Kamala Das Gupta
Template:Short description Template:Use dmy dates Template:Use Indian English Script error: No such module "infobox".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".Script error: No such module "Check for clobbered parameters".Template:Wikidata image Kamala Das Gupta (11 March 1907 – 19 July 2000) was an Indian freedom fighter from Bengal region.
Early life
Das Gupta was born in 1907, to a Bengali Baidya family of Bikrampur in Greater Dhaka, now in Bangladesh; the family later moved to Calcutta, where she got a Master of Arts degree in history from Bethune College, Calcutta University.[1]
Revolutionary activities
Nationalist ideas were current among the young people in Calcutta she met at university, and she was filling with a strong desire to take part in the freedom struggle. She tried to quit her studies and enter Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi's Sabarmati Ashram, but her parents disapproved. Finishing her education, she became friends with some members of the extremist Jugantar party, and was quickly converted from her original Gandhism to the cult of armed resistance.[2]
In 1930, she left home and took a job as manager of a hostel for poor women. There she stored and couriered, bombs and bomb-making materials for the revolutionaries.[3] She was arrested several times in connection with bombings but was released every time for want of evidence. She supplied Bina Das with the revolver that she used to try to shoot Governor Stanley Jackson in February 1922,[4] and was arrested also on that occasion, but released. In 1933 the British finally succeeded in putting her behind bars.Script error: No such module "Unsubst". In 1936 she was released and placed under house arrest. In 1938 the Jugantar Party aligned itself with the Indian National Congress, and Kamala also transferred her allegiance to the larger party. Thenceforth she became involved in relief work, especially with the Burmese refugees of 1942 and 1943 and in 1946–1947 with the victims of communal rioting. She was in charge of the relief camp at Noakhali that Gandhi visited in 1946.Script error: No such module "Unsubst".
She worked for women's vocational training at the Congress Mahila Shilpa Kendra and the Dakshineshwar Nari Swabalambi Sadan. She edited the women's journal Mandira for many years. She authored two memoirs in Bengali, Rakter Akshare (In Letters of Blood, 1954) and Swadhinata Sangrame Nari (Women in the Freedom Struggle, 1963).Script error: No such module "Unsubst".
Death
She died on 19 July 2000 in Kolkata.Script error: No such module "Unsubst".
References
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- ↑ Distinguished Almunae Template:Webarchive www.bethunecollege.ac.in.
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Further reading
- The Silence Day note to Kamala Das Gupta 16 December 1946. Collected Works By Mahatma Gandhi. Publications Division, Ministry of Information and Broadcasting, Govt. of India, 1994. page 231.
- Pages with script errors
- Women Indian independence activists
- 1907 births
- Bethune College alumni
- University of Calcutta alumni
- 2000 deaths
- People from Bikrampur
- Prisoners and detainees of British India
- 20th-century Indian women
- 20th-century Indian people
- Female revolutionaries
- Indian independence activists from Bengal