Ummid Assistant

Hajj committee's IAS coaching cell invites applications for new batch

AMU Centre for Distance Education to add five more study centres

Welcome Guest! You are here: Home » Regional

Dropping names: Intellectuals divided on renaming West Bengal

Sunday July 10, 2011 05:59:29 PM, Mithun Dasgupta, IANS

Related Articles

Mamata mulling renaming West Bengal

The West Bengal government is contemplating renaming the state and the view of all the stake holders will be taken into consideration before taking any decision, a minister said Wednesday. "Since the name of the state starts with W, our representatives get  »

Kolkata: Will it be 'Bongo' or 'Bangla' or 'Bongodesh'? West Bengal is getting the blues over a proposed re-naming of the state as new Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee pushes for 'poriborton' or change in every area of functioning of this much neglected state.

State Commerce and Industry Minister Partha Chatterjee has said a change of name is essential as West Bengal, which begins with the letter 'W', figures last at inter-state discussions when it comes to the alphabetical order of things.

"Since the name of the state starts with W, our representatives get to speak only at the fag end of any function when most of the audience has left. To do away with the problem, the chief minister has suggested the name be changed," Chatterjee said.

Chief Secretary Samar Ghosh has been asked to seek the views of political parties, assembly members and experts.

While the opposition Communists have supported the idea, the move has left Bengal's famed intellectuals polarised.

"If the name of West Bengal is changed, then I will support it. The name should have been changed much before. There is no significance of the name 'West Bengal' when 'East Bengal' does not exist," renowned Bengali poet Shankha Ghosh told IANS. East Bengal is a reference to the region that makes up present day Bangladesh that was once part of India.

The Sahitya Akademi award winning poet suggested 'Bangla' as an alternative name after Rabindranath Tagore's song "Banglar mati, Banglar jal" (Soil of Bengal, Water of Bengal).

Eminent writer Atin Bandyopadhyay, however, disagrees.

"East Bengal and West Bengal came into existence after the bifurcation of Bengal. East Bengal became Bangladesh. The name West Bengal signifies that Bengal has been divided," he added.

After the partition of India in 1947, Bengal was bifurcated into East and West Bengal. East Bengal became a part of Pakistan. It was re-christened East Pakistan in 1956 and later emerged as the independent nation of Bangladesh in 1971.

Bengali writer Samaresh Majumdar is game for a change. "It is difficult to find a new name. I think the government should take the views of common people of the state about the new name. The government could suggest two to four new names and the people then could cast their vote to select one," he said.

"I think the name West Bengal is fine. Because if we change the name as 'Bongodesh', then it would be thought that we are imitating Bangladesh in changing the name," veteran Tagore songs exponent Dwijen Mukherjee told IANS.

"The government should put its thinking cap on before arriving at a decision. A debate can take place in this regard," he added.

The previous Left Front government had also wanted to change the name of the state, triggering a public debate both for and against the proposal. During the regime, the name of the state capital was changed from Calcutta to Kolkata.

Renowned Bengali writer Sirshendu Mukhopadhaya said the name change was long due.

"There is no meaning of the name 'West Bengal'. We are facing an identity crisis with the name...it must be changed. If we do not change the name now, then when will it be changed?" he asked.

Mukhopadhaya, the Sahitya Akademi Award and Vidyasagar Award winning writer, suggested the name 'Bongo' for the state.

Magician P.C. Sorcar said there were many more important issues facing the state than choosing a new name.

"This is not a new topic and not a very important topic also. More important issues are left for the government to check, like skyrocketing prices, develop rural communication and rural electrification," he said.

Sorcar, however, said he was supporting the reason for the move. "The new name should start with B."

"To me it is a gimmick. If you are changing the name of the state from West Bengal to 'Bongo' or 'Bangla', you are denying history. The history of partition is associated with it," political analyst Sabyasachi Basu Roychowdhury said.

Bengal Peerless managing director Kumar Sankar Bagchi is pro change.

"To be in the front row is good. But we should have the moral strength to occupy the front seat," he added.



(Mithun Dasgupta can be contacted at mithun.d@ians.in)


 

 

 


 


 

 

 

 

 

  Bookmark and Share

Home | Top of the Page

 

Comments

Note: By posting your comments here you agree to the terms and conditions of www.ummid.com

Comments powered by DISQUS

 

 

 

Top Stories

India, Pakistan to announce Confidence Building Measures on Kashmir

 India and Pakistan are set to unveil specific cross-Kashmir and nuclear confidence-building measures (CBMs) when their foreign  »

Government okays Rs.1,000 crore job plan for Kashmir

New job plan for Kashmir to train 40,000 youth

 

  Most Read

Agonized families, resolute protesters and barefaced government

“My life changed beyond imagination after losing legs in the 2006 blast. I had to fight for every small or big thing thereafter to say the least. All my sufferings, however, are nothing in comparison  »

Forbesganj firing: Senior Bihar cop in dock

A case was filed in a Bihar court against 10 people, including Araria Superintendent of Police Garima Mallik, in connection with the police firing in which four people were killed and over a dozen injured  »

Forbesganj Firing: Video shows Home Guard jumping on victim's body

 

  News Pick

Pro-Palestinian activists participating in fly-in protest detained

Israeli police have arrested six pro-Palestinian activists and detained more than 100 other people participating in a fly-in protest at  »

Income Tax commissioner in Mumbai nabbed for graft

In a big catch, the Central Bureau of Investigation has nabbed an Income Tax commissioner and a chartered accountant for demanding a bribe of Rs.2.20 lakh from a complainant for settling a   »

Delhi police chief admits there is corruption in force

If a police official is unwilling to register your first information report (FIR), just send an e-mail complaint to a senior official to get the problem addressed, Delhi Police Commissioner B.K. Gupta said, admitting there was  »

South Sudan becomes world's newest country

South Sudan became the world's newest country and Africa's 53rd state here early Saturday   »

South Sudan celebrates independence

 

Picture of the Day

Defence Minister of Mozambique Filipe Jacinto Nyusi laying wreath at Amar Jawan Jyoti, in New Delhi on June 28, 2011.

(Photo: Fulchand)

 

 
 
 
 
 

RSS  |  Contact us

 

| Quick links

News

 

Subscribe to

Ummid Assistant

 

National

Religion

RSS

Scholarships

About us

International

Culture

Twitter

Government Schemes

Feedback

Regional

History

Facebook

Education

Register

Politics

Opinion

Newsletter

Contact us

Business

Career

     

Education

       

 

 

Ummid.com: Disclaimer | Terms of Use | Advertise with us | Link Exchange

Ummid.com is part of the Awaz Multimedia & Publications providing World News, News Analysis and Feature Articles on Education, Health. Politics, Technology, Sports, Entertainment, Industry etc. The articles or the views displayed on this website are for public information and in no way describe the editorial views. The users are entitled to use this site subject to the terms and conditions mentioned.

© 2010 Awaz Multimedia & Publications. All rights reserved.