Becoming and remaining an honest,
effective and forthright writer in developing countries is a difficult and
hazardous career. It is not only governments, sensitive to their local and
international images, who try to curb and influence what is printed and
broadcast. Every political and economic pressure group jealously seeks to
foster its case. Publishers often are financially shaky and writers are
commonly underpaid; both face the quandary of how to survive and be true to
their profession.
Since India's independence 34 years ago, Calcutta and the hinterland of West
Bengal have been perilous yet challenging arenas for writers. Heirs to the
great Bengali cultural and literary tradition enhanced by giants like
Rabindranath Tagore, they feel a deep obligation to pursue the finest
artistic and intellectual standards. Yet traumatic social pressures make for
a modern violence—reminiscent of the ancient terrorism of the thuggees—of
which the chroniclers become targets.
GOUR KISHORE GHOSH, born 58 years ago in the village of Hat Gopalpur, now in
Bangladesh, grew up in this environment of upheaval. His father was an
idealist of modest means who took in disabled destitutes from the streets
and deserted his family when GHOSH was 18. To provide for his mother and
four younger sisters, GHOSH worked as an electrician, fitter viseman, air
raid rescue mate, petty timber trader, restaurant boy, manager of a
wandering dance troupe and a trade union organizer. Attending college
briefly in between jobs he passed the Intermediate Examination in Science in
1945. Three years later he became a proofreader on a short-lived weekly
literary magazine. From an interim job as a border customs clerk he joined a
new daily newspaper where his distinctive writing style earned him promotion
to editor of two feature sections.
GHOSH went on to author popular columns in the literary weekly Desh and in
Calcutta's largest vernacular daily, Ananda Bazar Patrika, of which he also
became senior editor. With rare courage he portrayed in sharp satire in his
"News Commentary by Rupadarshi" the agony of West Bengal as the Naxalites—a
Maoist terrorist movement—from 1969 to 1971 sought power through widespread
murder. When the Naxalites notified GHOSH he would be assassinated unless he
apologized, he replied in print with heavy sarcasm and kept on writing. In
turn, he defended the terrorists' right to legal due process when the
government retaliated with excessive violence.
After "the emergency" was imposed upon India in 1975, GHOSH shaved his head
and wrote a symbolic letter to his 13 year old son explaining his act of
"bereavement" over the loss of his freedom to write. Published in Kolkata, a
Bengali monthly, this letter caused his arrest, was widely circulated
through the underground and became a classic of protest. GHOSH smuggled from
prison two other letters on abuses of authoritarian rule before, in his
cell, he suffered a third heart attack. His political thesis was: "People
remain apathetic to any form of government. Democracy is a word rather than
a political fact. We have to take more responsibility to keep democracy
alive, especially in an underdeveloped country with masses of poor." In
best-selling fiction written before and after his incarceration he has
illuminated the underlying human dilemma of West Bengal—of a talented,
emotional people sorely riven by deepseated religious and political
differences.
Although reinstated as a senior editor of Ananda Bazar Patrika after "the
emergency" ended and he had recovered from his illness, GHOSH decided that
to instill the values essential for future generations of Indians demanded a
more focused and higher caliber of journalism. From this conviction and in
collaboration with like-minded associates came Aajkaal (This Time), the
recently launched Bengali daily he edits. His wife, two daughters and son
share his beliefs and his spartan living. It has not been an easy path, but
it is the choice for this journalist who would enhance the quality of Indian
society which is being shaped by today's hectic events.
In electing GOUR KISHORE GHOSH to receive the 1981 Ramon Magsaysay Award for
Journalism, Literature and Creative Communication Arts, the Board of
Trustees recognizes his sagacious courage and ardent humanism in defense of
individual and press freedom amidst pressures and threats from left and
right.
|