Friday, 22 July 2016

An Inspiring Personality with loss of Vision: Asit Ranjan Bandyopadhyay 22 july 2016

                                                            Asit Ranjan Bandyopadhyay

                                                    Asitda's garden at the back
                                                               Manju Bandyopadhyay



Asit Ranjan Bandyopadhyay. DOB 24 November 1933. Residing at Shyamkhola, Jagaddal, PO Sonarpur, South 24 Parganas
In 1994 I had an opportunity to meet Asitda. At that time volunteers of SVH, mainly sighted Braille transcribers faced serious problems in operating Taj Braillers. Perkins Standard Brailler at that time was an absorbitantly high priced product, something we, the volunteers with very modest means could not even imagine to possess.
Late Raja Paul, a very skilled self-made “Do-it-yourself” technician  and an extremely reliable escort and resource person in our thethen annual mountaineering programs, with the Himalayan Mountaineering Institute (HMI), Darjeeling, introduced us in 1994, to Asitda, a highly-skilled photographer & technician, a man of strong personality and self-confidence, a hard disciplinarian and an ardent Nature-lover, whose garden was a heaven for bird-watchers. Asitda at that time was busy working in his studio at Ekdalia Road and Raja took our defective Braillers there for repair. Strangely at that time Asitda had no problem relating to eye-sight and would walk long distances in Kolkata for his assignments.
We would then hear from Raja various achievements of Asitda as a renowned professional photographer till oneday, when it surfaced that Asitda is suffering from vision problem, he was diagnosed with macular degeneration. Asitda himself would handle all his problems and would innovate various tools within his home to facilitate his independent movement in and around.
In 2001 Asitda, at the age of 68 years, decided to learn Braille and with great dedication and steadfast perseverance picked up English Braille Grade 2, frequently interacting with us the advantages and inconveniences faced by an aged Braille learner and how best that inconvenience can be converted into one’s advantage. He would borrow English Braille books, gifted to us from UK & USA, read them avidly and return them carefully. Ultimately Asitda got enrolled himself with the Hadley School for the Blind, USA for a course in English Braille and completed it.
His most invaluable contribution is tutoring Meena Mondol, an adult Blind rural woman, identified from an area closer to Asitda’s house. Meena came to SVH in 1992-93 and had some education from Louis Braille Memorial School for the Sightless, Uttarapara, Hooghly & one & a half-year’s vocational training from Calcutta Blind School, Behala. She then received a sewing machine from the Dept of Social Welfare, Government of West Bengal, as a tool to make herself self-reliant. By this time on our request Asitda and Boudi, his wife, Manju Bandyopadhyay extended a warm hand of support to Meena, grooming her, finetuning her Braille skill etc and other daily living tips. Professor Jefferey J Kripal, presently Newton Razor Professor at Rice University, USA, would send some funds which enabled us to support Meena for her bare necessities. By the way Meena’s widow mother supported the two by selling vegetable in a local market. In course of time Meena grew extremely smart & self-confident in her appearance, dress, association with strangers, adjusting with family problems and other challenges.
Last Tuesday the 19th of July 2016 I went to pay a visit to Asitda & Manjuboudi. They were very eager to gift us some ripe jackfruits from their own tree, which they give us every year for our beneficiaries & volunteers to taste. Asitda and Boudi both looked very frail. Their son Ananda and daughter-in-law Najma take very good care of them. Boudi is very active too in her daily home management.
Today the 22nd July, I have sent our IT assistant Sukla and digital book editor Debasish to fix an EVD machine in Asitda’s proximity so that he can listen to our recordists’ unedited recording and tell us the relevant points.

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