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Bina Das

Bina Das (24 August 1911 – 26 December 1986) was an Indian revolutionary and nationalist from West Bengal.

Das was a member of Chhatri Sangha, a semi-revolutionary organisation for women in Kolkata. On 6 February 1932, she attempted to assassinate the Bengal Governor Stanley Jackson, in the Convocation Hall of the University of Calcutta. The revolver was supplied by another freedom fighter Kamala Das Gupta. She fired five shots but none hit him. Her confession, which ran to five pages long and was written in English, was censored by the British colonial administration, but still found itself widely circulated. In it, she wrote:

"My object was to die, and if to die, to die nobly fighting against this despotic system of Government, which has kept my country in perpetual subjection to its infinite shame and endless suffering – and fighting in a way which cannot but tell... I have been thinking – is life worth living in an India so subjected to wrong, and continually groaning under the tyranny of a foreign Government, or is it not better to make one's supreme protest against it by offering one's life away? Would not the immolation of a daughter of India and of a son of England awaken India to the sin of its acquiescence to its continued state of subjection and England to the iniquities of its proceedings?"

The Special Tribunal convened to judge her sentenced her to nine years of rigorous imprisonment on charges of attempted murder under section 307 of the Indian Penal Code.

After her release from jail, she became active in the Indian National Congress, participated in the Quit India Movement and was imprisoned till 1945. After independence, she was elected to the provincial assembly, but Bina Das left Congress due to ideological differences.

Though she didn't join the Communist Party, she was attracted to socialist and communist ideals. She believed that Marxism should be re-established according to the needs of the country.

She was a friend of Suhasini Ganguly, a freedom fighter.

She was the youngest of the five daughters of Beni Madhab Das and particularly influenced by immediate senior sister Kalyani and second brother who had also gone to jail. In 1947, she married Jatish Chandra Bhaumik, an Indian independence movement activist of the Jugantar group.

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Indian revolutionary and nationalist
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