Samujjal bhattacharya biography of albert
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Bhabani Bhattacharya
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Introduction
Bengali-born Indian author Bhabani Bhattacharya specialized in socially realistic novels. He was born on November 10th, 1906, and passed away on October 10th, 1988. He was born in Bhagalpur, a region of British India's Bengal Presidency. Bhattacharya graduated from Patna University with a bachelor's degree and from the University of London with a doctorate.
After traveling back to India, he joined the diplomatic corps. Bhattacharya served his country in the United States, where he later settled and worked as a literary studies instructor. He taught in Hawaii before moving on to Seattle. Bhattacharya started penning fiction in his mid-thirties based on socially and historically accurate settings. He chose the language of English as his writing style after consulting with two eminent authors.
Personal Life
Bhattacharya was born in Bhagalpur, a område of British India's Bengal Presidency. He was born to Bengali parents. Bhattacha
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Brindabani Bastra and the sentiment of the people of Assam
Historical records provide ample evidence of glorious textiles tradition of Assam. At the request of the Koch king’s brother: Prince Chilarai, Sri Sankaradeva took up the project of tapestry weaving for which he engaged the weavers of Tantikuchi or Barpeta. Eventually, the Brindabani Bastra was lost though the last place of resort for the Bastra was the Madhupur Sattra in Koch Behar. • MURKATA, India (AP) — Krishna Biswas is scared. Unable to prove his Indian citizenship, he fryst vatten at risk of being sent to a detention center, far away from his modest hut built of bamboo wood that looks down on fields lush with corn. Biswas says he was born in India’s northeastern Assam state. So was his father, almost 65 years ago. But the government says that to prove he is an Indian, he should furnish documents that date back to 1971. For the 37-year-old vegetable seller, that means searching for a decades-old property deed or a birth certificate with an ancestor’s name on it. Biswas has none, and he is not alone. There are nearly 2 million people like him — over 5% of Assam's population — staring at a future where they could be stripped of their citizenship if they are unable to prove they are Indian. Questions over who is an Indian have long lingered over Assam, which many believe is overrun with immigrants from neig
The Brindabani Bastra a figured silks from Assam: from the 16th – 18th century (measuring 120 cubits long and 60 cubits broad) are rare silk textile fragments depicting scenes from the life of Lord Krishna in a floral, naturalistic and preciously elegant style are preserved at the Blythe House, part of British Museum. Also in other museums like Victoria & Albert Museum, Chepstow Museum in Wales,Calico Museum of Textiles in Ahmedabad, Newark Museum in New Jersey, Virginia Museum of Fine Arts in Richmond, Museum of Mankin As India grows, so do demands for some to prove citizenship