Surya Kumar Bose

Surya Kumar Bose (Bengali: সূর্যকুমার বসু) was an Indian entrepreneur and philanthropist who founded the Dhakeshwari Cotton Mills.[1] He was also the president of Dhaka District Hindu Mahasabha.[2] During the Partition, he along with Sanat Kumar Raychaudhuri officially raised the proposal of partitioning Bengal to create a homeland for the Bengali Hindus at the Bengal Hindu Conference held at Tarakeshwar.

Early life

Surya Kumar Bose was born in Sonargaon in Dhaka district. His family residence was adjacent to the Ramakrishna Mission and he was closely connected to it. He patronized and actively participated in the activities of the Ramakrishna Mission.

Career

In 1927, Surya Kumar Bose founded the Dhakeshwari Cotton Mills in Narayanganj on the banks of Shitalakshya. It was the first cotton mill in the district of Dhaka. In 1937, he expanded the mill by commissioning a second mill unit. He was the founder, owner and the Managing Director of Dhakeshwari Cotton Mills. After the Partition the government of Pakistan acquired the Dhakeshwari Cotton Mills by force. Surya Kumar Bose emigrated to India and set up the Dhakeshwari Cotton Mills, once again, on the banks of the Damodar, at Suryanagar in Asansol.

Surya Kumar Bose was the president of the Dhaka District Hindu Mahasabha. After the Direct Action Day riots in Dhaka city, he began to organize and unite the affected Hindus in the city. He was one of the chief organizers of Hindusthan National Guard in Dhaka. In early 1947, when the Partition of India became inevitable where the province of Bengal was to be ceded to Pakistan, he began to campaign for the inclusion of Hindu majority areas of Bengal in the Indian Union. At the Bengal Hindu Conference held at Tarakaeshwar from 4 to 6 April, he along with Sanat Kumar Raychaudhuri officially raised the proposal of partition of Bengal and inclusion of Hindu majority areas in the Indian Union.

References

  1. Solaiman, Md. (2012). "Narayanganj". In Islam, Sirajul; Jamal, Ahmed A. (eds.). Banglapedia: National Encyclopedia of Bangladesh (Second ed.). Asiatic Society of Bangladesh.
  2. Basu, Nirban (1987). "V". The Working Class Movement in Eastern India, 1937-47 (PDF) (Ph.D. thesis). Vidyanidhi Digital Library, University of Mysore. Retrieved 5 June 2011.
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