Chakravarty was born in Bangladesh to parents of two different faiths.[1] Her Muslim mother, Sultana Kamal, is a lawyer and human rights activist who runs a legal aid organisation in Bangladesh. Her Hindu father, Supriyo Chakravarty, is also a lawyer.[2] Her parents both decided to keep their respective religions after marriage.[1] She is her parents' only child.[2] Her maternal grandmother is poet Sufia Kamal.[3]
Because of Chakravarty's parents' and grandparents' activism and anti-fundamentalist stance, her family have been under threat on and off her whole life. She has grown up with threatening telephone calls and her home has been firebombed twice.[1]
Chakravarty attended a school in Sylhet her parents set up which taught the British Council-regulated O-level curriculum and examination syllabus. The school took students up to the age of 14, after which her schooling was mostly tutorial-based.[2] Later, she entered the mainstream education system to continue with her O-levels.[1] She achieved seven O-levels.[2]
She then got a partial scholarship[1] to sixth-form college in Oxford, to board and sit her A-levels,[2] after her parents remortgaged their family home, she left for the UK[1] in 2001.[3] Her lawyer mother, who had spent most of her life doing voluntary work until then, moved to Dhaka, to take up a full-time job.[1] Chakravarty studied Law at the University of Oxford[2] and became a Barrister in 2008.[3]
Political activism
Chakravarty started her career as a tax consultant in London before moving into communication and public affairs.[2] From July 2012 to December 2013, she was a deputy director at The Freedom Association where she advocated for freedom of the press, free speech, and freedom of expression.[2][4] In January 2014, she was appointed political director of the TaxPayers' Alliance.[2][5]
Chakravarty moved into communications and public affairs.[6] She worked for Banking on Change, a global partnership between Barclays Bank and two international charities seeking to extend access to basic financial services through savings-led microfinance.[7]
In September 2017, Chakravarty appeared on Question Time.[16] In October, Chakravarty appeared on Newsnight, discussing Brexit.[17] In the same month, she was listed at Number 100 by commentator Iain Dale in his '100 Most Influential on the Right'.[18]
Singing career
Chakravarty took her first music lesson from Prateek Enda in Sylhet[19] and had an early start in her musical training in Rabindranath Tagore songs.[3] Although she specialises in Bengali music,[2] since moving to the UK she has added Hindi songs to her repertoire.[3] She now takes lessons from London-based singer-master Anuradha Roma Choudhury.[19]
In October 2007, Chakravarty married Duncan Hall. She met her husband while at school and decided to settle in England after completing her university and Bar examinations.[2] Chakravarty is also involved with Udayan, a Bengali cultural group.[3]
Discography
A Bloom in Vain and Other Songs
A Bloom in Vain and Other Songs
Cover design by Rajib Chakraborty and photography by Ranjay RC
A Bloom in Vain and Other Songs (Bengali: কত চামেলি বৃথা যায়) is the debut studio album by Dia Chakravarty, released on 22 August 2014. Chakravarty, having studied law at the University of Oxford, chose songs of composers, who, except for Dwijendralal, studied law, including Tagore who eventually dropped out; and except for Rajanikanta, every one of them went to England for higher studies.[20]
In August 2014, Chakravarty told New Age, "Music is my passion and runs through my blood. I love to sing Bangla songs of almost every genre."[19]
Mosabber Rahman of the Dhaka Tribune said of Chakravarty, "Her voice lacks pretension, and she has the sincerity of a schoolgirl preparing for the final exam".[20]
Track listing
No.
Title
Lyrics
Length
1.
"Bodhua Nid Nahi Ankhipate" (Monsoon Night, Alone)