Bakul Tripathi

Bakul Tripathi was a Gujarati humour essayist from Gujarat, India. Educated in commerce and law, he taught commerce in Ahmedabad. He wrote thousands of humour essays in columns in his 40 years long career.

Bakul Tripathi
Born(1928-11-27)27 November 1928
Nadiad, Gujarat, India
Died31 August 2006(2006-08-31) (aged 77)
Ahmedabad, Gujarat
OccupationHumour essayist
LanguageGujarati
NationalityIndian
Notable awardsRanjitram Suvarna Chandrak (1988)

Life

Bakul Padmamanishankar Tripathi was born on 27 November 1928 at Nadiad (now in Gujarat, India). He matriculated in 1944. He completed his B. Com. in 1948 and M. Com. in 1953. He completed LL.B. in 1953.[1][2][3]

He served as a professor of commerce in H L College of Commerce in Ahmedabad from 1953 to his retirement. He wrote humour columns in Gujarati daily, Gujarat Samachar titled Thoth Nishaliyo and Kakko ne Barakhadi which was the longest run regular column in any daily across India. He also edited international edition of Gujarat Samachar from 1983. He died on 31 August 2006 at Ahmedabad. He was the president of Gujarati Sahitya Parishad when he died.[1][2][3][4]

Works

Tripathi was chiefly humour essayist. He had written thousand of essays in his 40 years long career of column writing but just small number of them are published as collections. Sacharacharma (1955) was his first collection of essays which had novelty in subjects. Somvarni Savare (1966) is his take on affairs of his time and society. Dranacharyanu Sinhasan (1985) has humorous essays about corruption and issues in education system which included various forms of humour. His other essay collections include Vaikunth Nathi Javu (1983), Govinde Mandi Gothdi (1987), Hindolo Zakamzol, Hasya Etle Prabhu Sathe Maitri, Bakul Tripathinu Teramu, India America Hasta Hasta, Haiyu Kholine Hasie, Bapujini Bakrini Bakrini Bakrano Bakro, Batrees Lakshana Bakul Tripathi, Ashadhni Sanje Priya Sakhi Ane Bhajiya, Man Sathe Maitri, Mitrona Chitro, Shakespeare nu Shraddh.[1][3]

Leela (1974) was his three-act play which had more than fifty shows. Paranu To Ene Ja Paranu is his another play. He had edited one-act plays of Jayanti Dalal and humour essays of Jyotindra Dave. Fantasia was his work of children's literature. He had written few critical essays.[1]

Recognition

He received Kumar Chandrak in 1951. He had also received Ranjitram Suvarna Chandrak in 1988.[1][3]

Personal life

He was married and had a daughter.[2][4]

gollark: The registry is somehow worse than random config files, and you're limited by what options Microsoft deigned to put in.
gollark: hahahahahahahaaahahahahahahahhahahaahahhahahhhahahahahahahhhahhhhhhhhhhhahahha again.
gollark: I mean, if you don't care about customizability or tracking or not randomly breaking, *maybe*?
gollark: It's open source and verifiably does not track me (significantly).
gollark: Some apps are annoying without it?

See also

References

  1. Brahmabhatt, Prasad (2010). અર્વાચીન ગુજરાતી સાહિત્યનો ઈતિહાસ - આધુનિક અને અનુઆધુનિક યુગ (History of Modern Gujarati Literature – Modern and Postmodern Era) (in Gujarati). Ahmedabad: Parshwa Publication. p. 301-304. ISBN 978-93-5108-247-7.
  2. "Gujarat lost range of giants in 2006". DeshGujarat. 2006-12-30. Retrieved 2014-03-30.
  3. "બકુલ ત્રિપાઠી (Bakul Tripathi)". Gujarati Sahitya Parishad (in Gujarati). Retrieved 2016-11-18.
  4. "Noted humourist Bakul Tripathi dead at 78". One India News. 2006-08-31. Retrieved 2014-03-30.
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