In 1931, he worked as a volunteer at the Burdwan District Congress Conference. Later, he became a believer in communism. In 1935, the first district committee of the
Communist Party of India (Marxist) in undivided Bangladesh was formed in Burdwan. He was elected as the first secretary of this committee and served in this position for three years. Along with the work of forming the party, he also organized the farmers' movement in the district. He was associated with the farmers' movement for more than fifty years. In 1939, he was one of the leaders of the historic canal tax resistance movement in Burdwan district. In 1948, he served as the secretary of the provincial farmers' meeting. In the same year, when the party was declared illegal, he went into hiding. In 1963-64, he was imprisoned during the Sino-Indian conflict. He became a member of the State Council of the Undivided Communist Party and a member of the CPI (M) State Committee in 1968. From then until 1988, he was a member of the State Committee of the party. He was elected to the
Bengal Legislative Council in 1957, to the Burdwan Municipality in 1964, to the
West Bengal Legislative Assembly from
Bardhaman Uttar Assembly constituency in 1967, and to the
Rajya Sabha in 1978. He was famous as an essayist. In 1937, the magazine 'Comrade' was published on his initiative. For a long time, he was the editor of the magazine 'Nandan'. His books include 'Gandhism in the Eyes of Leninists', 'Education and Class Relations', 'Matribhasha and Literature', 'Various Topics' etc. ==References==