
Bhaskar Bhattacharyya circa.
Life
Bhaskar was born in 1950 in
Darjeeling, India. At the age of five he went to Uganda where both
his parents were teachers. In 1966 his parents moved to England
where he finished his O and A levels. In 1970 he went City of
London University. In 1971 he travelled through Europe, Turkey,
Iran, and Afghanistan to India. He stayed there for the next six
years living with sadhus(ascetics), sufis and shamans, and studying
Sanskrit in Benares. In 1976 he moved back to London to begin his
library research into mystical Hindu and Sufi traditions. In 1979
he began his career in television in UK and France. In 1988, after
getting married he moved back to India to pursue a writing career,
but television seduced him back. Bhaskar has traveled extensively
and continues to write. He was in the process to write a novel on
the past and future lives of the poet Shelley.
Life & Career
The young Bhaskar,
bespectacled and rather intense, looked like a young Rabindranath
Tagore, but his cultural references rapidly widened as he became a
fanatical blues fan and frequenter of squats on Haverstock Hill,
north London. Like many others at that time, he was feeling the
pull of alternative lifestyles over more orthodox pursuits. In 1971
he dropped out of a physics degree at City University and travelled
to India, where he developed his characteristic ability to surround
himself with life and colour, immersing himself in esoteric
practices yet always retaining his impish good humour.
After
five years of "perfecting his beard, but not his Sanskrit", as his
younger brother Ranjan put it, Bhaskar went to study the Baul
musicians, a band of tantric mystics, many of whom became his
lifelong friends. From this period came a collaboration with the
filmmaker George Lunneau and entry into a career as director,
producer and India expert for the UK television industry. He formed
the production company Maya Vision with Gerry Troyna and Becky
Dodds. Already blessed with great charisma, he soon revealed he had
a rare talent for celluloid - not in practical terms, he never
learned how to operate a camera - but in the indefinable art of
bringing the right people and places together. He worked as India
adviser on such acclaimed television series as The Jewel in the
Crown (1984) and Great Railway Journeys of the World
(1989).
Bhaskar's wedding in 1988 showed just how adept he had
become at navigating the radically different elements of his life:
east and west, bohemian and brahmin. Hiring two hotels at Manali,
in the Himalayas, one for each group, he kept everyone happy,
steering guests either towards the smoky campfire revelries or the
more traditional steaming pots of chai and sandesh. He and his wife
settled in Delhi, where their house became a vibrant melting pot of
talents, conversation, music and laughter.
As director of
programmes for the Business India television channel, Bhaskar
created a generation of young filmmakers, sometimes with alarming
speed - one young protege bumped into him in the Press Club bar in
Delhi and a week later was watching his first documentary go out on
air. It was Bhaskar's gift for friendship that carried him through,
opening doors in the salons of New Delhi and London, but also with
the poor and downtrodden.
On one occasion, he arranged to film a
group of Naxalite rebels planning a terrorist attack; on another,
finding the budget underspent, he simply handed out the remainder
to needy villagers. Travelling with Bhaskar on these shoots was an
education and an entertainment; his culture and learning were deep,
but worn lightly. His stock-in-trade had become the hidden
diversity of India - minstrels, Gypsy rovers, shamans and saddhus -
but his skills in video production led to other opportunities,
often musical. He worked with Itzhak Perlman and, in 1983, with
David Bowie on his Serious Moonlight tour.
Despite these
experiences in the wider world, it was always the Bauls who were
Bhaskar's first love, and he never forgot the debt he owed them. In
1993 he collaborated with Nik Douglas on the book The Path of the
Mystic Lover, a collection of 84 Baul lyrics which became something
of a cult classic in new age circles.
Bhaskar's television
career reached a new peak with the Kumbh Mela. He helped set up a
luxury tented camp for foreign visitors, and guided them through
the festival. Typically, a week after that he had disappeared from
the media spotlight and could be found, living in total simplicity
at his old haunt at the Assi Ghat, on the banks of the Ganges in
Varanasi (Benares), almost indistinguishable from all the other
bearded holy men.
Death
The last
couple of years of his life were spent largely in London, looking
after his ageing parents. It was on a film shoot in Tamil Nadu for
Channel 4 that he tragically drowned, caught in a rip tide off a
beach near Chennai.
His wife Rohini Pathania and his son
Abhinava survive him.
Sources
-Photo Credit-Meryl
Dowman
-Text
Excerpts from Guardian obituary written by Kevin
Rushby on 27th February, 2006.
Obituary online at Guardian.co.uk