Santosh Kumar Mitra

Santosh kumar Mitra (Bengali: সন্তোষ কুমার মিত্র) or Santosh Mitra (15 August 1900 – 16 September 1931) was an activist of the Indian independence movement and a martyr.

Santosh Kumar Mitra
Born15 August 1900
Central Calcutta, British India
(now in Kolkata)
Died16 September 1931
Hijli Detention Camp, British India
(now in India)
NationalityIndian
Known forRole in Indian freedom struggle

Early life

Mitra was born on 15 August 1900 in Kolkata, in a middle class kaystha family. He passed matriculation from Hindu School, Kolkata in 1915 and became graduate from the University of Calcutta in 1919. During the period 1921–22, he completed his M.A and LL.B.[1]

Revolutionary activities

Santosh Mitra joined the Indian National Congress. He founded the Swaraj Sevak Sangha and attached with Hooghly Vidya Mandir was headed by Bhupati Majumder, one of the Jugantar Leaders in 1922. He organised a Socialist conference in Kolkata in the presidency of Jawaharlal Nehru. After the suspension of Non-cooperation movement Mitra shifted to the extremist movement in the struggle for Independence. He was charged with Shankharitola Murder Case and arrested in 1923.[1][2]

Death

On 16 September 1931, police shot and killed Santosh kumar Mitra and another inmate Tarakeswar Sengupta in Hijli Detention Camp.[3][4]

Santosh Kumar Mitra bust
Santosh Kumar Mitra martyr
gollark: Well, that seems to partly be for vaccines and testing, which don't seem to have much of a possible counting issue going on. The other bit is for treatment, and I don't think they would particularly want to go to the hassle of treating people who don't actually have it.
gollark: Why?
gollark: For who to do that, exactly?
gollark: I don't really see what the "principle" is here.
gollark: or come up with some way to split the result based on *how* close each person was.

References

  1. Part I, Arun Chandra Guha. "Indias Struggle Quarter of Century 1921 to 1946". Retrieved 22 November 2017.
  2. Vol - I, Subodh S. Sengupta & Anjali Basu (2002). Sansad Bangali Charitavidhan (Bengali). Kolkata: Sahitya Sansad. p. 559.
  3. "IIT-Kharagpur remembers its Hijli Jail days". financialexpress.com. Retrieved 22 November 2017.
  4. Jana, Naresh (11 September 2002). "IIT revival pill for historic Hijli Jail". Retrieved 10 June 2018.
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