The Caravan

Echoes of Resistance

At the end of an hour-long radio episode on Bengali protest songs, the singer and oral historian Moushumi Bhoumik performed a song written by Birendra Chattopadhyay, a twentieth-century socialist poet. A witness to the 1943 Bengal famine, Chattopadhyay wrote the lines “Anna bakya, Anna pran, Anna-i chetana”—Rice is language, rice is life, rice is consciousness. Like several other shows on Radio Quarantine, Bhoumik’s programme is concerned with building an archive of regional narratives of political resistance and cultural histories. She interviews folk singers and friends from as far afield as Purulia and Sylhet, and recollects her travels through the Sundarbans to document the region’s folk traditions.

Radio Quarantine was started by a group of Kolkata-based filmmakers and scholars in March 2020, as West Bengal went into lockdown in response to the COVID-19 pandemic. With a tagline that translates to “Don’t be alone in such difficult times,” its primary aim was to create solidarity among its listeners even as national protests against the Citizenship (Amendment) Act were suddenly disbanded. The filmmaker and curator Kasturi Basu, one of the station’s founders, is no

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