlivened by constant social, political and
religious commentary and packed with the details of technological evolution in
the fields of printing and photography, the book stands out with its impartial
and non-judgmental approach. Meticulous research has gone into putting this vast
work of writing together, the book positively creaks under the weight of
historical information. The rise of the Brahmo movement, its core philosophy,
its merits and drawbacks are analysed extensively, along with the eventual
breaking up of the sect and the forming of splinter groups. Thus, we are privy
to the information that the Rays were Kayastha Bengalis who belonged to the
scribal community of administrators, clerks and judicial officials. Dwarkanath
is remembered as a figure who took a strong stand against such malpractices.
One
reads with horror how the tea garden coolies were often punished brutally and
how one of every four labourer died, their deaths being dismissed by the tea
planters as being caused by disease or failure to adjust to climatic conditions.
A bulk of the volume is reserved for notes at the end of every couple of
chapters and though these may frequently break the fluid flow of reading, they
make for fascinating reading in themselves. Tagore, a family friend, we are
informed, took immense pleasure in teaching Suprabha his new songs. What could
have been a mind bogglingly intricate mesh of familial relationships comes
across as effortlessly comprehensive under Sengoopta’s competent penmanship.
Kankana Basu is a Mumbai-based writer.The Tagores and the Rays have always
evoked interest, the two premier families of Bengal having spawned multiple
luminaries over the decades. An interesting snippet of information is carried
here about how traditional portraits of "Muslim tyranny" tend to overlook the
fact that Hindu Kayastha employees adept in both Persian and Sanskrit were very
happy to serve the Mughals, often attired in Persianised attire. The technical
details of halftone printing and the revolutionary methods devised by
Upendrakishore, all of which was destined to change the look of magazines,
photographs and print, are intricately covered. A man of astonishing talents,
Upendrakishore is described as a passionate musician, a technological genius, a
photography enthusiast and a pioneer in half-tone technology and photomechanical
innovations. An illustrator and children’s fiction writer blessed with a
distinctive style of writing, Upendrakishore in 1913 founded the immensely
popular children’s magazine Sandesh. Combining creativity with domesticity with
a rare skill, Suprabha took up a job (unheard of in those days), tutored her son
at home and being a talented singer, sang songs composed by Rabindranath Tagore.
A valuable and scholarly record of Bengal’s awakening, the book is a must-have
for every book shelf. A lengthy introduction gives a detailed synopsis of the
book’s contents and cast of characters; the definition of modernity with its
multiplicity of meanings makes for a memorable passage. We are informed that the
Rays were originally Debs but received the honorific title of Ray from the
Muslim notables. 29DEL2. It is fascinating to note how the inborn love for CAGE
NUT Suppliers print technology, fonts, writing, illustrations and children’s
fiction kept popping up in every generation of the Rays. Over the decades,
various family members would find themselves involved in some capacity or the
other in the regular publishing of the iconic magazine. end-of. The first of two
women graduates of Calcutta, the first Indian woman medical practitioner, the
first woman lecturer at an Indian medical school and the first Bengali to visit
England entirely alone Kadambini’s incredible story in this volume climaxes with
her supervising the birth of Sukumar and Suprabha Ray’s baby, who would grow up
to be the famous Satyajit Ray. The sepia book jacket featuring priceless
portraits (designer Pinaki De at his best) is underplayed and captures the
zeitgeist of a bygone era perfectly; the picture of a young Satyajit with his
mother Suprabha is particularly endearing. There is a marked thrust in focusing
on extraordinary women of the times and Satyajit Ray’s mother, widowed early, is
described as a woman of sterling qualities. Not just for cinephiles,
bibliophiles, history buffs, followers of early feminism or the technologically
inclined, The Rays before Satyajit offers an immensely enriching read for every
kind of reader. Her published works of fiction include a collection of short
stories, Vinegar Sunday, and a novel, Cappuccino Dusk. Think Rabindranath Tagore
and the Gitanjali and soul lifting songs of the Bengali bard spring to mind
Posted by: insertzbg at
02:21 AM
| No Comments
| Add Comment
Post contains 1255 words, total size 9 kb.
17kb generated in CPU 0.0074, elapsed 0.0359 seconds.
33 queries taking 0.0313 seconds, 45 records returned.
Powered by Minx 1.1.6c-pink.
33 queries taking 0.0313 seconds, 45 records returned.
Powered by Minx 1.1.6c-pink.