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Dr. Bidhan Chandra Roy
Born: 1st July 1882
Died: 1st July 1962
Bidhan Chandra Roy was born on
July 1, 1882, at Bankipore in Patna, Bihar. His father Prakash
Chandra was an Excise Inspector. Bidhan was the youngest of five
children and was greatly influenced by the simplicity, discipline
and piety of his parents. His parents inculcated in him the idea of
service by taking care of people other than relatives with affection
and understanding.
Bidhan's mother passed away when
he was 14. His father played the role of both father and mother to
his five children. He promised never to compel them to do anything
but to just guide them on their path. All five children were
required to do the household chores themselves. This was very
helpful for Bidhan in his college days.
Bidhan did his B.A. fromPatna
College with Honors in Mathematics. He applied for admission to the
Sibpur Engineering College and the Calcutta Medical College. He was
accepted to both institutions but opted to go to medical school.
Bidhan left for Calcutta in June 1901. While at medical school
Bidhan came upon an inscription which read, "Whatever thy hands
findeth to do, do it with thy might." Bidhan was deeply impressed by
these words and they became a source of inspiration for him
throughout his life.
Bidhan's term in medical school
was fraught with hardships. His father retired as a Deputy Collector
after the first year and could no longer send Bidhan any money.
Bidhan fended for himself by getting a scholarship and living
frugally, saving on books by borrowing notes and relying on books in
the library.
The partition of Bengal was
announced while Bidhan was in college. Opposition to the partition
was being organized by nationalist leaders like Lala Lajpat Rai,
Arvinda Ghosh, Tilak and Bipin Chandra Pal. Bidhan resisted the
immense pull of the movement. He controlled his emotions and
concentrated on his studies realizing that he could better serve his
nation by qualifying in his profession first.
Immediately after graduation,
B.C. Roy joined the Provincial Health Service. He exhibited immense
dedication and hard work. He was prepared to prescribe medicine to
patients and even serve as a nurse when necessary. In his free time
he practiced privately, charging a nominal fee of Rs. 2 only.
Bidhan sailed for England with
only Rs. 1,200 in February of 1909 intending to enroll himself at
St. Bartholomew's to further his education. The Dean, reluctant to
accept a student from Asia, rejected Bidhan's application. Dr. Roy
did not loose heart. Again and again he submitted his application
until finally the Dean, after 30 admission requests, accepted Bidhan
to the college. Within two years and three months, Bidhan completed
his M.R.C.P and F.R.C.S and returned home from England in 1911. On
his return he taught at the Calcutta Medical College, then the
Campbell Medical School and finally at the Carmichael Medical
College.
Dr. Roy believed that swaraj
would remain a dream unless the people were healthy and strong in
mind and body. He made contributions to the organization of medical
education. He established the Jadavpur T.B. Hospital, Chittaranjan
Seva Sadan, R.G. Kar Medical College, Kamala Nehru Hospital,
Victoria Institution, and Chittaranjan Cancer Hospital. The
Chittaranjan Seva Sadan for women and children was opened in 1926.
The women were unwilling to come to the hospital initially but
thanks to Dr. Roy and his teams hard work, the Seva Sadan was
embraced by women of all classes and communities. He opened a center
for training women in nursing and social work.
In 1942, Yangon fell to Japanese
bombing and caused an exodus from Calcutta fearing Japanese
insurgency. Dr. Roy was serving as the Vice-Chancellor of the
University of Calcutta. He acquired air-raid shelters for schools
and college students to have their classes in, and provided relief
for students, teachers and employees alike. In recognition for his
efforts, the Doctorate of Science was conferred upon him in 1944.
Dr. Roy believed that the youth of India would determine the future
of the nation. He felt that the youth must not take part in strikes
and fasts but should study and commit themselves to social work. At
his Convocation Address on December 15, 1956 at the University of
Lucknow, Dr. Roy said, "My young friends, you are soldiers in the
battle of freedom-freedom from want, fear, ignorance, frustration
and helplessness. By a dint of hard work for the country, rendered
in a spirit of selfless service, may you march ahead with hope and
courage... ."
Dr. Roy was both Gandhiji's
friend and doctor. When Gandhiji was undergoing a fast in
Parnakutivin, Poona in 1933 during the Quit India Movement, Dr. Roy
attended to him. Gandhiji refused to take medicine on the grounds
that it was not made in India. Gandhiji asked Dr. Roy, "Why should I
take your treatment? Do you treat four hundred million of my
countrymen free?" Dr. Roy replied, "No Gandhiji, I could not treat
all patients free. But I came... not to treat Mohandas Karamchand
Gandhi, but to treat "him" who to me represents the four hundred
million people of my country." Gandhiji relented and took the
medicine.
Dr. Roy entered politics in 1925.
He ran for elections from the Barrackpore Constituency as an
Independent candidate for the Bengal Legislative Council and
defeated the "Grand Old Man of Bengal," Surendranath Banerjea. Even
though an independent he voted with the Swaraj Party (the
Parliamentary wing of the Congress). As early as 1925, Dr. Roy
tabled a resolution recommending a study of the causes of pollution
in Hoogly and suggested measures to prevent pollution in the future.
Dr. Roy was elected to the All
India Congress Committee in 1928. He kept himself away from rivalry
and conflicts and made a deep impression on the leaders. Dr. Roy
efficiently conducted the Civil Disobedience in Bengal
in 1929 and prompted Pandit
Motilal Nehru to nominate him Member of the Working Committee (CWC)
in 1930. The CWC was declared an unlawful assembly and Dr. Roy along
with other members of the committee were arrested on August 26, 1930
and detained at Central Alipore Jail.
During the Dandi March in 1931,
many members of the Calcutta Corporation were imprisoned. Congress
requested Dr. Roy to remain out of prison and discharge the duties
of the Corporation. He served as the Alderman of the
Corporation from 1930-31 and Mayor in 1933. Under him, the
Corporation made leaps in the expansion of free education, free
medical aid, better roads, improved lighting, and water supply. He
was responsible for setting up a framework for dispensing
grant-in-aid to hospitals and charitable dispensaries.
The Congress Party proposed Dr.
Roy's name for Chief Minister of Bengal. Dr. Roy
wanted to devote himself to his profession. On Gandhiji's advice,
however, Dr. Roy accepted the position and took office on
January 23, 1948. Bengal at the time had been torn by
communal violence, shortage of food, unemployment and a large flow
of refugees in the wake of the creation of East Pakistan. Dr. Roy
brought unity and discipline amongst the party ranks. He then
systematically and calmly began to work on the immense task in front
of him. Within three years law and order was returned to Bengal
without compromising the dignity and status of his administration.
He told the people, "We have the ability and if, with faith in our
future, we exert ourselves with determination, nothing, I am sure,
no obstacles, however formidable or insurmountable they may appear
at present, can stop our progress... (if) all work unitedly, keeping
our vision clear and with a firm grasp of our problems."
The nation honored Dr. Roy with
the Bharat Ratna on February 4, 1961. On July 1, 1962, after
treating his morning patients and discharging affairs of the State,
he took a copy of the "Brahmo Geet" and sang a piece from it. 11
hours later Dr. Roy died. He gifted his house for running a
nursing home named after his mother, Aghorkamani Devi. The B.C. Roy
National Award was instituted in 1976 for work in the area of
medicine, politics, science, philosophy, literature and arts. The
Dr. B.C. Roy Memorial Library and Reading Room for Children in the
Children's Book Trust, New Delhi, was opened in 1967 |
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