Monday, December 22, 2025
ADVT 
India

'Why Bengalis Are Not Entrepreneurs'

Darpan News Desk IANS, 03 Aug, 2015 12:30 PM
    The lack of inclination among Bengalis to become entrepreneurs was a result of "intellectual arrogance", said Lord Kumar Bhattacharyya, a member of Britain's House of Lords who is of Bengali-origin.
     
    Bhattacharyya, a graduate of the Indian Institute of Technology, Kharagpur, is an engineer, educator and government adviser, who famously persuaded the Tatas' to purchase a then ailing Jaguar Land Rover, which has now become one of the most profitable companies in Europe. 
     
    He is the founder and chairman of Warwick Manufacturing Group, an international role model on how higher education and businesses can work together, which is a part of Warwick University in the Midlands of England. 
     
    His expertise is the automotive industry and in the 1980s he helped Margaret Thatcher, then British prime minister, to revive a sinking car making sector. He is often described as "the most eminent Indian in England". 
     
    Speaking as the chief guest at a lecture on Dwarkanath Tagore, Rabindranath Tagore's grandfather, at an event hosted in London by the Tagore Centre on Sunday evening, Bhattacharyya went on to say the Bengali attitude was "we don't do business".
     
    Dwarkanath Tagore was among India's first entrepreneurs, but his descendants desisted from entering business and instead followed intellectual pursuits, which have become the ideal for Bengalis.
     
    Delivering the lecture on Dwarkanath Tagore, Sumit Mitra, a senior Indian journalist, highlighted the fact that his Nobel Prize winning grandson Rabindranath Tagore harboured an antipathy for his ancestor. 
     
    Mitra has been carrying out extensive research on the senior Tagore in London, Scotland, Delhi and Kolkata since 2009, with the object of writing a definitive book. 
     
    Dwarkanath died in London in 1846 at the age of 52.

    MORE India ARTICLES

    India-Pakistan Relations Like 'Saas-Bahu', Says Pak Envoy; Apologises

    India-Pakistan Relations Like 'Saas-Bahu', Says Pak Envoy; Apologises
    "Indo-Pakistan relation is riddled with conflicts and issues. Despite the abundance of mutual goodwill, we have not allowed this relation to grow as normal." Basit said here at an event.

    India-Pakistan Relations Like 'Saas-Bahu', Says Pak Envoy; Apologises

    Modi, Rajnath, Anna Hazare To Visit Punjab

    Modi, Rajnath, Anna Hazare To Visit Punjab
    Prime Minister Narendra Modi will pay tributes on March 23 to freedom struggle martyrs Bhagat Singh, Rajguru and Sukhdev at Hussainiwala in Punjab, along the India-Pakistan border. Home Minister Rajnath Singh and social activist Anna Hazare will also visit the state in the coming days.

    Modi, Rajnath, Anna Hazare To Visit Punjab

    Pakistan's High Commissioner Abdul Basit Invites Mamata To Pakistan

    Pakistan's High Commissioner Abdul Basit Invites Mamata To Pakistan
    Pakistan's High Commissioner Abdul Basit on Wednesday invited West Bengal Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee to Pakistan and said she "readily agreed" to student exchange programmes between her state and Pakistan.

    Pakistan's High Commissioner Abdul Basit Invites Mamata To Pakistan

    Indian Supreme Court Quashes Jat Reservation, Shocked Community To Seek Review

    Indian Supreme Court Quashes Jat Reservation, Shocked Community To Seek Review
    Mahasabha president Kushaldeep Dhillon said legal options would be explored to defend the case, and blasted the Modi government for "deliberately weakening the case" in the court by not presenting the "true facts".

    Indian Supreme Court Quashes Jat Reservation, Shocked Community To Seek Review

    After Delhi Success, AAP To Go National

    After Delhi Success, AAP To Go National
    A month after it took power in Delhi after crushing the BJP and the Congress, the Aam Aadmi Party (AAP) announced on Tuesday that it has decided to go national.

    After Delhi Success, AAP To Go National

    Modi's Religious Beliefs Helped Shape His Political Views

    Modi's Religious Beliefs Helped Shape His Political Views
    Narendra Modi's religious beliefs helped shape his political views and he has no desire to jettison Hindu nationalist ideology, says a new book and notes that Modi risks alienating a section of his supporters if he allows the more extreme elements of Hindutva to influence governance.

    Modi's Religious Beliefs Helped Shape His Political Views