
Assam’s Peacebuilding Legacy: Inspiring Stories of Reconciliation
Amrit Kumar Goldsmith, a long-time advocate for communal harmony and a familiar face in Assam’s Christian civic leadership, died on 10 April 2026 after years of ill health. A former Secretary of the All Assam Christian Forum and a member of the Axom Nagarik Samaj core committee, Goldsmith played a key role in bringing community leaders together and in grassroots peace efforts across the region.
Colleagues recall a partnership that deepened as India’s political climate shifted after 2014. Long before that, Goldsmith and fellow activists responded to local crises. In late December 2010 and early January 2011, when violent clashes erupted between the Rabha and Garo communities in West Assam — particularly in Goalpara district and along the Assam–Meghalaya border — Goldsmith joined others in visiting affected villages, speaking with victims and initiating peace dialogues between the communities.
As Secretary of the All Assam Christian Forum, Goldsmith represented a broad spectrum of Christian denominations and introduced peers to senior church figures. He facilitated the author’s introduction to the respected nonagenarian and former Archbishop of Guwahati, Fr. Thomas Menamparampil, whose constitutional-themed address at a 2021 gathering of Christian leaders in Guwahati left a lasting impression. Goldsmith had invited the author to that pre-election meeting, where he urged leaders to uphold secular ideals and constitutional values.
Goldsmith’s public work was curtailed after he suffered a severe stroke while accompanying Fr. Thomas on a peace-building mission to Nagaland. The stroke left him largely immobile and confined to his home, a bitter reversal for a man described as tireless in service. Even so, he maintained warm personal connections; he would often answer phone calls with, “Mr. Malakar, how are you?” The author’s last in-person visit with him was on 11 March 2025, at the home of Rev. Aziz‑ul Haque, former pastor of Guwahati Baptist Church.
Those who knew Goldsmith remember his conviction that prayer and moral transformation must accompany administrative action to prevent violence. After the Easter bombings in Sri Lanka on 21 April 2019 — which killed nearly 270 people — he urged prayers not only for victims but also for perpetrators, saying such petitions might help bring about a change of heart. Friends say that belief in the power of prayer and persistent work for peace define his legacy.
Goldsmith’s colleagues and community leaders will remember him for his conciliatory spirit and steady commitment to communal harmony. Any crisis that tests the social fabric, they say, will recall his presence and his plea for lasting peace. Adieu.
Original Source: https://nenow.in/opinion/adieu-mr-goldsmith-a-legacy-of-peacebuilding-in-assam.html
Category: Assam,Northeast News,Opinion,Top News
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Publish Date: 2026-04-15 13:48:00

