Bina Das বীণা দাস |
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Born | 24 August 1911 Krishnanagar, Bengal Province, British India |
Died | 26 December 1986 Rishikesh, Uttar Pradesh, India |
Organization | Jugantar and Indian National Congress |
Political movement | Indian Independence movement |
Religion | Hinduism |
Bina Das (Bengali: বীণা দাস) (1911–1986) was an Indian revolutionary and nationalist from Bengal.
She was the daughter of the well knownd Brahmo teacher, Beni Madhab Das and a social worker Sarala Devi.
Bina Das was a member of Chhatri Sangha, a semi-revolutionary outfit for women in Kolkata. On 6 February 1932, she attempted to assassinate the Bengal Governor Stanley Jackson, a former England cricket captain, in the Convocation hall of the University of Calcutta. She fired five shots but failed and was sent to nine years of rigorous imprisonment.
After her early release in 1939, Das joined the Congress party. In 1942, she participated in the Quit India movement and was imprisoned again from 1942-45. From 1946-47, she was the member of the Bengal Provincial Legislative Assembly and later from 1947-51. she was a member of the West Bengal Legislative Assembly. In 1947, she married Jatish Chandra Bhaumik, an Indian independence movement activist belonging to the Jugantar group. After the death of her husband, she led a lonely life in Rishikesh and died in anonymity.[1]
Bina Das wrote two autobiographical works in Bengali are Shrinkhaljhankar and Pitridhan.[1]