From Our Correspondent
Guwahati: The outlawed United Liberation Front of Assam (Independent), has criticised Assam Chief Minister Tarun Gogoi for Assam government’s decision to present the coveted Srimanta Sankardeva Award to yesteryear’s celebrated actress of Hindi cinema, Sharmila Tagore.
Tagore was presented with the Award by President Pranab Mukherjee here on Monday in a glittering function in presence of a host of dignitaries.
The outlawed militant group that considers itself the ‘self-styled’ champion of Assamese culture and tradition, has taken strong exception for selection Sharmila Tagore whom ULFA termed as the ‘bikini girl’ of Hindi cinema (An Evening in Paris).
In a statement e-mailed to the media here the outfit said Chief Minister Gogoi had hurt the sentiment of the people of Assam by selecting Tagore for the award as she had no contribution towards propagation the ideals of Srimanta Sankardeva the vaishnavite saint was born on Assam soil in 15th century and initiated a widespread religious and cultural movement encompassing all communities in the State to integrate the greater Assamese race as it is today.
The ULFA’s statement was, however, silent on Ms Tagore’s Assamese roots. Accepting the award from the President , the actress said, “Half of me is from Assam since my mother was an Assamese. Ira Baruah, my mother was the daughter of J Baruah, the founder Principal of Earl Law College (now Government Law College) in Guwahati.” She dedicated her award to her late mother who, she said, used to tell her about the high status accorded to women in Assamese society.
Sharmila Tagore’s grandfather J Baruah was the one who initiated law education in then undivided Assam while her great grandfather Gunabhiram Baruah had led the fight against the tradition child marriage and worked for promotion of widow marriage and women education in Assam.