Lieutenant-ColonelHassan SuhrawardyCStJ, FRCS (17 November 1884 – 18 September 1946)[2] was a Bengali surgeon, military officer in the British Indian Army, politician, and a public official. He was the former chairman of the executive committee of the East London Mosque. Knighted in 1932, he renounced his British honours a month before his death.[3][4]
Suhrawardy was the first Muslim vice-chancellor of Calcutta University (1930–1934) and the second Muslim from the sub-continent to become a Fellow of the Royal College of Surgeons of England. In 1945 he was appointed Professor of Islamic History and Culture in Calcutta University while retaining the chair of Public Health and Hygiene, which he had held since 1931.
Suhrawardy served as an adviser to the Simon Commission and was a member of the Bengal Legislative Council of which he was deputy president from 1923 to 1925. As the chief medical and health officer of the East Indian Railway, he founded the railway's ambulance and nursing division.
Suhrawardy also played a role towards the establishment of the East London Mosque.
Knighthood and later life
While Suhrawardy was vice-chancellor and dean of the Faculty of Medicine, he received his knighthood immediately after he had saved the life of Sir Stanley Jackson from an assassination attempt by Bina Das, a student, in the Senate House of the University of Calcutta in February 1932. His distinguished career in medicine and in the public service was crowned in 1939 by his appointment to succeed Sir Abdul Qadir as the adviser to the Secretary of State for India. He retired from that post in 1944.
Suhrawardy was appointed an OBE in the 1927 Birthday Honours list,[5] awarded the Kaiser-i-Hind Medal, First Class in the same honours list in 1930,[6] knighted on 17 February 1932,[7] appointed an Associate Officer of the Venerable Order of St. John (OStJ) in January 1932[8] and promoted to Associate Commander in January 1937.[9]
Suhrawardy died at the Calcutta School of Tropical Medicine, aged 61.[3] He had renounced his knighthood and OBE a month before his death in August 1946, when the Muslim League decided to renounce all British honours.
In April 1933, Calcutta Municipal Corporation named the new 100 ft. road from Park Circus to the junction of Kasaipara Lane as "Suhrawardy Avenue". Suhrawardy's house "Kashana" stood on that road.[10] As of 2020, the house is used as the Library and Information Center building of the Deputy High Commission of Bangladesh.[11]