West Bengal to acquire Tagore’s home in London

West Bengal to acquire Tagore’s home in London
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Highlights

West Bengal Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee wants to acquire the London house where Nobel laureate Rabindranath Tagore had lived, and convert it into a museum-cum-memorial to the world-famous poet and writer.

London: West Bengal Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee wants to acquire the London house where Nobel laureate Rabindranath Tagore had lived, and convert it into a museum-cum-memorial to the world-famous poet and writer. Tagore had lived at No 3, Heath Villas in Hampstead Heath, north London, for a few months in 1912 while he translated his collection of poems 'Gitanjali'.

During a meeting with acting Indian High Commissioner to the UK, Dinesh Patnaik, on arriving in London for a week-long tour of the UK on Saturday, Banerjee expressed her state's desire to buy the privately-owned lodgings. "The home has great historical significance and the Chief Minister is keen that it be turned into a memorial to Tagore," a person close to the discussions said.

The property, valued at an estimated 2.7 million pounds a few years ago, had also featured in discussions during the West Bengal chief minister's last visit to London in 2015. She has revived her request this time with the hope of some movement on the plans. The home already has a blue plaque commemorating its famous former Indian resident. "Rabindranath Tagore (1861-1941) Indian poet stayed here in 1912," reads the inscription.

Tagore had set sail for England from India in 1912 and was known to have translated many of his works while in London. His company at the time included famous British artists and poets, including W B Yeats who also wrote the introduction to 'Gitanjali' – the collection of 103 translations which went on to win Tagore his Nobel Prize for literature the next year in 1913.

A number of Tagore's plays were performed in London by British and Indian troupes and he was to return to the UK a few more times until 1931. A bronze statue of Tagore, commissioned by Tagore Centre UK and unveiled by Prince Charles in 2011, stands at Gordon Square in central London.

It now remains to be seen if the owners of the poet's London base in 1912 would sell the property. While in the UK, Banerjee is also scheduled to formally unveil a commemorative blue plaque in the memory of Sister Nivedita, the Scottish-Irish social worker and follower of Swami Vivekananda best known for her charitable work in Kolkata. Next week, the Chief Minister has a series of investor meetings planned in London and then Scotland to attract investments to West Bengal.

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