Thursday, August 27, 2009

A New Thinking Communist Mohit Sen



[caption id="attachment_40" align="alignright" width="144" caption="Mohit Sen on the Cover of his Autobiography"]Mohit Sen on the Cover of his Autobiography[/caption]

Born in 1929 in a distinguished westernised
Brahmo Samaj family in Calcutta, Mohit Sen
was educated in Calcutta and Cambridge. It
was at Cambridge that Sen met mathematics
scholar Vanaja Iyengar, and the two decided
to marry. He also received his party card at
Cambridge.


From 1950 to 1953, Mohit Sen was in People’s Republic of China, where he attended the International Communists School in Beijing. Subsequently he worked at the central office of the CPI, beingeventually elected to the party’s Central Executive Committee.He later parted with the CPI, persuaded by his thinking that the Communist movement should ally with the nationalist stream in India’s public affairs. He then founded the United Communist Party of India.
Mohit Sen passed away in 2003, shorty after the publication of his autobiography. Of Sen’s memoirs, Eric Hobsbawm, the celebrated historian of the twentieth century, has noted that “… it is a most remarkable book, written with unremitting passion and love, with acute observation of those who gave their lives to the cause, but with skeptical judgment. In my view no more illuminating first-hand book on the history of Indian Communism has been written, nor is likely to be written … India was lucky to enter independence with people as honest, as selfless, and as devoted to the service of the people as he.”
A widely acknowledged intellectual communist, Sen wrote for India’s leading journals. His other writings include Revolution in India: Problems and Perspectives, Glimpses of the History of the Communist Movement in India, Maoism and the Chinese
Revolution, Congress and Socialism and Naxalites and the Communists.


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