
The Story Of A Bengal Butcher Who 'Saved' Calcutta
His story assumes significance today, seven decades after Independence, with his legacy remaining unclaimed, and due to what his family believes is an attempt to distort his ideology by a filmmaker.
Who Was Gopal Patha?
Gopal Chandra Mukherjee, or Gopal Patha, was born in Kolkata in 1913. 'Patha' means goat in Bengali, a reference to his family-run meat shop on College Street. He is often referred to as the man who saved Calcutta from falling to the Muslim League. But over seven decades after Independence, he still needs an introduction.
Just five feet and four inches tall, Mukherjee chose a herculean task for himself. His long hair tied neatly, complete with a beard and moustache, he sported a gentlemanly look. But the police knew him as a criminal, a gang leader who had hundreds of boys ready to kill at his command. His muscle power kept the cops on their toes.
Mukherjee's role in Calcutta's history rose to prominence much ahead of the Partition. He met with force the Muslim League's agenda to snatch Calcutta by force. Armed with sticks, spears, knives, guns, or whatever his men could arrange, he led an army that stood like a wall against surrendering the city.
Direct Action Day
By the beginning of the 1940s, most freedom leaders in united India were convinced that the two-nation theory was inevitable - a political doctrine preached by the Muslim League and Muhammad Ali Jinnah. But the drawing of a map that would divide a country known for its united struggle against the British had become a point of communal discord.
The Muslim League was worried about the demographics of their dream nation that came with an economic challenge. While the eastern part of then Bengal province was Muslim-majority, it lacked industrial hubs, which were concentrated in cities like Calcutta and Howrah, on the western side.
The League then came up with a plan that left the region burning. Jinnah announced 'Direct Action Day' on August 15, 1946, to ensure Calcutta fell to the League by a show of muscle power. The day marked the beginning of violent events, with fiery speeches being given from local mosques at the instruction of Huseyn Shaheed Suhrawardy, a League leader who then held the post of Bengal's Prime Minister.
Hindu houses were burnt and shops looted by Muslim League supporters. There were killings and rapes.
By August 17th, Hindus started organising. Gopal Mukherjee was among the musclemen who mobilised their forces. The Vyayam Samitis, who were instrumental in the freedom struggle, chipped in, armed with rods, knives, and even revolvers that they had sourced from American soldiers in the aftermath of World War 2. Funding for counteroffensive poured in from the Marwari traders of Burrabazar.
Mukherjee, fearing that Calcutta would turn into Pakistan, gave strict orders to his men to retaliate. In response to one murder, you kill 10 of the attackers, he told them.
After two more days of violence, the League realised Mukherjee couldn't be countered and that bringing Calcutta into Pakistan would remain a distant dream.
In an article for The Indian Express, British historian and journalist Andrew Whitehead illustrated Mukherjee's role as, "Calcutta was in flames and Gopal Patha, in effect, took the opportunity to douse the city in kerosene." But for Mukherjee, it was his "duty to help those in distress".
A year after the killings started, in 1947, Mahatma Gandhi visited Calcutta. Many turned up to his message of peace and laid down their weapons. But Mukherjee was adamant. "Where was Gandhiji, I said, during the Great Calcutta Killing?" he had recalled, refusing to surrender even a nail.
Was He Anti-Muslim?
Mukherjee's role in the partition violence has been controversial; over the years, he has been billed as a "protector of Hindus", but his family refuses to believe in the communal binary that it made him a "Muslim-hater". Rather, he saved several Muslim families in his neighbourhood during the 1946 riots, recalls his grandson Santanu Mukherjee.
Speaking to The Times of India, he claimed his grandfather sheltered Muslims on their house terrace. He even saved the family of a rickshaw-puller whom they knew as Rafique chacha, his sister recalled, adding that local Muslims still respect their family.
But his family fears his portrayal in the upcoming movie 'The Bengal Files' reduces him to "a rabble-rousing Muslim-hating butcher". Santanu Mukherjee, who still lives in his 200-year-old ancestral home that was once the address of Gopal Patha, is now leading a pushback to the movie by filmmaker Vivek Ranjan Agnihotri that had led to an uproar over alleged distortion of history.
In a police complaint, he has alleged the movie "denigrates not only his (grandfather's) words or deeds, but his ideological conviction along with historic struggle."
Not just his family, even in his own words, Gopal Mukherjee made his conviction clear: the aim was to save the city, not meaningless killing.
In a 1997 interview, Whitehead had asked him if his boys misbehaved with any Muslim woman if they found her alone. He had replied softly, but firmly, that there were strict orders not to touch any women.
"I had strict orders not to misbehave with or kill women, even if they were Muslims. In our history, even Ravan was destroyed for kidnapping Sita. Therefore, I had given two strict orders: do not loot and do not misbehave with women," he had said.
Mukherjee died in 2005.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


India Today
2 hours ago
- India Today
Explained: Direct Action Day, Noakhali riots at the heart of The Bengal Files
At a press conference in Delhi on August 18, director Vivek Agnihotri defended his film 'The Bengal Files' against criticism. When asked if the film had distorted history to create a political narrative, the filmmaker said he had spent two years researching the subject and was presenting what he described as the untold story of Bengal's history. He referred to Direct Action Day - the Great Calcutta Killings of 1946, and the Noakhali riot as examples of what he called a Hindu genocide nahi hua tha Direct Action Day par? Kya Noakhali riots genocide nahi tha [Wasn't there genocide on Direct Action Day? Weren't the Noakhali riots genocide?]," he Action DayIn 1906, while India was under British rule, the All-India Muslim League (AIML) was founded in Dacca (present-day Dhaka) to safeguard Muslim interests. By 1946, as the British prepared to leave, the party called for "Direct Action" to demand a separate Muslim homeland. How did they try to achieve it? With widespread communal riots, strikes and shutdowns. On August 16, 1946, violence broke out in Calcutta (now Kolkata), resulting in large-scale clashes between Hindus and Muslims. The riots, which spread to other parts of India, are remembered as a turning point in the country's history and contributed to the partition of Bengal into Hindu-majority West Bengal and Muslim-majority East Bengal (now Bangladesh).Speaking to the media, Agnihotri argued that Bengal would not have been divided if the riots had not taken place. He also questioned the government's alleged inaction at the time."My film shows Direct Action Day - the black day, the Noakhali riots, which led to a part of Bengal being taken away from us to create Bangladesh. If that had not happened, Bangaldesh would have been a part of India, and lakhs would not have been killed," he riotsTwo months after Direct Action Day, violence erupted in Noakhali, a district now in Bangladesh - the same series of events that Agnihotri has referred to as the Hindu genocide. Hindu families were attacked, women were assaulted, homes were looted, and people were abducted by mobs. The first incidents were reported during Lakshmi Puja on October 10, 1946, and the violence continued for days, with little immediate administrative Gandhi, then leading India's independence movement, spent four months in Noakhali, travelling the entire area in an attempt to restore peace and communal harmony, as the Indian National Congress slowly accepted the idea of having a divided Bengal. Cinema and debateThere are multiple historical interpretations of what triggered the riots in Noakhali. 'The Bengal Files' engages with some of these narratives - both widely accepted accounts and more contested film features that part of our partition history that should be told to the world," Agnihotri said, urging the Mamata Banerjee-led West Bengal government to host a special screening instead of opposing history has not been told in Hindi cinema in a larger-than-life way so far. As 'The Bengal Files' approaches release, it has sparked debate over how partition history is represented in popular culture, and how cinema shapes the way these memories are understood hits the screens on September 5.- EndsMust Watch


News18
3 hours ago
- News18
Odisha CM Majhi Hits Back At Mamata Banerjee, Rejects Claims Of Harassment Of Bengalis
Odisha CM Majhi dismissed Mamata Banerjee's claims of Bengalis being attacked in Odisha as baseless, clarifying police checks target suspected Bangladeshi immigrants. Odisha Chief Minister Mohan Charan Majhi on Tuesday dismissed West Bengal Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee's allegation that Bengalis were being attacked in his state, calling it 'completely baseless." He was speaking at News18 Odia's Rising Odisha Conclave 2025 in Bhubaneswar. Majhi said no Indian citizen was being harassed and that the state's police were only conducting checks to identify suspected Bangladeshi immigrants. 'Mamata Banerjee is lying. No Indian citizen and no Bengali is being harassed or tortured in Odisha. Police are only checking if there are any suspected Bangladeshi infiltrators," he said. The Chief Minister underlined that Odisha has for decades been home to Bengalis and has historically provided refuge during crises. 'After Partition and the creation of Bangladesh, Odisha arranged for clusters in many parts of the state for displaced Bengali minorities and including areas such as Koraput, Malkangiri and other districts. They continue to live peacefully here," Majhi said. He further added that those with proper documents remain undisturbed, while only those without proof of citizenship are asked to return to their native places. 'The state government has taken care of all citizens. But if Bangladeshi infiltrators are sneaking in and snatching livelihoods from Odia people, we are mandated to act," he said. Majhi's remarks comes after Mamata Banerjee alleged that Bengalis were being targeted in Odisha, triggering a sharp political exchange between Bhubaneswar and Kolkata. view comments First Published: Disclaimer: Comments reflect users' views, not News18's. Please keep discussions respectful and constructive. Abusive, defamatory, or illegal comments will be removed. News18 may disable any comment at its discretion. By posting, you agree to our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy. Loading comments...


Time of India
4 hours ago
- Time of India
NSUI holds protests at DU over NCERT's special module on Partition
New Delhi: Congress-backed National Students' Union of India (NSUI) staged a protest at 's Faculty of Arts on Tuesday, criticising what it called the "RSS-BJP's hateful and distorted" NCERT module. Tired of too many ads? go ad free now The uproar came after NCERT, in a special module released to mark 'Partition Horrors Remembrance Day', held Muhammad Ali Jinnah, the Congress, and then Viceroy Lord Mountbatten responsible for India's Partition. Opposition leaders accused the BJP of "interfering" in institutions and "distorting" the nation's history. BJP, however, responded, claiming the Congress was rattled because NCERT simply presented the "bitter truth of Partition" to students. According to an NSUI statement, scores of students joined the protest. "The history of India will not be written with lies and hatred. When the nation was fighting for freedom, these people were standing with the British. We will not allow the innocent children of this country to be victims of distorted history," said NSUI national president Varun Choudhary. The students' body announced that the agitation will not remain limited to Delhi University but will spread to every state and university until the "hateful and misleading NCERT module" is rolled back. Asserting that restoring truth and dignity in the portrayal of India's freedom struggle was "non-negotiable," NSUI vowed to escalate its campaign in the coming days. (NCERT official statement awaited)