Kolkata:A book with more than 150 rare photographs of the 1971 Bangladesh Liberation War was launched at the Kolkata Press Club ahead of Prime Minister Narendra Modi's two-day visit to Bangladesh.
Veteran Kolkata journalist Abhijit Dasgupta's "Through My Eyes: The Birth of Bangladesh" contains the rare images he shot during his ten forays into Bangladesh in the company of the Bengali freedom fighters then battling the Pakistan Army.
He worked for Statesman at that time but most of his pictures shot inside East Pakistan or on the borders went out to the world through the Gamma Presse Images, the world-leading photo agency at that time.
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"If a picture says a thousand words, I must have contributed my bit to arouse global opinion about the genocide unfolding in East Pakistan.
"My family roots are in Dhaka, the Pakistanis were killing my Bengali people, so the risk of entering a foreign territory engulfed in the civil war was worth the while," Dasgupta told IANS in an interview before the launch.
"Mujib's son Sheikh Kamal who was in the Mukti Bahini as ADC to Commander in Chief M.A. Osmani was my personal friend. He was around my age and we hit it off very well. He was a vibrant personality and mostly took me around," Dasgupta said, tears in his eyes as he recalled the death of Kamal and his wife with most members of Bangabandhu's family in the August 1975 coup.
Dasgupta is proud he even has pictures of Sheikh Mujib's father and mother who held out bravely during the nine months of massacre and mayhem.
"It was a rediscovery of my people, my roots and ethos. I realised how tough the East Bengali peasantry is. They would face armed Pakistani soldiers with sticks, machetes and spears, their casualties in the initial months of the conflict were ten to twenty times that of the Pakistanis. They lost near and dear ones, their women were raped in front of their eyes, but the East Bengalis never flinched in their resolve to gain their Independence," Dasgupta said.