Gosaba

For the river with the same name, see Gosaba River.
Gosaba
গোসাবা
town
Gosaba

Location in West Bengal, India

Coordinates: 22°10′N 88°48′E / 22.16°N 88.80°E / 22.16; 88.80Coordinates: 22°10′N 88°48′E / 22.16°N 88.80°E / 22.16; 88.80
Country  India
State West Bengal
District South 24 Parganas
Elevation 4 m (13 ft)
Population (2001)
  Total 222,764
Languages
  Official Bengali, English
Time zone IST (UTC+5:30)
PIN 743370
Lok Sabha constituency Jaynagar (SC)
Vidhan Sabha constituency Gosaba (SC)
Website s24pgs.gov.in
CD Block

Gosaba is a village in Gosaba CD Block in Canning subdivision of South 24 Parganas district in the Indian state of West Bengal. It is the last inhabited area before the deep forests of the Sundarbans start. It has a police station, a community development block, and an assembly constituency. The area symbolises man’s struggle against nature and predators.

History

Sir Daniel Mackinnon Hamilton, a Scotsman, had travelled to Kolkata to work for MacKinnon & McKenzie, a company with which he had family connections. The company sold tickets for the P&O shipping line, then one of the largest in the world. Hamilton became head of the company and master of an immense fortune, one of the richest men in British India. Another man may have taken his money and gone away but Hamilton set his eyes on the deltaic islands in south Bengal. In 1903, he bought 40 square kilometres (10,000 acres) of the tide country from the government – it included such islands as Gosaba, Rangabelia, and Satjelia. His efforts at developing these places brought in other people into these islands. They were people who dared not only to struggle against nature but also the predators that lived there – tigers, crocodiles, sharks and lizards. They killed so many people that Hamilton gave rewards to people who killed them.[1]

Administration

Gosaba is an intermediate panchayat (local self-government) under South 24 Parganas district. Village panchayats under it are – Amtali, Bali I and II, Bipradaspur, Chhota Mollakhali, Gosaba, Kachukhali, Kumirmari, Lahiripur, Pathankhali, Radhanagar-Taranagar, Rangabelia, Satjelia and Sambhunagar.[2]

Geography

Gosaba is located at 22°10′N 88°48′E / 22.16°N 88.80°E / 22.16; 88.80.[3] It has an average elevation of 4 metres (13 feet). Gosaba is one of the main deltaic islands in the Sundarban region, bounded by the Matala and Zilli rivers/ creeks. It is the last inhabited area before the deep forests start. Kolkata to Sonakhali (opposite Basanti) is 100 kilometres (62 mi); it takes about three hours by road. Sonakhali to Gosaba is about 1½ hours by powered boat.[4] Sundarbans are home to some 270 man-eating tigers. Sixteen of them have entered the villages of Gosaba between 2001 and 2004.[5]

Demographics

As per 2011 Census of India Gosaba had a total population of 5,369, of which 2,681 (50%) were males and 2,688 (50%) were females. Population below 6 years was 503. The total number of literates in Gosaba was 3,994 (82.08 % of the population over 6 years).[6]

In the 2001 census, Gosaba community development block had a population of 222,764 out of which 113,827 were males and 108,937 were females. The entire population is classified as rural.[7]

Economy

The Hungry Tide
The destitution of the tide country was such as to remind them of the terrible famine that had devastated Bengal in 1942, except that… hunger and catastrophe were a way of life… the land had still not been wholly leached of its salt. The soil bore poor crops and could not be farmed all year round. Most families subsisted on a single daily meal. Despite all the labour that had been invested in the embankments, there were still periodic breaches because of floods and storms: each such inundation rendered the land infertile for several years at a time… Hunger drove them to hunting and fishing and the results were often disastrous. Many died of drowning, and many more were picked off by crocodiles and estuarine sharks. Nor did the mangroves offer much of immediate value to human beings yet thousand risked death in order to collect meagre quantities of honey, wax, firewood and the sour fruit of kewra trees. No day seemed to pass without news about someone being killed by a tiger, a snake or a crocodile.[8]

Amitav Ghosh

Tourism

The main tourist centre in the region is Sajnekhali in the heart of the Sundarbans tiger reserve, where the state tourist department has a lodge with basic amenities. Sajnekhali is about 1½ hours by boat from Gosaba. Most tourist boats go past Gosaba. Some tourists travel to Gosaba on their way to Pakhiralay (the home of the birds). Foreigners need a special permit to enter Sunderbans, which is issued in Kolkata by the Department of Tourism, Government of West Bengal.[4] Help Tourism's small Jungle Camp is at Bali island, outside the tiger reserve. Sunderban Tiger Camp at Dayapur, Gosaba has 14 rooms.[9] u can visit UZAN (MR.DULAL MONDAL)cultural organization which helps poor person and preventing cultural activities of gosaba,sundarban. [10]

Power

Villages in the deltaic region of Sundarbans do not have access to conventional forms of energy. A 5x100 kW biomass-based power plant was installed at Gosaba island, in June, 1997 and has been running successfully, serving about 650 consumers through a network of distribution lines. The power plant is being run on a commercial basis by the Gosaba Rural Energy Cooperative. A 500 kW gasifier-based power plant was commissioned in the remote island of Chhotomollakhali in June, 2001.[11]

Plans are afoot to set up a 3.6 MW power plant in Durgaduani creek using tidal water. The Durgaduani creek is between the rivers Bidyadhari and Gomdi Khal. It is about 8.5 kilometres (5.3 mi) long and has an average width of 145 metres (476 ft). Tidal water will be stored and then let out to generate electricity using four turbines. There will be two gates at either end at Gosaba and Sonagaon to form a low head.[12]

Honey collection

Around 20,000 kilograms (44,000 lb) of honey is collected every year from forests of Sundarbans. Mostly people from the Kultali, Joynagar, Basanti, Gosaba and Canning are honey collectors. The number of honey collectors has dwindled from around 1,500 a few years back to around 700 in 2007. From 1985 through 2004, about 75 honey collectors were killed by tigers in the forests. Now all honey collectors are insured for Rs. 50,000. The forest department has also intensified vigilance during the honey collection period. The range officers and guards are on full alert. No deaths have been reported since 2006.[13]

Education

Educational institutions in Gosaba - Sundarban Hazi Dasarat College (Pathankhali), Gosaba Rural Reconstruction (government-sponsored) Institution, Rangabelia High School, Sambhunagar High School, Bipradaspur High School (Manmathanagar), Mongol Chandra Vidyapith (Chotomollakhali), Satjelia Natavar Vidyayatan (Satjelia). Radhanagar Kali Bari High School (Radhanagar). Sri Gourangha High School(Dakshin Radhanagar). Jatindra Nath Sikshaniketan (Paschim Radhanagar).[14] Satjelia Santigachhi High School, Dayapur P.C. Sen High School (Satjelia Dayapur).

Health

Although in South 24 Parganas district groundwater is affected by arsenic contamination, in Gosaba all the tubewells analyzed were arsenic safe (below 10 µg/L). The probable reason may be that being a coastal area most of the tubewells draw water from less contaminated deep aquifers.[15]

The World Wildlife Fund has organized workshops on the treatment of snakebite victims in Gosaba block with the local quacks, ojhas and gunins, people who attend the local patients, to enhance the scientific knowledge of such people.[16]

Four launches with doctors carrying medicines, sophisticated portable X-ray and echo-cardiograph machines, provided by the French author Dominique Lapierre move along the waterways of the Sundarbans to its furthest corners. Residents of such places as Sandeshkhali, Basanti, Gosaba and Kultali have felicitated him when he came in 2004.[17]

References

  1. Ghosh, Amitav, The Hungry Tide, 2004, pp. 49-53, Harper Collins/Indiaoday group, ISBN 81-7223-613-1.
  2. "Details of West Bengal till Village Panchayat Tier". Ministry of Panchayati Raj, Government of India. Retrieved 2007-08-24.
  3. Falling Rain Genomics, Inc - Gosaba
  4. 1 2 "Sunderban Tiger Tour". Retrieved 2007-09-26.
  5. "Man-eating tigers wreak havoc on India's island of widows". Daily Times, 22 December 2004. Retrieved 2007-09-22.
  6. "C.D. Block Wise Primary Census Abstract Data(PCA)". 2011 census: West Bengal – District-wise CD Blocks. Registrar General and Census Commissioner, India. Retrieved 26 April 2016.
  7. "Census of India 2001". Provisional population totals, West Bengal, Table 4. Census Commission of India. Retrieved 2007-08-24.
  8. Ghosh, Amitav, The Hungry Tide, p. 79,
  9. "Sunderbans Trip Report". Water Birds of India. Retrieved 2007-09-22.
  10. raj
  11. "Biomass gasifier". Archived from the original on 2007-08-15. Retrieved 2007-09-26.
  12. "First for country: harnessing tides for electricity in the Sundarbans". Yahoo News. Retrieved 2007-09-26.
  13. "Honey come lately". The Statesman, 24 April 2007. Retrieved 2007-09-22.
  14. "West Bengal Council of Higher Secondary Education" (PDF). Retrieved 2007-09-26.
  15. "Groundwater arsenic contamination status of South 24-Parganas district, one of the nine arsenic affected districts of West Bengal-India". SOES. Retrieved 2007-09-26.
  16. "Awareness and Skill Transfer Programme for the Treatment of Snakebite Victims". World Wildlife Fund India. Archived from the original on 2007-08-08. Retrieved 2007-09-26.
  17. "Sundarbans gratitude to Lapierre". The Telegraph, 30 November 2004. Retrieved 2007-09-22.

Sir Daniel Hamilton O Gosabar Aakhan by Soumen Dutta (Sir Daniel Hamilton and History of Gosaba) A book in Bengali published by Mitra and Ghosh. Gosabar Daktarbabu (Doctor of Gosaba) by Soumen Dutta. A book in Bengali published by Deep P

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