Skip to content Skip to navigation

'ULFA had traced me to Philadelphia…': Assamese Tea Baron's Biography Released

Guwahati: Noted tea industrialist Hemendra Prasad Barooah has revealed in a new book about being traced by the ULFA to Philadelphia, about his English acquaintance involved in the Great Train Robbery in the UK, and about the search for Dr Bhupen Hazarika's lost Rolex watch one dark night on a street near Sivasagar. The planter, a multifarious personality, who has remained away from media glare, shares many intimate details of his life with eminent journalist Wasbir Hussain in 'Life and Times: Story of an Assamese Tea Baron', an authorized biography.

The book, published by Spectrum Publications, Guwahati/New Delhi, was released by chief minister Tarun Gogoi at a function in a city hotel here on Saturday. The packed gathering included guests of honour Jahnu Barua, a celebrated filmmaker, playwright Arun Sarma, and Hemen Barooah, the man himself. The book is not just about Barooah, it is also about the times in which he lived and the fascinating people he had encountered from across the world —thieves and conmen, painters and politicians, lovers and musicians, business tycoons and lunatics, god men and frauds, and many more.

Barooah says in the book how on June 11, 1990 he along with 13 other top tea company captains from across India met ULFA leaders at the tea garden bungalow of a leading business family in Dibrugarh after the outfit summoned them to 'discuss the active participation of the tea industry in the economic development' of the state. The then chief minister Prafulla Kumar Mahanta advised Barooah not to meet the ULFA leaders. 'Who advised you to go for the meeting?

I suggest, you don't go,' Hemen remembered Mahanta as having told them. But, the tea captains were prepared to take the risk and face the rebels. Barooah in his biography recounts how they went in three cars to meet the ULFA leaders – the meeting ended just before the crack of dawn with the rebels talking to the planters individually and demanding hefty amounts. The ULFA, however, did not demand any money from Barooah in that meeting. 'An ULFA caller one day threatened to kidnap me from Calcutta. That was the first time I got scared. I could not sleep that night," Barooah said in the book. Such was the pressure from the ULFA that Barooah was even traced in the US where he was on a holiday with his daughter, trying to beat the stress. The phone buzzed at his daughter's home in Philadelphia. "Dada, are you all right? How's your daughter," an ULFA militant said on the phone at a time when there were reports in the media in Assam that he had 'fled' India.

On the lighter side of his life, Barooah in the biography recounts the night when he and Dr Bhupen Hazarika searched for the music icon's lost Rolex watch on a desolate road near Sivasagar, besides his encounter with the man behind the Great Train Robbery in the UK. Hemen narrated many fascinating tales in the book, including his 'secret' meeting with Mrs Indira Gandhi at the Circuit House in Jorhat, and her bus ride to the sleepy town of Golaghat.

The book gives an account of the society in Assam around the time India became independent and after that. It also details how Barooah became the first person from the North-east to obtain an MBA degree from the prestigious Harvard Business School (HBS). In fact, he belonged to the HBS's famous Class of 1949 and has batch mates who went on to transform the destiny of American business. The book talks about Hemen the art collector, the connoisseur of music, Hemen the racing enthusiast, and Hemen the tabla player, having been a disciple of Ustad Munwar Ali of Calcutta.

Speaking on the occasion, Hussain said: " Aside from writing about his life, I have tried to give an account of the challenges facing the Assamese planters during the British Raj. The British, after all, never wanted the locals to enter into the business of tea. The story of Bisturam Barooah, Mr Hemen Barooah's grand-father, is indeed remarkable, because here was a man who displayed both foresight and tact by venturing into forbidden territory, by keeping the sahibs on the right side. The battle with tea giant Williamson Magor, agents of the Barooahs, had indeed been interesting. The links finally got snapped between the Barooahs and Williamson Magor in the early fifties. By that time, Assamese planters had come of age."

Photo © : UBPhotos.com

Comments

d's picture

long live b&c
Devraj Baruah's picture

Interesting to Read!
Sanjay Biswas's picture

I am overwhelmed by reading the fascinating story of a man who fought for his life and become the pioneer in business of Tea, by avoiding/handling the ULFA problem.
siddhartha choudhury's picture

I am proud 2 be an assamese, as it has produced such a true and successful businees leader of international reckon,inspite of all odds like our tea baron Mr H.P. Barooah....Salute to u..... you will be a role model for many in future...

Pages

Add new comment

Assamese Translator

Assam Times seeks English to Assamese translators!
Join our volunteer team.
Email editor@assamtimes.org.

Random Stories

Physical assault on magistrate in Kokrajhar

21 Sep 2019 - 10:57pm | AT Kokrajhar Bureau
KOKRAJHAR: In a heart touching incident, Kokrajhar SP Rajen Singh physical assaulted  EAC Sailen Das at a gettogeter inside a hotel in Kokrajhar as video of CCTV footages state. The incident...

BPF backs NDA in Citizenship Bill

25 Oct 2016 - 3:50pm | AT News
NDA has received a marginal shot on its arm in the move to amend The Citizenship Amendment Bill, 2016 when the Bodo Peoples’ Front has come in full support of the Bill that triggers statewide protest...

North East Games gets underway

30 Jan 2008 - 2:36pm | editor
Despite a chilly Wednesday, the North East Games gets underway at a colourful fuction organised at the Sarusajai Sports Complex where Assam Chief Minister Tarun Gogoi took salute of the march pass by...

Nalbari tax officer held in APSC scam

28 Mar 2018 - 11:17am | AT News
GUWAHATI: Yet   another officer has been arrested in connection with the nefarious APSC scam while four others are expected to meet the same fate at any moment The Assam police team...

Other Contents by Author

Flood waters continue to wreak havoc in Dhemaji district destroying paddy fields besides rendering thousands of people homless. According to information, floods have inundated 10 villages in the entire districts following incessant rains that lashed the district during the last 72 hours. Most of the houses have been severely damaged in the village.
Exodus seems to have stopped. Suggesting a gradual return of normalcy, hundreds of people from the northeast are back to Bangalore in three special trains from Guwahati on Monday. According to Northeast Frontier Railway, three special trains had left for Bangalore on Sunday taking back those who had fled from Bangalore fearing attacks. After four days of panic-driven exodus, the situation eased on Monday with police and railway officials saying it has stopped in Karnataka and reduced to a trickle in Tamil Nadu.
Normalcy is back. There has been no report of fresh incident of violence even as security has been beefed up on the occasion of Eid on Monday. Police and security forces have been deployed in all districts and regular reports have been received. Eid celebrations are over in Kokrajhar, Chirang and Dhubri, which bore the brunt of the recent violence.Chief minister Tarun Gogoi participated at a community Eid prayer in Guwahati in the morning and called for peace and harmony in the state.
Three more bodies were recovered on Monday taking the toll in violence on board the Guwahati-bound train to five. Two bodies were recovered from a place between Belakoba and Raninagar stations. Two more bodies were found later at a place near Halakata, close to New Jalpaiguri station. The body of a man was found on Monday close to the tracks near Manguraj railway station on West Bengal border under the Northeast Frontier Railway.NF Railway authorities have yet to ascertain the reason. Besides, it was not clear if the five were among those fleeing Bangalore fearing backlash after the Assam violence as the police and railway authorities remained tight-lipped pending an investigation. The...
Assam Gana Parishad legislator Alka Sarma on Monday said that the BTAD violence is not a conflict between Bodos-Muslim. Talking to reporters in Bangalore, she said that the implementation of the Assam Accord could have averted the tension. Sarma slammed Dispur for failing to deal with the tension by building up confidence among the people.
A team of the National Council of Churches in India is on a two-day visit to BTAD areas to take stock of the situation. They expressed solidarity with the victims of violence. Led by Solomon Rongpi, the Executive Secretary for Unity, Mission & Evangelism, the nine-member NCCI team has representatives from the Presbyterian Churches of India, the Young Women Christian Association, the Lutheran Church and others.
Seven Joint Secretaries are scheduled to arrive on BTAD areas and Dhubri to monitor the rehabilitation after the clash. The delegation of joint secretaries will visit Kokrajhar, Dhubri, Chirang and Baksa districts to oversee the steps for relief and rehabilitation of those affected during the recent violence. Apart from Joint Secretary (Northeast) in the Home Ministry Shambhu Singh and Joint Secretary (Disaster Management) RK Srivastava, the other officers belong to the Ministries of Health, Rural Development, Food, Department of Drinking Water and Planning Commission. The team will hold meetings with state government officials and take stock of the plans being chalked out to implement...
Body of more Assamese youth was recovered in West Bengal on Monday. Identified as Anil Das he hails from Majuli, who is a security guard with a hotel in Hyderabad. His body was recovered near a railway station in West Bengal.
Top pro talk ULFA leader Hira Sarania was arrested in connection with a sensational kidnap and murder case in Guwahati. Sarania was arrested by Guwahati police from Nalbari on a complaint lodged by Binit Jain’s family members who has been missing from August 1. He was arrested along with three others including a Gauhati High Court on Monday morning. The complaint was lodged at Dispur police station.
The Asia Book of Records has formally recognized the rarest sacred lamp at a Vaishnavite temple near Jorhat on Saturday. The lamp gets rare recognition for burning continuously for the past 484 years after it was lit up by the saint Madhavdeva in 1528 in Dhekiakhowa Bor Namghar. The formal certificate was handed over to Jorhat Lok Sabha MP and former Union Minister Bijoy Krishna Handique.Madhabdeva, set up the historic Dhekiakhuwa Namghar in 1528 and since then the lamp has been burning continuously. Receiving the certificate, Handique said that the recognition would help in furthering the teachings of the two Vaishnavite saints Srimanta Sankardev and Mahapurush Madhabdeva.