Tripti Joshi (Editor)

Ambika Charan Choudhury

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Pen name
  
Kamataratna

Citizenship
  
Indian

Language
  
Assamese

Name
  
Ambika Choudhury


Nationality
  
Indian

Resting place
  
Bongaigaon

Ethnicity
  
Koch Rajbonshi

Literary movement
  
Culture

Ambika Charan Choudhury httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Occupation
  
School principalWriterHistorianActivist

Died
  
December 4, 2011, West Bengal

Education
  
Cotton College, Guwahati, Gauhati University

Similar
  
M Athar Ali, Maria Aurora Couto, Jagdish Chandra Jain

Ambika Charan Choudhury (Assamese: অম্বিকা চৰণ চৌধুৰী) (16 August 1930 – 4 December 2011) was a noted Assamese litterateur, historian and activist from Bongaigaon in Assam. Popularly he is known as Kamataratna.

Contents

Early life and education

Born on 16 August 1930 to a poor family, Nareshwar Choudhury (father) and Kashiguri Devi (mother), in Borpara village of Bongaigaon, Ambika Charan Choudhury attended schooling in local Birjhara High school, Bongaigaon. He obtained a graduate degree from Cotton College, Guwahati. After that he joined government services at Shillong. Later he changed several jobs and finally retired as Principal of Bongaigaon Normal School.

Social life

Choudhury always get attached with many social and political organizations. He devoted most of his life for the development and promotion of Rajbanshi language and culture, also known as Goalpariya. He was an executive member of Assam Xahitya Xabha, joint secretary of OBC Xahitya Xabha, secretary of undivided Goalpara District Xahitya Xabha, and secretary of Koch-Rajbanshi Sanmilany. He was also founder of many educational institutions in western Assam. Choudhury was leading the popular demand for Schedule Tribe status to the Koch-Rajbangshi community since 1958. He was actively involved with the Sanmilita Jatiya Abhibartan, which is facilitating the peace process between Government of India and the moderate wing of the rebel group ULFA.

He died on 4 December 2011 in a road mishap at Tetultola near Kamakhyaguri in West Bengal. He left behind his wife, three daughters and two sons.

Literary works

Ambika Choudhury started his major literary journey through Ratnapeethot Ebhumiki, a book written in 1961. He wrote columns regularly in Ramdhenu journal published from Guwahati. He had written more than 123 valuable articles and 29 books mostly on the Rajbangshi language and culture. Koch-Rajbanshi Jatir Itihakh aru Sanskriti, Kamatapurot Mohapurush Sreemanta Sankardev, Xantirdut Hajrat Mohammad, The Koches Around the World, Koch-Rajbanshies betrayed, Biswabir Chila Roy Sahitya Pratibha, Rani Abhayeswari and Bijni Rajyar Itibritta are some of his notable books written in Assamese and English.

Awards and honours

Choudhury was a recipient of Bir Chilarai award, instituted by the Government of Assam. He was regarded the backbone of Koch-Rajbanshi language movement and was conferred the title of Kamataratna by many cultural and literary organizations.

References

Ambika Charan Choudhury Wikipedia


Similar Topics