Author:
Publication: OneIndia.in
Date: August 23, 2006
URL: http://entertainment.oneindia.in/music/news/aashish-khan-230806.html
For Ustad Aashish Khan tracing his roots and
recognising it has made him adopt the ancestral title Debsharma. From now he
will be known as Ustad Aashish K Debsharma. Talking to the reporters during
his sojourn to the city, he said, "This is an attempt to recoginse the
roots or going back to the roots. Present generation of our country are more
Westerners than the Westerners themselves. This is my personal choice of using
the title Debsharma."
Asked if he had taken the permission of his
father, the great sarod maestro Ali Akbar Khan, he said, "It is not a question
of getting his permission. He never had any objection. Our family is liberal.
We always worshipped Devi Saraswati and Goddess Kali. This is nothing new."
"I am not removing Khan from my title altogether. It will remain my middle
name. But I am adopting my ancestral title to recognise our original identity,"
Aashis said.
On whether the title Khan was a problem in the
west nowadays, "I must say that there is a global movement and there are
lot of problems if our skin colour is brown. We are always prospective terrorists.
But my decison is not for that reason. For me its going back to the roots."
He also added there was no need of reconversion, "as we are Hindus and
had to take the title Sadhu Khan under unfavourable circumstances so there was
no formal conversion to Islam and I dont need to convert again.
Historian Satyabrata Rai Chowdhury, a successor
of the erstwhile Royal Family of Shibpur, Comillah, Bangladesh, has been personally
intimate with the family of one of the greatest musical geniuses India has ever
produced, the late Padmabibhusan Baba Alauddin Khan. He was founder of the Senia
Maihar Gharana of Indian classical Music.
He does know, like may other eminent people
of the intelligentsia of Bengal, that Baba Alauddin Khan, born in 1871, traced
his lineage from a very high caste Hindu Brahmin family, and was a devotee of
Maa Kali (the Goddess of power), Maa Saraswati (the Goddess of Learning), spiritual
leader Sri Ramakrishna and Maa Sharada, Mr Chowdhury said.
Baba Alauddin Khan's successors are also no
exception when it comes to their religious practice, so much so that his son
Ali Akbar Khan's Calcutta residence at Ranikuthi is named as Maa Sharada Bhawan.
Baba Alauddin Khan's father, who was commonly
known as Sadhu Khan, was originally Sadananda Debsharma. We all know that Debsharma,
which means the almighty lord or Bhagawan himself, is a very distinguished honorary
title rather than a mere surname, and it is very fondly used by high caste Hindu
Brahmins.
Sadananda Debsharma, a master in the art of
fighting with sticks and the chief guard of the great grandfather of speaker
Maharaja Nabakishore Roy Chowdhury, killed an opponent in a clash between the
southern Royals and the Royals of the middle of Shibpur, and escaped to "Mager
Mulluk", the place where the Portuguese pirates lived in the border of
India and the then Burma, and it was there that in order to hoodwink the British
Police he changed his name to Sadhu Khan.
He was later brought back by Maharaja Nabakishore
and was established at his native place of Bajainna Adi at Shibpur, but that
is a different story altogether. However, then onwards they were recognised
as Khans, and therefore, believed to be muslims.
Neverthless, form the present writer and also
from the diaries of Maharaja Nabakishore Roy Chowdhuri and Baba Alauddin Khan,
it is clear that his family was never converted into Islam.
Unfortunately, ignorant gossip-lovers left no
stone unturned to spread all sorts of stories regarding their conversion into
Islam.
However, the present writer and historical evidences
keep no room for conflicting views in how the sacred thread bearer Sadananda
Debsharma became Sadhu Khan.
Many are not aware of the fact that the word
"Khan" does not necessarily mean Muslims. It is a Persian word meaning
"a wise and learned man". The surname Khan is very common among the
Hindus and the Christian as well.
Ustad Aashish gave his first public performance
at the age of 13, with his grandfather, on the All India Radio "National
Program", New Delhi, and in the same year, performed with his father and
his grandfather at the "Tansen Music Conference", Calcutta. Besides
his virtuosity as a traditional sarod maestro, Aashish is also a pioneer in
the establishment of world music genre, as founder of the Indo-American musical
group "Shanti" with distinguished tabla player Ustad Zakir Hussain
in 1969 and 1970 and later, fusion group, "The Third Eye" and composed
a Sarod Concerto in "raga" form.
With Pandit Ravi Shankar, he has worked on many
musical products for both film and stage, including Oscar Winner Satyajit Ray's
Apur Sangsar, Parash Pathar and Sir Richard Attenborough's film Gandhi.
He has also worked with Maurice Jarre on John
Huston's film The Man Who Would be King, David Lean's A Passage to India, and
composed the music for Tapan Sinha's films, Joturgriha and Aadmi Aurat.
In 1989, Khan was appointed to the prestigious
post of the Composer and Conductor for the National Orchestra of All India Radio,
succeeding Pandit Ravi Shankar.
Aashish has collaborated with such diverse western
musicians as John Barham, George Harrison, Ringo Starr, Eric Clapton, Charles
Lloyd, John Handy, Alice Coltrane, Emil Richards, Dallas Smith, Don Pope, Jorge
Strunz, Ardeshir Farah, and the Philadelphia String Quartet.