![]() Batul is yet drawn by Debnath for Shuktara. Bullets began to bounce off of him, much like Superman. On assurance, he made Batul a superhero able to take upon tanks, airplanes, and missiles. Debnath was reluctant at first because he was worried about legal implications. When the Bangladesh War of Liberation, also known as the Indo-Pakistani War of 1971 flared up, he was asked by the editors and publishers to add an aura of invincibility. Initially, he did not know what he foresaw as a future for Batul and did not give him any superpowers. ![]() The name came to him instantly and he thought up the figure of the protagonist rapidly. ![]() He has remarked that the character of Batul was influenced by his pal Manohar Aich, the well-known Bengali bodybuilder. By Debnaths admission, he thought up the idea of the superhero while returning from College Street, Calcutta. Narayan Debnaths first comic book characters in color were for the comic strip and book Batul The Great. It has since appeared in comic book format and as an animation series. It first appeared and yet appears in a children's magazine called Shuktara and is widely read, not only by children but by adults as well. Batul, Bantul, Batul the Great, or Bantul the Great is a popular Bengali comic strip character created by Narayan Debnath.
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