Govinda Chandra Dev (1 February 1907 – 26 March 1971) (Full name : Govinda Chandra Dev Purakayastha[1]), also known as Dr. G. C. Dev, was a professor of philosophy at the University of Dhaka. He was assassinated at the onset of Bangladesh Liberation War of 1971 by the Pakistan Army.
Govinda Chandra Dev | |
---|---|
গোবিন্দ চন্দ্র দেব | |
Born | |
Died | March 26, 1971 | (aged 64)
Nationality | British India (1907-1947) Pakistan (1947-1971) Bangladesh (1971) |
Education | PhD |
Alma mater | Sanskrit College University of Calcutta (MPhil, PhD) |
Known for | Martyred Intellectual |
Early life and education
editDev was born in the village of Lauta of the Panchakhanda Pargana (currently Beanibazar Upazila) of Sylhet District, British India (present-day Bangladesh) on 1 February 1907.[1] After his father's death at an early age, Dev was raised by the local Christian missionaries. Dev passed the Entrance Examination in first division from Biani Bazar High English School in 1925. In 1927, he passed the Intermediate Examination from Ripon College, Kolkata. He received his Bachelor of Arts degree with honors from Sanskrit College in 1929. In 1931, he received his Master of Arts in philosophy from the University of Calcutta. He graduated summa cum laude in both Bachelors and Masters. His Doctoral thesis was titled Reason, intuition and reality, and for this, he received a PhD degree from Calcutta University in 1944. The thesis dissertation was later published as a book titled Idealism and Progress.[1]
Life and career
editDev started his career as a lecturer in Ripon College in Kolkata. As the college was transferred from Calcutta to Dinajpur (now in Bangladesh) during World War II, he moved as well. In 1945, the college re-located to Kolkata, but Dev decided to stay back in Dinajpur as the founding principal of the new branch of Surendranath College (now Dinajpur Government College). Later, in July 1953, he joined the Department of Philosophy at Dhaka University. He also served as the house tutor of Dhaka hall (present Shahidullah Hall) in 1957 before being appointed as the provost of Jagannath Hall in the same year. Dev was appointed as the chairman of the department of philosophy in 1963. On 1 July 1967, Dev became a full professor. In the late 1960s he taught in Wilkes-Barre College in Pennsylvania, USA as a visiting professor. His admirers in the college founded The Govinda Dev Foundation for World Brotherhood for the propagation of Dev's humanist philosophy.[2]
Dev was elected the general secretary of Pakistan Philosophical Congress in the 1960s and held the post till his death in 1971. He also set up a Philosophy House in Dhaka University to promote and practice his life-oriented and humanist philosophy, which became a center for intellectual and cultural activities in the university.
Dev donated the bulk of his belongings to the university in his lifetime. The donation facilitated the establishment of Center for Philosophical Studies (DCPS) at Dhaka University in 1980.
Dev was a life-long bachelor, although he adopted a son Jyoti Prakash Dutta and a daughter, Rokeya Begum Sultana.
Assassination
editDev was assassinated along with the husband of his adopted daughter by Pakistan army personnel involved in 1971 Dhaka University massacre on the black night of 25 March. At that time, Dev was residing in a university quarter near Jagannath Hall with his adopted daughter Rokeya Sultana and her husband Mohammad Ali. At around 11 p.m., the residents of the house were awakened by the sound of gunfire as the army raided the campus. As Rokeya remarked later, bullets were hitting the house like a hailstorm. The family took shelter in a small room and kept awake the whole night. In the morning of 26 a group of soldiers came to the door. They started banging on the door as they shouted in Urdu, "Kanha Malaun kanha, daravaaja khol" ("You son of an infidel, open the door"). As Dev proceeded to open the door, the door collapsed on him. Upon entering the house, one of the soldiers hit his head with his rifle and another one shot him in the chest. His adopted daughter Rokeya Begum's husband Mohammad Ali came to rescue him and recited Kalima to calm the soldiers. But it didn't work. Dev feebly asked, "What do you want here, son?" But in response, the soldiers opened fire and shot a few more rounds at him. Two bullets hit him in the head and the other bullets hit him in the chest. Dev died immediately. The soldiers beat Rokeya mercilessly and also killed her husband. They also plunged a bayonet into the professor's lifeless body. Rokeya Begum survived the sudden attack and was knocked unconscious. They later took the dead bodies to the grounds of Jagannath hall where the bodies of the other victims of the massacre were dumped.[3]
Bibliography
editDev wrote over a hundred articles in English and Bangla in national and international journals. He also published seven books in his lifetime –
- Idealism and Progress (1952)
- Idealism: A New Defence and A New Application (1958)
- Amar Jibandarshan (The Philosophy of My Life) (1960)
- Aspiration of the Common Man (1963)
- The Philosophy of Vivekananda and the Future of Man (1963)
- Tattvavidya-sara (1966)
- Buddha: the Humanist (1969).
Two other books Parables of the East (1984) and My American Experience (1993) were published posthumously.[1]
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ a b c d Roy, Pradip Kumar (2012). "Dev, Govinda Chandra". In Islam, Sirajul; Jamal, Ahmed A. (eds.). Banglapedia: National Encyclopedia of Bangladesh (Second ed.). Asiatic Society of Bangladesh.
- ^ Jahed Ahmed. "On Martyred Intellectual Prof. G.C. Dev: A Philosopher of, by and for the Commoners!". Archived from the original on 4 February 2012. Retrieved 6 February 2013.
- ^ Profiles of pro Bangladesh Intelligentsia of 1971: Dr GC Deb ( Philosophy Dept, Dhaka University), archived from the original on 6 January 2014
Further reading
edit- Bangalir Dorshan: Prachinkal Theke Somokal by Prof. Dr. Aminul Islam, Dept. of Philosophy, DU, (Maola Brothers, Dhaka, 2002), pp. 247–258
External links
edit- My Philosophy of Synthesis: Factors that Moulded It by G. C. Dev
- A tribute to Prof. G.C. Dev by Jahed Ahmed Archived 4 February 2012 at the Wayback Machine