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Baman Das Basu

Toward the end of his life

Major Baman Das Basu (24 March 1867 – 23 September 1930) was an Indian army physician, botanist, nationalist, historian, and writer. He resigned from the Indian Medical Service after serving in Chitral and Sudan due to the conflict with his nationalism and joined his brother in editing and publishing books on Hinduism from the Panini Office, Allahabad. A promoter of Indian medical traditions, he completed the botanical work begun by K.R. Kirtikar on Indian medicinal plants.

Biography[]

BD Basu on commission

When joining the Indian Medical Service in 1891

Baman Das Basu was born in Lahore, the youngest son of Bhubaneshwari Devi and Shyama Charan Basu (who came from Tangra Bhabanipur, Khulna and studied at Calcutta under Alexander Duff). His father was involved in organizing the department of education in Punjab including Punjab University but died when young Basu was just five months old.[1] An older brother Srisha Chandra Basu and his mother took care of him. Although entitled to pension, the family was cheated and pushed into poverty. His mother had to sell her jewellery to raise the children. Srisha was six years older and advised Baman to study Indian medicine systems. Basu entered the Lahore Medical College in 1882 but failed his midwifery exam in 1887. He however went on to study medicine in England, encouraged by his brother. He passed the LSA, MRCS and the IMS examinations and was commissioned in April 1891 and posted to the Bombay Presidency where he served until 1907. He saw wartime action in Sudan and in Chitral, and suffered scurvy, but his longest spell was as a civil surgeon in Ahmednagar. He took early retirement when he no longer could bear the conflict of supporting imperialists and his nationalist vision.[2]

After retirement, Basu worked at the Panini Office in Allahabad started by Srisha. He wrote biographies of Indian medical celebrities, a book "My Sojourn in England'' and numerous short contributions to the Modern Review. Even while in England he wrote to the Congress paper India on a Serious indictment of the examinations for the Indian Medical Service. (1890). He put together a large collection of books and set up a library in Allahabad named after his mother, the Bhubaneswari library. Colonel K. R. Kirtikar was so impressed by the library that he bequeathed his own collection to it. In 1920 Basu gifted Kirtikar's herbaria, books and journals relating to botany to the Calcutta University and suggested that they set up a Kirtikar Herbarium. He founded the Jagat-Taran Girls' High School in Allahabad (named after his sisters).[2]

Basu married Srimati Sukumari Devi, daughter of Babu Hari Mohan De of Allahabad in 1887. Shortly after the birth of their son his wife suffered from tuberculosis and died in 1902. His son was then raised by his sister Jagat Mohini Das.[2]

Basu was opposed to the caste system and said that it would lead to the downfall of Hinduism and also publicly condemned child marriage and the purdah system. He was strongly against Islam and Anglicization. He admired Swami Bhaskarananda Saraswati. He served as president of the 9th all-India Ayurvedic conference held in Lahore. He believed that diabetes mellitus could be treated by diet and wrote a book Diabetes Mellitus and its Dietetic Treatment. Sadly he himself died from diabetes.[2]

Publications[]

The major books he wrote and edited include:

References[]

  1. Bose, Phanindranath (1932). Life of Sris Chandra Basu. https://archive.org/details/in.ernet.dli.2015.102725. 
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 Chatterjee, Ramananda (1930). "Baman Das Basu". pp. 667–675. 
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