PM Modi pays tribute to Bankim Chandra Chattopadhyay on birth anniversary
Synopsis
Key Takeaways
Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Friday, 26 June paid homage to Bankim Chandra Chattopadhyay — novelist, poet, essayist, and journalist — on his birth anniversary, calling the 19th-century literary giant a figure who 'awakened a spirit of patriotism and cultural pride among generations of Indians.' The tribute coincides with the 150th anniversary of Vande Mataram, the hymn Chattopadhyay composed and which became one of the most enduring rallying cries of India's freedom movement.
What Modi and Shah Said
Taking to social media platform X, Prime Minister Modi wrote: 'Tributes to the great Bankim Chandra Chattopadhyay on his Jayanti. A towering literary luminary, his writings awakened a spirit of patriotism and cultural pride among generations of Indians. His rich literary work continues to illuminate minds and strengthen our collective resolve towards nation-building.'
Modi also noted the significance of the timing: 'This is a time when we are marking the 150th anniversary of Vande Mataram. Through Vande Mataram, he gifted the freedom movement and our nation one of its most enduring inspirations.'
Union Home Minister Amit Shah also offered homage, stating: 'Through his immortal work 'Anandamath', he conveyed the message of dedication to the motherland, sacrifice, and national consciousness. With the composition of 'Vande Mataram', he gave the Indian freedom struggle new strength, inspiration, and an ideological foundation. Today, on the occasion of the 150th anniversary of 'Vande Mataram', its original form continues to carry the message of national unity and collective pride across the country.'
Who Was Bankim Chandra Chattopadhyay
Bankim Chandra Chattopadhyay — also widely known as Chatterjee — was born on 26 or 27 June 1838 near Naihati in Bengal, into an orthodox Brahmin family. He was educated at Hooghly College, Presidency College in Calcutta, and the University of Calcutta, where he was among the institution's earliest graduates. From 1858 until his retirement in 1891, he served as a Deputy Magistrate in the Indian Civil Service. He passed away on 8 April 1894 in Calcutta.
Literary Legacy and Contributions
Chattopadhyay's early writings appeared in Sambad Prabhakar, and in 1858 he published a poetry collection titled 'Lalita O Manas'. He initially wrote in English — his novel 'Rajmohan's Wife' was serialised in the Indian Field in 1864 — before pivoting decisively to Bengali. His first major Bengali novel, 'Durgeshnandini', is credited with laying the foundation for the Bengali novel as a literary form. He followed it with 'Kapalkundala' in 1866 and 'Mrinalini' in 1869, the latter depicting themes from the period of early Muslim invasions in Bengal.
Scholars note that while his plots occasionally relied on coincidence or supernatural elements — partly a consequence of serial publication constraints — his influence on nationalist sentiment was profound. His portrayal of heroic figures stirred cultural pride well beyond Bengal's borders.
Vande Mataram and the Freedom Movement
Chattopadhyay's most lasting contribution to India's political consciousness is Vande Mataram, drawn from his novel 'Anandamath'. The hymn became a defining slogan of the independence struggle and was later adopted as India's national song. This year marks its 150th anniversary, lending additional resonance to the tributes offered by senior government leaders. Notably, both Modi and Shah chose to anchor their remembrances in the Vande Mataram milestone — a framing that underscores the hymn's continued symbolic weight in contemporary political discourse.
As India marks a century and a half of Vande Mataram, Chattopadhyay's dual identity — civil servant by day, revolutionary literary voice by night — remains a reminder that cultural nationalism in India has deep, complex roots that predate the formal independence movement by decades.