Bishakha Ghose
| Bishakha Ghose | |
| Born | India |
| Nationality | Indian |
| Occupation | Museologist, linguist, corporate trainer, author, editor |
| Education | Delhi University
National Museum, New Delhi University of Valladolid University of Cambridge |
| Known for | Cross-cultural training, linguistics, and conflict resolution |
| Notable work | The View from the Forbidden Window |
| Parents | Vice Admiral Barin Ghose (father)
Dr. Anubha Ghose (mother) |
| Children | Anuradha Ghose |
| Residence | Gurgaon, India |
Bishakha Ghose is an Indian museologist, linguistic engineer, international conflict resolution specialist, and author. She is the founder of Linguist’s Corner (formerly Leisure Links), a language and cross-cultural training venture, and the author of the literary novel The View from the Forbidden Window.
Bishakha is a direct descendant of the prominent jurist Sir Chunder Madhub Ghose, having reworked and republished the biographical and historical chronicle of her lineage, a text originally compiled by Sir A. K. Roy.
Ancestry and family legacy
The family belongs to a prominent Bengali Kayastha lineage with roots in Bikrampur (near Dacca, modern-day Dhaka\) that later became deeply intertwined with the public, legal, and cultural life of Calcutta (Kolkata).
Legal and administrative pioneers
- Rai Bahadur Durga Prasad Ghose: An early administrative official who served as Sheristadar at Chittagong and later as Deputy Magistrate at Alipore and Jessore. His acquisition of a family estate in Bhowanipore marked the family's entry into Calcutta public life.
- Sir Chunder Madhub Ghose (1838–1918): Bishakha's great-great-grandfather. A foundational Vakil of the Calcutta High Court (established 1862\), who was appointed Puisne Judge in 1885 and served as the officiating Chief Justice of the Calcutta High Court in 1906. Knighted that same year, he was known for challenging racial discrimination within the colonial judiciary, advocating for equal pay between European and Indian judges, and founding the Bengal Kayastha Sabha.
- Jogendra Chunder Ghose: Son of Sir Chunder Madhub Ghose. An eminent Vakil of the Calcutta High Court, he delivered the Tagore Law Lectures in 1904 and authored authoritative texts including Principles of Hindu Law. He served in the Bengal Legislative Council, edited the collected works of Raja Ram Mohan Roy, and founded the Association for the Advancement of Scientific and Industrial Education for Indians.
- Binode Kumar Ghose: A member of the Indian Civil Service (ICS) who served as a Sub-Divisional Magistrate in Dhaka and Magistrate in Darjeeling, Kurseong, and Shillong.
Naval and literary lineage
- Commander Biman Kumar Ghose: Bishakha's grandfather. He initially served in the Royal British Navy before transferring his commission to the newly formed Indian Navy post-Independence, serving in critical sectors including Karachi and Srinagar.
- Indira Dutta Ghose: Bishakha's grandmother, from the Rambagan Dutta family. She was among the earliest female matriculates of her era and organized women's civil defense training during World War II. Through her, the family is connected to the pioneering 19th-century Indian literary figures Toru Dutt and Aru Dutt.
- Vice Admiral Barin Ghose: Bishakha's father. A logistics and systems specialist who served 40 years in the Indian Navy, receiving the Vishisht Seva Medal (VSM\) and Ati Vishisht Seva Medal (AVSM\). In his retirement, he became a prominent advocate for the One Rank One Pension (OROP\) welfare movement for military veterans.
Maternal lineage
- Dr. Anubha Ghose: Bishakha's mother. A medical doctor and Assistant Commissioner who served on multiple international medical and humanitarian assignments.
- Chandi Prasad Banerji: Bishakha's maternal grandfather. He served as Joint Secretary in the Ministry of Agriculture during the premiership of Jawaharlal Nehru. He was instrumental in shaping post-Independence food distribution and agricultural reforms, notably leading the commercial development of "Modern Bread" to make bread an affordable, mass-accessible dietary staple in middle-class India prior to the Green Revolution.
Cultural and cinematic legacy
- Kali Prosanno Ghose: Bishakha's relative connected to the historic, legally contested Bhawal Estate zamindari of Eastern Bengal, which later inspired the iconic Bengali films Sannyasi Raja and Ek Je Chhilo Raja.
- Barrister B. K. "Kaku" Ghose: Bishakha's relative, a key historical figure in early Bengali cinema. He was one of the primary financial backers of the pioneering Tajmahal Film Company (operating 1922–1924\), which produced silent film adaptations of literary works by Sarat Chandra Chattopadhyay (Aandhare Alo\) and Rabindranath Tagore (Maanbhanjan\).
Early life and education
Bishakha pursued higher education across diverse disciplines in India and Europe:
- Bachelor of Arts (BA): History, Delhi University.
- Post Graduate Studies: Museology at the National Museum, New Delhi.
- Post Graduate Diploma: Industrial Relations and Personnel Management, recognized by the Government of India.
- Advanced Spanish Studies: University of Valladolid, Spain.
- Language Pedagogy: Teacher of English as a Foreign Language (TEFL) qualification from the University of Cambridge.
Career
Linguistics and Corporate Training
Bishakha operates as a language engineer and cross-cultural consultant based in Gurgaon (Gurugram), India. She founded Linguist’s Corner (originally established as Leisure Links\), an organization specializing in foreign language pedagogy, technical translation, localized film dubbing, and international corporate cross-cultural training.
Through this venture, the organization has provided linguistic and cultural infrastructure training to major national and multinational corporations, including:
- IBM
- McKinsey & Company
- Sapient
- American Express
- Maruti Suzuki
- Rico Auto Industries
- Elsevier
As a polyglot, Bishakha is fluent in English, Hindi, Bengali, Spanish, Arabic, and French.
Humanitarian and Conflict Resolution Work
In addition to corporate consulting, Bishakha's international assignments have spanned humanitarian initiatives, migration, and asylum programs. This includes extensive periods deployed in global conflict zones, specializing in international conflict resolution, wartime mediation, cross-cultural negotiation, and refugee rehabilitation. Much of this field experience involved direct engagement with migrant communities and governmental bodies, particularly during her tenure in Spain and assignments in the Middle East.
Literary and Research Pursuits
An antiquarian book collector and researcher, Bishakha focuses on personal and spiritual research intersecting with the history of storytelling, Raja Yoga, Sufism, and esoteric frameworks such as Tarot and past-life regression.
The View from the Forbidden Window
Bishakha authored The View from the Forbidden Window, a work of literary fiction heavily informed by an international and cross-cultural background. The novel follows the journey of an Indian protagonist, Kritika, who relocates to Spain following a broken engagement. The narrative explores themes of migration, identity, displacement, and cultural discovery, spanning locations from a volatile stopover in Jordan to borderlands and classrooms across Europe. It also highlights a network and its connection to global politics.
Personal life
Bishakha resides in Gurgaon, India, with her mother, Dr. Anubha Ghose, and daughter, Anuradha Ghose.