
 Shilaidaha Kuthibadi   a historic place associated with RABINDRANATH TAGORE and a tourist spot. It  stands on the south bank of the river Padma in Kumarkhali upazila in Kushtia  district and is five miles north of the district headquarters across the Gadai  and opposite to the Pabna town on farther north across the Padma. Shilaidaha is  also famous for the kachhari (office) of the Birahimpur zamindari and the  historic kuthibadi of the Tagore family of Jorasanko.
  Shilaidaha is a  relatively modern name; its old name was Khorshedpur. Before the Thakurs of  Jorasanko acquired the village in the middle of the 19th century there stood an  indigo-Kuthi reportedly built by a planter, named Shelly. A deep daha  (whirlpool) was formed there at the confluence of the Gadai and the Padma, and  hence the village came to be known as 'Shelly-daha', which ultimately took the  form of 'Silaidaha'. DWARKANATH TAGORE, grandfather of Rabindranath Tagore,  became the owner of this zamindari in 1807 by means of a will executed in his  favour by Ramlochan Tagore. Rabindranath assumed the responsibility of looking  after the zamindari and came to Shilaidaha for the first time in November 1889. 
 Rabindranath Tagore  in his adolescence and even later occasionally stayed there during his periodic  inspection of the zamindari estate. But later the Padma began to devour its  banks during high flood close to the old Kuthibadi. Alarmed at the devastating  erosion it was dismantled and its building materials were used for the erection  of the new Kuthibadi. There the poet lived for more than a decade at irregular  intervals between 1891 and 1901. During his stay there, eminent scientists,  litterateurs and intelligentsia of Bengal such as Sir JAGADISH CHANDRA BOSE,  DWIJENDRALAL ROY, PRAMATHA CHOWDHURY, MOHITLAL MAJUMDER, Lokendranath Palit  visited him on various occasions. Sitting at his desk in the Kuthibadi or on a  boat on the Padma, Rabindranath wrote a number of masterpieces: Sonar Tari,  Chitra, Chaitali, Katha O Kahini, Ksanika, most of the poems of Naibedya and  Kheya, and the songs of GITANJALI and Gitimalya. It was here, in 1912, that the  poet started his translation of Gitanjali into English, which earned him the  Nobel Prize in 1913. Rabindranath had a deep attachment for Shilaidaha and the  Padma, which is evident in his Chhinna Patrabali. The poet once wrote in a  letter, 'The holy place of my literary pursuits during my youth and middle age  was the village of Shilaidaha kissed by the waves of the Padma'. 
 Kuthibadi is a  picturesque three-storied terraced bungalow, constructed with brick, timber,  corrugated tin sheets and Raniganj tiles. Silaidaha Kuthibadi is nestled within  about eleven acres of beautiful orchards of mango, jackfruit and other evergreen  trees, a flower garden and two ponds. Silaidaha has an enchanting natural beauty  and rural landscape. The Villa, enclosed within a boundary wall, is entered  through a simple but attractive gateway on the south. It accommodates about 15  apartments of various sizes with a large central hall on the ground and the  first floors. Each of the open terraces on the ground and the first floors is  partly covered with a sloping roof of Raniganj tiles, while the central part  over the ground floor has a pitched roof with gable ends. A short pyramidal  crest farther variegates the roof over the second storey. Silaidaha Kuthibadi is  now a protected national monument where a Thakur Memorial Museum has been  established by the government.
 Rabindranath started  his experimental work with village development and modern methods of cultivation  at Shilaidaha, which he later undertook at PATISAR. He established a primary  school there in the name of Pratima Devi, his daughter-in-law. 
 The birth and death  anniversaries of the poet are observed at Silaidaha on a national level on 25  Baishakh and 22 Shraban respectively. Many scholars from home and abroad attend  these celebrations and take part in discussions on the life and works of  Rabindranath. Cultural functions follow, during which prominent artistes present  TAGORE SONGS
 
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