Batra married one of his students, the
entomologist Suzanne W. Tubby, in a Hindu wedding ceremony on 12 June 1960 in Delhi, India, and they had two children, daughter Mira and son Persa. He was a man of diverse interests, famous for his excellent sense of humor. Once, he dressed up in a plaid shirt, jeans and a straw hat and entered the Greenbelt Labor Day parade, with 13 piglets and a sow that he had borrowed from the research station. He was also actively involved in the community activities and affairs in Beltsville, taking part in the opposition to sale of the research station's land to developers. Batra was a noted linguist, fluent in six Indian languages, as well as a master in English, Hindi, Urdu, French and German. He additionally knew some Arabic and Russian, and was reported to have translated
Khruschev's famous 1956 speech, "
On the Cult of Personality and Its Consequences", from Russian to both English and Arabic for others as he listened to the speech on television. According to his former Beltsville colleague, Marie Tousignant, he also combined his interests in linguistics and mycology and "... once translated all of the Latin scientific terms into Japanese". Batra died following a cerebral hemorrhage in Washington, D.C., on 20 May 1999. His funeral followed a traditional Indian reception where, in reference to his field of study, mourners were served with
truffles,
morels,
oyster and
shiitake mushrooms. He featured among the 10 people selected by the
Washington Post for their annual
in memoriam article, "Passings 1999". == Publications ==