KOLKATA PARTITION MUSEUM
Source: https://kolkata-partition-museum.org
Archived: 2026-04-23 15:38
KOLKATA PARTITION MUSEUM
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5-Online Concert_Arko Mukhaerjee & Friends_16 April 2021
6-Virtual KPM_Announcement_19 Mar 2021
7-Partition Exhibition at KCC_17 to 29 Aug, 2021
8-Children's Day Special_14 Nov 2021
9-Commemoration of 50 years of Liberation War_16 Dec 2021
10-'Esho Hey Baisakh'_30 April 2022
11-Launch of V-KPM, ICCR Kolkata_24 Aug 2022
12-Inaugural Lecture, KPMT 'Annual Lecture Series'_26 Aug 2022
13-Parted Crafts_Exhibition_Nov-Dec 2022
14-Adhir Biswas_17 March 2023
A
About KPMP
The Kolkata Partition Museum Project was conceived by Rituparna Roy in early 2016.
Initially inspired by the
Holocaust Memorials of Berlin
and working on the project as an independent scholar, she first formally broached the idea in an
International Conference
(commemorating 70 years of Partition) that she co-convened with Prof. Sekhar Bandyopadhyay and Dr. Jayanta Sengupta in August 2016 at the Indian Museum, Kolkata. An Affiliated Fellowship at the International Institute for Asian Studies (
IIAS
), Leiden, during this phase (July 2017 – June 2018) proved valuable as a networking platform.
By August 2018, Roy was able to gather support for the project from a wide cross-section of people in different fields who were invested in Partition and heritage in varying ways, and got together a team which formed the TRUST for the project.
The KPM TRUST was Registered on 20 August 2018.
Mission
When India was partitioned in 1947 at the end of British colonial rule on its western and eastern borders, the brunt of it was borne by Punjab and Bengal. But Partition did not mean the same thing for these two provinces. Unlike Punjab, the aftermath of Partition in India was a protracted one for West Bengal, which impoverished the state and radicalized its politics. And the afterlives of Partition are felt to this day along the borderland. Unfortunately, the Bengal experience has never got its due. The Kolkata Partition Museum Project (KPMP) aims to fill this lacuna.
Vision
KPMP is dedicated to memorialize, in the most comprehensive way, the specificity of Bengal’s Partition history and its aftermath; to emphasize the continuities between West Bengal and Bangladesh – in terms of language and literature, food, fabric, and the performing arts – and to encourage collaboration between them. And it aims to do so by involving public participation in its programs and gearing all its activities in a way that makes it more accessible and interesting to the public at large.
History
There are two sides to the Partition – rupture and continuity. Our project seeks to remember both.
The rupture has been well recorded in history and represented in art, literature and films. But the public memorialisation of Partition took seven decades to happen. We now stand at a critical moment in this evolution.
Read more >>
Compared to the rupture of the political division, the quiet continuities in Bengali life – our common living heritage – has not been emphasized enough. Fabric, food, song, language and literature – there is still much that binds the two Bengals.
Read more >>
Board of Trustees
The KPM TRUST was Registered on 20 August 2018.
Skip to content
Logo-Sparse-2
1-slider
2-slider
4-slider
3-slider
5-Online Concert_Arko Mukhaerjee & Friends_16 April 2021
6-Virtual KPM_Announcement_19 Mar 2021
7-Partition Exhibition at KCC_17 to 29 Aug, 2021
8-Children's Day Special_14 Nov 2021
9-Commemoration of 50 years of Liberation War_16 Dec 2021
10-'Esho Hey Baisakh'_30 April 2022
11-Launch of V-KPM, ICCR Kolkata_24 Aug 2022
12-Inaugural Lecture, KPMT 'Annual Lecture Series'_26 Aug 2022
13-Parted Crafts_Exhibition_Nov-Dec 2022
14-Adhir Biswas_17 March 2023
A
About KPMP
The Kolkata Partition Museum Project was conceived by Rituparna Roy in early 2016.
Initially inspired by the
Holocaust Memorials of Berlin
and working on the project as an independent scholar, she first formally broached the idea in an
International Conference
(commemorating 70 years of Partition) that she co-convened with Prof. Sekhar Bandyopadhyay and Dr. Jayanta Sengupta in August 2016 at the Indian Museum, Kolkata. An Affiliated Fellowship at the International Institute for Asian Studies (
IIAS
), Leiden, during this phase (July 2017 – June 2018) proved valuable as a networking platform.
By August 2018, Roy was able to gather support for the project from a wide cross-section of people in different fields who were invested in Partition and heritage in varying ways, and got together a team which formed the TRUST for the project.
The KPM TRUST was Registered on 20 August 2018.
Mission
When India was partitioned in 1947 at the end of British colonial rule on its western and eastern borders, the brunt of it was borne by Punjab and Bengal. But Partition did not mean the same thing for these two provinces. Unlike Punjab, the aftermath of Partition in India was a protracted one for West Bengal, which impoverished the state and radicalized its politics. And the afterlives of Partition are felt to this day along the borderland. Unfortunately, the Bengal experience has never got its due. The Kolkata Partition Museum Project (KPMP) aims to fill this lacuna.
Vision
KPMP is dedicated to memorialize, in the most comprehensive way, the specificity of Bengal’s Partition history and its aftermath; to emphasize the continuities between West Bengal and Bangladesh – in terms of language and literature, food, fabric, and the performing arts – and to encourage collaboration between them. And it aims to do so by involving public participation in its programs and gearing all its activities in a way that makes it more accessible and interesting to the public at large.
History
There are two sides to the Partition – rupture and continuity. Our project seeks to remember both.
The rupture has been well recorded in history and represented in art, literature and films. But the public memorialisation of Partition took seven decades to happen. We now stand at a critical moment in this evolution.
Read more >>
Compared to the rupture of the political division, the quiet continuities in Bengali life – our common living heritage – has not been emphasized enough. Fabric, food, song, language and literature – there is still much that binds the two Bengals.
Read more >>
Board of Trustees
The KPM TRUST was Registered on 20 August 2018.