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Dipankar Chakroborty, Aneek Editor, Passes Away

By Countercurrents.org

29 January, 2013
Countercurrents.org

Dipankar Chakroborty, the founder-editor of the independent left Bangla journal Aneek, passed away on Sunday night. He was 71.

A cardiac patient, he had suffered respiratory problem at evening and died on the way to hospital. He is survived by his wife, son and daughter and grandchildren.

Always active in people’s movements, Dipankar Chakroborty had a pioneering role in civil rights movement also.

As editor of Aneek, Dipankar Chakroborty played an important role in educating generations of activists. At the same time, the Bangla monthly, under his editorship, raised important political and cultural issues for debate.

He was born in Dhaka in 1941 and grew up in Murshidabad after the partition. Educated in Baharampur and Kolkata, Chakroborty taught economics at Krishnanath College at Baharampur. He later settled in Kolkata.

A veteran of the Left movement since the sixties, he began publishing and editing Aneek since 1964 when ruptures in the CPI on ideo-political issues led to first split and birth of the CPI(M).

In the wake of the Naxalbari uprising three years later that had triggered the second split and birth of the CPI(ML), Chakroborty did not join the new party. But he made Aneek an independent forum for debates on contemporary communist movement, both national and international.
Under his stewardship, Aneek has become one of the leading left periodical in Bengal and among the few 'little magazines' which have survived five decades against all odds. He himself was an accomplished political commentator and had several books to his credit.

Chakroborty was jailed by the S.S Roy government during the Emergency. A life-long defender of human rights, he was also one of the founders of Association for Protection of Democratic Rights and its vice-president.

He was always active in the campaigns of release of political prisoners irrespective of the creed of the ruling parties and governments since the seventies. He stood by peoples' movements and joined protests in their support despite his failing health-- from Maruti to Nonadanga.

He was also one of the founders of Peoples' Books Society, a major publication house and a enthusiast of Little Magazine movement in Bengal.

Noted novelist and activist Mahasveta Devi who knew Chakroborty closely expressed her 'profound shock'. "I am deeply grieved. It's an irreplaceable loss for the human rights movement as well as for me,'' the octogenarian writer said. Poet Sankhaya Ghosh also mourned Chakroborty's death. "I feel like losing a near and dear one,'' he said.

Here is an article Dipankar wrote for Countercurrents in February, 2012

Jungal Mahal And Recent 'Peace' Efforts

 

 




 

 


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