:Dhirendranath Datta

{{Short description|Pakistani politician}}

{{use Pakistani English|date=May 2014}}

{{Use dmy dates|date=August 2021}}

{{Infobox officeholder

| name = Dhirendranath Datta

| native_name = ধীরেন্দ্রনাথ দত্ত
دھریندر ناتھ دتا

| native_name_lang = bn

| image = Dhirendranath datta.jpg

| caption =

| office = Health and Social Welfare Minister of East Pakistan

| termstart = 19 September 1956

| termend = 7 October 1958

| chief_minister = Ataur Rahman Khan

| predecessor =

| successor =

| office1 = Leader of the Opposition of Pakistan

| termstart1 = 7 May 1948

| termend1 = 7 July 1955

| leader1 = Liaquat Ali Khan
Khawaja Nazimuddin
Mohammad Ali Bogra

| predecessor1 = Kiran Shankar Roy

| successor1 = Huseyn Shaheed Suhrawardy

| office2 = Leader of the Opposition of East Bengal

| termstart2 = 15 March 1948

| termend2 = 7 May 1948

| leader2 = Khwaja Nazimuddin

| predecessor2 = position created

| successor2 = Basanta Kumar Das

| birth_date = {{birth date|df=yes|1886|11|2}}

| birth_place = Brahmanbaria, Bengal, British India

| disappeared_date = {{death date and age|df=yes|1971|3|29|1886|11|2}}

| disappeared_place = Comilla Cantonment, Chittagong, Bangladesh

| nationality = British India (1886-1947)
Pakistan (1947-1971)

| occupation = *Lawyer

  • Politician

| party = Pakistan National Congress

}}

Dhirendranath Datta (2 November 1886 – disappeared 29 March 1971){{cite web | url=http://opinion.bdnews24.com/2016/11/02/dhirendranath-duttaour-dream-maker/ | title=Dhirendranath Dutta…our dream maker | publisher=bdnews24.com |type=Opinion | date=2 November 2016 | access-date=2 November 2016 | author=Ahsan, Syed Badrul}}

was a Bengali lawyer and politician from East Bengal who was a member of the 1st Constituent Assembly of Pakistan. He is best known for proposing Bengali for the national language of Pakistan in the Assembly. He was also active in the politics of undivided Bengal in pre-partition India.{{cite web |last1=Salam |first1=Muhammad Abdus |title=Datta, Dhirendranath |url=http://en.banglapedia.org/index.php?title=Datta,_Dhirendranath |website=Banglapedia |access-date=26 July 2015}}

Early life

Datta was born in an Aristocrat Kayastha Family on 2 November 1886 in Ramrail Union, in Brahmanbaria District,{{cite news |date=3 November 2007 |script-title=bn:শ্রদ্ধাঞ্জলি:এই দেশ এই মাটি যাঁর অস্তিত্ব |trans-title=A Tribute to this Country |work=Prothom Alo |language=bn}} Bengal Province (in today's Bangladesh). His father Jagabandhu Datta was a mukhtiyer (lower ranked pleader) who introduced Dhirendranath to the legal profession from an early age. Dhirendranath completed matriculation from Comilla Zilla School and intermediate from Ripon College in Calcutta. Later he completed his graduation and obtained law degree from Calcutta University.{{citation needed|date=November 2023}}

Early career

Datta began his career as a school teacher after passing intermediate, he eventually became assistant headmaster of the Bangora High school in Comilla. After obtaining law degree, he started law practice as an advocate. He joined the Comilla District Bar Association in 1911. Quite early in his legal career, he established himself as a successful lawyer in the comilla district. He practiced law earnestly and uninterruptedly from 1911 to 1920. Dhirendranath's reputation as a lawyer was akin to legend due to the service he provided for the poor.{{Cite news |last=Rahman |first=Mohammad Afzalur |title=Dhirendranath Dutta: Portrait of a patriot |url=https://www.thedailystar.net/views/in-focus/news/dhirendranath-dutta-portrait-patriot-2224291 |work=The Daily Star |date=8 November 2021}} Hecontinued to practice until he was advised to give up his profession in favor of politics by his political comrade Chittaranjan Das.He was very active in the local community and was a leader of the relief effort following devastating floods in 1915. He formed the Mukti Sangha, a welfare organization, after becoming inspired by Mahatma Gandhi. Datta's relief work continued up to the Bengal Famine of 1943. {{citation needed|date=November 2023}}

Political activism

{{unreferenced section|date=November 2023}}

Along with many politically active Bengalis of his time, Datta took a firm stand following the Bengal Partition of 1905. He chose to vehemently oppose partition, working closely with other anti-partition activists such as Surendranath Banerjee and Rabindranath Tagore. Datta joined the Indian National Congress from Mymensingh District and was first elected to the Bengal Legislative Council in 1937. He was arrested by the British rulers of India for his participation in the Quit India movement of 1942.

Datta firmly opposed the creation of Pakistan and partition of India on religious lines; but when it became clear that partition of Bengal was inevitable and that his home district of Comilla would be in the new Muslim majority state, he opted to remain in East Bengal (unlike many other Hindu leaders), and as a result, was invited to be part of the constitutional committee to draft the legislative framework of the new country before the actual independence of Pakistan.

=The Pakistan era=

Datta continued to represent his constituency as a Hindu member of the renamed Pakistan National Congress (seats were allocated by a quota according to religion). On 23 February 1948 in the Pakistan Constituent Assembly in Karachi, he made a speech calling for Bengali to be made one of the official languages of Pakistan,{{cite encyclopedia | url = http://en.banglapedia.org/index.php?title=Language_Movement | title = Language Movement | encyclopedia = Banglapedia – The National Encyclopedia of Bangladesh | publisher = Asiatic Society of Bangladesh | access-date = 26 July 2015 | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20160307033428/http://en.banglapedia.org/index.php?title=Language_Movement | archive-date = 7 March 2016 | url-status = dead }} in what was to become the action he will be most remembered for by his compatriots.

In 1954, he moved an adjournment motion against the declaration of Governor's Rule in East Pakistan, and was seen as the de facto face of protest and democracy.

File:1954 east bengal cabinet.jpg

He served as the Minister of Health and Social Welfare (East Pakistan) in Ataur Rahman Khan's cabinet (1956). Because of his alleged links to the emerging underground Bengali Nationalist movement, supposed members of which included Sheikh Mujibur Rahman, he was barred from participation in national election through the imposition of EBDO (Elective Bodies Disqualification Order). After this, he refrained from active politics but kept on supporting the rising nationalist movement from behind.

Assassination by the Pakistan Army

Due to Datta's continued defiance of state discrimination and authoritarianism in Pakistan, at the onset of the Bangladesh Liberation War, three days after the arrest of Sheikh Mujibur Rahman, Datta was arrested at his house in Comilla on 29 March 1971, and taken with his son, Dilip Kumar Datta, to Moynamoti Cantonment and tortured to death. For this reason, he is referred to as "Shaheed buddhijibi" (martyred intellectual) as a sign of respect.

Personal life

Datta had 2 sons, Sanjib and Dilip Kumar Datta.

References

{{Reflist}}

Further reading