Ajoy Home


Ajoy Home was a Bengali aviculturist, ornithologist and naturalist of India, based in the eastern state of West Bengal. The Archana Award was conferred upon him by the Bangiya Sahitya Parishad on 24 July 1992. He was also awarded the Rabindra Puraskar, the highest honorary literary award from the state of West Bengal, posthumously by the Government of West Bengal on 3 June 1996 for his book "Chena Achena Pakhi".

Early life and family history

The Brahmo family of Ajoy Home originally hailed from Mymensingh in modern-day Bangladesh, who later settled in Calcutta. Ajoy Home was born in Kolkata to Brahmo reformer and a teacher at City School, Gagan Chandra and his wife Basantabala. Ajoy was the sixth of his seven siblings. His eldest brother was Amal Chandra Home, the well-known founder-editor of the Calcutta Municipal Gazette and a member of Sukumar Ray's 'Monday club'. Ajoy Home himself studied at the Brahmo Boys School and went on to Vidyasagar College in Calcutta for his undergraduate education. He was married to Suparna, also of a Brahmo family hailing from Shillong, in the year 1947, and she predeceased him on 4 February 1987.

Career

Home was the author of several books on ornithology written in his vernacular Bengali: Banglar Pakhi, Chena Achena Pakhi that won him a posthumous Rabindra Puroshkar, awarded by the Government of West Bengal in 1996. His other works include Bichitra Jeeb-jontu, and the sci-fi tale Moron Ghum etc.
Home wrote for several Indian wild life journals, and also contributed regularly to various well-known Bengali-language magazines and periodicals of the time, including Sandesh, Desh, Kishore Jnan-bijnan - a science magazine for the young, Mahanagar, Aajkaal and others.
Home was appointed librarian of the Indian Statistical Institute by Prasanta Chandra Mahalanobis, where he worked until superannuation.
Although fluent in several languages, Home wrote mainly in his mother tongue, Bengali, motivated by a desire to write for the Bengali speaking masses in his home state of West Bengal, who were so far hamstrung by the scarcity of quality books on ornithology written in Bengali, as mentioned by him in his book Banglar Pakhi.
His books were compiled from information collected during four decades of travel and exploration in the wilderness of eastern India, including the hills and forests of undivided Assam and the remote corners of the Sunderbans, as well as other parts of India.
Home was a founder-member of , a Nature Study group in West Bengal and was a promoter of environmental awareness, wildlife conservation, and birdwatcher groups. He was the founder and editor of Prakriti Gyan, a Bengali magazine on nature.

Personal

Home participated in several hobbies apart from his study of birds, in particular playing bridge, attending bridge tournaments all over India.
He was very fond of Rabindrasangeet and was close to Pravas Dey. The duo started a music school named ‘Ektara'.

Death and legacy

Home died in Calcutta on 30 October 1992, survived by his only daughter Sutapa. A commemorative event was organized on the centennial of his birth.
In popular Bengali culture, a reference to Home's book Banglar Pakhi, is made in Satyajit Ray's detective novel Jahangirer Swarnamudra. The sleuth Feluda in the story refers to Ajoy Home's Banglar Pakhi as the definitive book on bird-watching in Bengali and mentions Salim Ali's Birds of India in English, as preparation for the supporting character Lalmohan Ganguly to pass himself off as a bird-watcher.

Books

  • Banglar Pakhi By Ajoy Home, Birth Centenary Edition, Jan2015 Publisher-Dey's Publishing,
  • Chena Achena Pakhi
  • Bichitra Jeeb-jontu
  • ''Moron Ghum''