Chatterjee devoted himself fully to the Naxalbari revolt. Before setting out for work in the villages, he met Charu Majumdar for the first time during the leader’s visit to Calcutta in 1968. What intrigued Chatterjee as a young student were the differences of opinion within the inner circle of Naxalbari ideologues, including founders Majumdar and Kanu Sanyal. “In 1973, a year after Majumdar’s death, Sanyal, who was then still in prison, wrote the ‘Torai Report’ (‘Report from the Terai Region’),” says Chatterjee. In the report, Sanyal made the astounding claim that Majumdar had proposed a model different from the one that came to be known as the ‘Naxalbari’ rebellion. Majumdar, Sanyal claims, conducted an experimental revolt by leading poor farmers in a nearby location called Joter Haat, where the goal of the uprising was described as “annihilation of the class enemy for the sake of gradual seizure of power”. But as the peasants rejected it as too vague a dream, Majumdar went along with the suggestions of Sanyal and other comrades that the end result of class enemy annihilation would be to snatch everything from them—their arms and ammunition, money, farming tools, seeds and paddy, not to mention land and life. As Sanyal made this claim only after Majumdar’s death, his views earned much criticism and little attention.