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Sei Samay

Sei Samay

by Sunil Gangopadhyay

Reading Time

11m

Language

Bengali

Rating

4.5

Significance

Fiction

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Sei Samay
English
Sei Samay
Sunil Gangopadhyay
English Hinduism

Sei Samay

Sunil Gangopadhyay
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Bhakti Yoga is a profound exploration of the path of devotion, presenting love, surrender, and spiritual discipline through the teachings of Swami Vivekananda.

About This Book

Sei Samay, translated as ‘Those Days’, is a monumental historical novel set in 19th-century Calcutta during the Bengal Renaissance. It intricately weaves the lives of historical figures like Michael Madhusudan Dutt, Ishwar Chandra Vidyasagar, and the Tagore family with fictional characters to portray the intellectual ferment, social reforms, and the clash between tradition and modernity during the British colonial era.

Key Insights

The air in the drawing room is thick, heavy with the scent of expensive tobacco and the stifling dust of tradition. Outside, the humid heat of 19th-century Calcutta presses against the shuttered windows, but inside, a revolution is brewing in whispers. Michael Madhusudan Dutt sits at a mahogany desk, his quill trembling with the weight of a new language, a new identity. The gas lamps flicker, casting long, dancing shadows that seem to mock the rigid social codes of the city. This is the heartbeat of *Sei Samay*.

Sunil Gangopadhyay breathes life into an era of intense transformation. There is a scene I have not forgotten since I first read it: Ishwar Chandra Vidyasagar stands firm against a tide of orthodox rage, his voice quiet but iron-clad. He tells his opponent, “You guard the temple walls while the spirit inside starves.” It is a clash not just of ideologies, but of souls struggling to define what it means to be modern, to be free, and to be Bengali.

The author’s craft is exceptional, weaving real historical figures into a tapestry of fiction so seamless that one forgets where history ends and the dream begins. He writes, “History is not a record of dates, but a long, aching cry for self-recognition.”

[medium pause]

The hidden argument of *Sei Samay* is clear: progress is a violent, beautiful labor. It suggests that identity is not inherited; it is earned through the courage to break what is broken. The characters are caught in the grip of a changing world, constantly wondering if they are the architects of the future or merely victims of its relentless momentum. [short pause]

Do they find the peace they seek, or does the weight of the past hold them forever in its orbit? The story of *Sei Samay* is a mirror held up to the human condition, inviting the listener to confront their own moment of change. One simply must read the rest to find the truth.

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