The couple has been born into a legacy. And, both have
dedicated themselves to the cause. For they have taken up
the mantle of cultural sentinels, working silently and more
often than not behind the scenes. Across the length and
breadth of Assam have they crisscrossed, broadcasting the
heritage
bequeathed to
them by
Rupkonwar
Jyotiprasad
Agarwalla and
Kalaguru Bishnu
Prasad Rava. It is
therefore in the
fitness of things,
albeit a bit
belatedly, that the septuagenarian Dilip Sarma and his
beloved, the sexagenarian Sudakshina Sarma, have been
jointly honoured with the Sangeet Natak Akademi award for
the year 2002 in recognition of their contributions to the
research and practice of the State’s folk music and Jyoti
Sangeet. In fact, this is for the maiden time that a couple
has been accorded this honour simultaneously.
Ever smiling and simple, the Sarmas personify the selfless
character one generally attributes to artistes.
Dilip Sarma was born at Bajali in erstwhile Kamrup district,
as the eldest of five children, to the illustrious family of the
founder editor of Awahan, late Dinanath Sarma and late
Renu Devi in 1926.
Sudakshina (Queenie Hazarika) Sarma was born at
Guwahati in 1934, as the fourth of ten siblings, into the
culturally inclined family of late Nilkanta Hazarika, an ACS
officer, and late Shantipriya Hazarika. They hail from
Nazira. Dr Bhupen Hazarika is her elder brother and late
Jayanta Hazarika was younger to her.
While Dilip Sarma got the opportunity to be groomed in the
then cultural capital of India, Calcutta, where he
accompanied his parents at the impressionable age of one,
Sudakshina Sarma got the chance to interact and be
influenced by such titans of that age like Jyotiprasad
Agarwalla, Bishnu Prasad Rava, Natasurya Phani Sarma and
others in Tezpur where she had occasion to accompany her
eldest brother Bhupen Hazarika in the later 40s.
At the age of ten, she recorded the evergreen number
Nahar Phule Nushuwai with Rava and one of her mentors
Kamal Narayan Chaudhary.
Walking down memory lane, the bespectacled lady of
average height, carefully put aside her walking stick and
making herself comfortable on the cane chair in her simple
but neat drawing room, said: “I still recollect with great
excitement how Gandhiji blessed me after I performed a
number before him in Guwahati. I was then in my teens.”
She has worked as a playback singer in several pallas —
sets of three LP records on dramas — including Prabin
Phukan’s Maniram Dewan, Sarbeswar Chakraborty’s Piyoli
Phukan besides Vishnu Shakti and Rakshya Kumar of
Lakshyadhar Choudhury as well as in films like Parghat,
Maniram Dewan, Chikmik Bijuli and Abuj Bedana among
others. Most of her songs are preserved in HMV, Columbia
and Senola records. “Among the other artistes were the
family members of Jadab and Debobala Chaliha including
Minoti, Arati, Lakhimi, Rubi and Rekha Chaliha,” she
reflected.
Her audio cassettes are Jautijugiya, Aparup Tomar Bani,
Geet Gao Ekelage, Sirasundarr Sanskriti and Nijara Parar
Sur etc.
When the news of their selection by the Sangeet Natak
Akademi was announced on March 25, 2003, they were camping
at Chamata in Nalbari as
the key-persons of a
workshop on Jyoti sangeet
organised under the aegis
of the Directorate of
Culture and the
Chamata-based Srimanta
Kala Niketan.
Reacting to a query on the
need for such workshops,
Dilip Sarma said: “The
significance of such training camps can’t be undermined
today when we are being perpetually injected with all forms
of alien culture and music including pop, western music. Both
of us are fortunate enough to have come into close contact
with both Rupkonwar and Kalaguru and to also get the
unique opportunity to learn their ideals and typical tunes
from them. Now, it is our duty to ensure that the basic tunes
of these immortal songs are maintained. It would be a
disgrace for us if these sangeets are rendered in different
notes than those preferred and proposed by them. Moreover,
neither Rupkonwar nor Kalaguru could live to attach tunes
and notes to all their numbers. Hence, the utmost need for
such workshops.”
During his tenure as a member of this distinguished panel
constituted under the Cultural Directorate for documenting
Jyoti Sangeet, he brought out Sur-Jeuti. It comprises the
notes of these songs.
As Dilip Sarma talked about his childhood days, his eyes
behind the glasses appeared dewy: “After clearing my
matriculation in 1942, I got enrolled in St Xavier’s College in
Calcutta itself.” He added: “Our house at Bhabanipur was
the meeting place for several prominent personalities from
Assam. I remember father having adda with Pandit Tirtha
Nath Barua and Dr Prafulla Dutta Goswami among others. I
closely followed his discussions about Awahan, that was
published in 1929 from there, with its publisher —
litterateur Nagendra Narayan Chaudhary who later became
the president of the Asom Sahitya Sabha and was also a
zamindar.
“We also had as guests Rupkonwar when he was
underground along with Birinchi Kumar Barua, Tirthanath
Sarma, Holiram Deka and Ambika Bora among others. He
readied several of his compositions including Muktideul in
our house.
“Kalaguru and Sonitkonwar Gajen Barua used to camp in our
place while taking troupes to present dance programmes in
Calcutta. Among the other greats from whom I got the initial
training in Assamese tunes and songs were Purushottam Das
and Kamal Narayan Chaudhary.
“During those days, my taleem in classical music and
Rabindra sangeet were from Ustad Khitish Ghosh as well as
Ustad Sukhendu Goswami besides gurus Rabindra Lal Roy,
father of noted classical singer Malabika Kanan.
“During those days, massive relief camps were held at
Midnapur and Bardhaman for the people marooned in the
floods. I accompanied the relief workers including Sachin
Deb Barman and others in such campaigns. The first-hand
experience of the plight of the masses crippled by nature’s
fury was etched deeply in my psyche,” Dilip Sarma said.
His first Assamese song was recorded by HMV Company in
1942. It was directed by Kamal Narayan Chaudhary and
Purushottam Das. That very year he made his mark as an
artiste in the Assamese programme broadcast daily by the
All India Radio from Calcutta. Then followed his recordings
of Rava Sangeets.
“In 1949, I worked as the assistant music director to
Rupkonwar during his redubbing of the first Assamese film
Joymoti. I also sang the following numbers in the film —
More Bharatare More Saponere and Luitare Pani Jabi Ai
Bai,” he said with a sense of pride.
In the 1950s, he rendered his voice in the Purushottam Das
composed Jar Jeevanare Jeuti Heral in the film Nimila
Anka.
Recounting the days during the freedom struggle, especially
in the aftermath of the partition, Dilip Sarma appeared sad:
“Those were really tumultuous times. While there were
scenes of the crowd’s insanity there were many instances of
communal harmony too when Hindus shielded Muslims from
marauders and vice versa in Calcutta.
“In 1950, we returned to Assam and put up in a rented
house at Uzan bazaar for sometime,” he stated.
It was four years later that he tied the knot with Queenie
(Sudakshina) Hazarika whom he first met way back in 1943
at Calcutta where she had gone with the Kalaguru to record
his song Nahar Phule Nushuwai Tagar Phule Suwaba. The
song was recorded with Kamal Narayan Chaudhury by the
Senola Company. Dilip Sarma had also rendered a few Jyoti
Sangeets and some other numbers in the record then.
“During one such programme at the Kumar Bhaskar Natya
Mandir in Uzan bazaar, Uday Shankar presented a novel
dance drama with his troupe members performing robotic
artistic movements. That night, she (Sudakshina) also
presented a beautiful classical dance number,” smiled the
grey-haired and French bearded romantic humanist.
In the 40s, Sarma acted and was also a playback singer in
the Assamese film Biplobi. He acted in Dr Bhupen Hazarika’s
Chikmik Bijuli as well.
During the early 50s, Dilip Sarma was attracted by the
activities of the Indian Peoples’ Theatre Association (IPTA).
“The progressive outlook of Prabuddha Rai Chaudhury, Hema
Sarma, Nagen Kakoti, Prof Bhabananda Dutta and others
really fired my imagination, and I too joined the
bandwagon,” he stated.
After becoming an active member of the Gana Natya
Sangha (IPTA), he worked with it from 1951-52. After their
marriage, both represented the Assam unit of the
organisation and presented Jyoti Sangeet and other numbers
in China under cultural exchange programmes. “The other
members of the troupe were Balraj Sahni, sitar maestro
Vilayat Khan, Haribai Barodkar, Kathak exponent Damayanti
Joshi and Debabrat Biswas,” he said, adding: “During those
visits, I also presented Assamese songs via the radio
programmes from China, Russia and Poland.”
On his most memorable event, Dilip Sarma smiled, “That was
the interaction with the great Chou En Lai in China when I
shook hands with him!”
They performed at the World Festival in Poland and also at
an annual session of the London unit of the Asom Sahitya
Sabha.
Sarma retired in 1985 as a subject teacher (Assamese)
from the Bengali Higher Secondary in Paltan bazaar in
Guwahati. He had joined there in 1959.
Along with Biren Phukan and Purushottam Das, Dilip Sarma
composed and published Tribeni — a book on the basic notes
of Assamese folk tunes.
“After the demise of my father in 1978, I took upon myself
the onerous task of bringing out the magazine Awahan. He
had, since our days in Calcutta, trained me to collect
advertisements, read the proof, do the composing and also
carry out circulation work. Earlier too, it had stopped
publication in 1947, after it was revived in 1953. And from
1985 for sometime, I carried out this mission till 1992,
publishing it as a three-monthly magazine,” he said.
In 1994, he was honoured with the Kamal Narayan
Chaudhury award for his contribution to music.
He was also the music director of the first Assamese
children’s film Abuj Bedana produced by Gunasindhu
Hazarika. It was screened in international film fests too.
Dr Bhupen Hazarika has also asked his brother in-law to
prepare a book on his songs in the form of Indian classical
notes. Similarly, the Sattradhikar of the Majuli-based
Auniati Sattra has reposed on Sarma the heavy
responsibility of bringing out a book on the notes used in the
religious psalms and bargeets of the Sattra. Moreover,
Sarma has also accepted the offer from the non-resident
Indians in USA to document the musical notes of Jyoti and
Rava sangeet.
The couple has rendered many immortal numbers. Mention
may be made of Moyu Bane Jao Swamihe, Nahar Phule
Nushuwai, Kamalkuwari More Praneswari, Rati Puwaelre
Kuruwai Pare Rao, Ur Ur Ur Neel Akashat, etc.
The Sarmas have two sons, prominent singer Rituparna
Sarma and Rishiraj Sarma who is a lawyer and an
up-and-coming artiste while their daughter Rijushree is
married to noted writer Paramananda Majumdar.
v
The Sarmas have been running the ‘Jayjayanti Kala Kendra’
— a music college and art school affiliated to the Pracheen
Kala Kendra, Chandigarh, and the Sarbabharatiya Sangeet O
Sanskriti Parishad, India — from 1990 at their home.
On his immediate plans, Dilip Sarma said: “I aim to once
again bring out the Awahan in the near future.”