Benita Roy
Rajmata Benita Roy (born 1907) was a Bangladeshi aristocrat, litterateur, diplomat and minister. She was the forty-ninth Rani of the Chakma Circle in the Chittagong Hill Tracts. Roy served as the Rajmata during the kingship of Tridev Roy and Debashish Roy. She was a member of Bangladesh's first delegation to the UN General Assembly in 1972. She was a minister in the Bangladeshi government from 1975 to 1978.
Rani of Chakma Circle | |
Born | Benita Sen 18 August 1907 Surrey, England |
---|---|
Spouse | Nalinaksha Roy
( m. 1948; died 1951) |
Father | Saral Chandra Sen |
Religion | Buddhism |
Family and the arts
Benita Sen was born on 18 August 1907 in Surrey, England to law student Saral Chandra Sen. Her paternal grandfather, Keshub Chandra Sen, was a Bengali Hindu reformer and Brahmo Samaj leader. Her mother's sister, Naina Devi, was a singer of Hindustani classical music. Benita attended Bethune College in Calcutta until age 18, when she married[1] Raja Nalinaksha Roy and became the forty-ninth Rani of the Chakma Circle. She was widowed in 1951.[1]
Benita was a close associate of Rabindranath Tagore,[1] under whose patronage she launched the first literary magazine in the Chittagong Hill Tracts. Named Garika, it was the first publication of its kind to feature Chakma language poetry.[2]
Liberation War and government
During the Bangladesh Liberation War in 1971, Roy opened up the Rangamati Palace as a shelter for civilians.
In 1972, Sheikh Mujibur Rahman appointed her as a member of Bangladesh's first delegation to the UN General Assembly. The Pakistani government at the time sent a counter delegation led by her son Tridev Roy, who sided with the Pakistani establishment in the liberation war.
During the political and constitutional crises of the mid 1970s, Roy served in the Bangladeshi government as Minister of Land Administration and Land Reforms (December 1975 - January 1976) and Minister of Relief and Rehabilitation (February 1976 - June 1978).[3]
References
- Jhala, Angma D. (2013). "Daughters of the Hills: legacies of colonialism, nationalism and religious communalism in the Chakma Raj family, Chittagong Hill Tracts, Bengal c. 1900–1972". Jhala. 4 (1): 114, 120. doi:10.1080/19472498.2012.750460.
- Kamala Visweswaran (2013). Everyday Occupations: Experiencing Militarism in South Asia and the Middle East. University of Pennsylvania Press. p. 268. ISBN 0-8122-4487-7.
Chunilal Dewan ... wrote Chakma poetry and songs, many published in the literary magazine Garika, the first magazine of its kind, flourishing in the CHT under the royal patronage of Rani Benita Roy. Garika was named by Tagore.
- Syedur Rahman (2010). Historical Dictionary of Bangladesh (4th ed.). The Scarecrow Press. pp. 314, 317. ISBN 978-0-8108-6766-6.