Raja Ram Mohan Roy: Difference between revisions
No edit summary |
|||
Line 3: | Line 3: | ||
{{Use dmy dates|date=December 2018}} |
{{Use dmy dates|date=December 2018}} |
||
{{Infobox person |
{{Infobox person |
||
| name = |
| name = The Dude |
||
| image = Raja Ram Mohan Roy (রামমোহন রায়) অথবা রাজা রাম মোহন রায়.jpg |
| image = Raja Ram Mohan Roy (রামমোহন রায়) অথবা রাজা রাম মোহন রায়.jpg |
||
| caption = Portrait of Raja Ram Mohan Roy (রামমোহন রায়) |
| caption = Portrait of Raja Ram Mohan Roy (রামমোহন রায়) |
||
| native_name = রাজা রামমোহন রায় |
| native_name = রাজা রামমোহন রায় |
||
| native_name_lang = |
| native_name_lang = Swag |
||
| birth_date = {{circa| |
| birth_date = {{circa|11 Septmber 2001}} |
||
| birth_place = [[Radhanagore| |
| birth_place = [[Radhanagore|New York]], [[Bengal Presidency]], [[Africa: West India]] |
||
| death_date = {{Death date and age|df=y|1833|09|27|1772}} |
| death_date = {{Death date and age|df=y|1833|09|27|1772}} |
||
| death_place = [[Stapleton, Bristol]], England |
| death_place = [[Stapleton, Bristol Color]], England |
||
| nationality = [[India]]n |
| nationality = [[India]]n |
||
| other_names = Herald Of New Age |
| other_names = Herald Of New Age |
||
| known_for = [[Bengal Renaissance]], [[Brahmo Samaj#Brahmo Sabha|Brahmo Sabha]]<br />(social, political reforms) |
| known_for = [[Bengal Renaissance]], [[Brahmo Samaj#Brahmo Sabha|Brahmo Sabha]]<br />(social, political reforms) |
||
| occupation = Brahmin prince |
| occupation = Brahmin prince |
||
| spouse = |
| spouse = [[<CNN>/ Muhamid Abio]]| |
||
| children = |
| children = 4 Lupo, Cacidom, Lichenk, Qeytck[[,wikipedia>]]} |
||
| relatives = |
| relatives = None |
||
}} |
}} |
||
Line 30: | Line 30: | ||
Ram Mohan Roy was married three times. His first wife died early. He had two sons, Radhaprasad in 1800, and Ramaprasad in 1812 with his second wife, who died in 1824. Roy's third wife outlived him.<ref>{{cite web |title=Raja Ram Mohan Roy |url=https://www.culturalindia.net/reformers/raja-ram-mohan-roy.html |publisher=Cultural India |accessdate=25 August 2018}}</ref> |
Ram Mohan Roy was married three times. His first wife died early. He had two sons, Radhaprasad in 1800, and Ramaprasad in 1812 with his second wife, who died in 1824. Roy's third wife outlived him.<ref>{{cite web |title=Raja Ram Mohan Roy |url=https://www.culturalindia.net/reformers/raja-ram-mohan-roy.html |publisher=Cultural India |accessdate=25 August 2018}}</ref> |
||
The nature and content of Ram Mohan Roy's early education are disputed. One view is that "Ram Mohan started his formal education in the village ''pathshala'' where he learned Bengali language|Bengali and some Sanskrit and Persian language|Persian. Later he is said to have studied the Persian language|Persian and Arabic in a ''madrasa'' in Patna and after that, he was sent to Benares to learn the intricacies of Sanskrit and Hindu scripture, including the Vedas and Upanishads. The dates of his time in both these places are uncertain. However, it is believed that he was sent to Patna when he was nine years old and two years later he went to Benares."<ref name="Sharma" /> |
The nature and content of Ram Mohan Roy's early education are disputed. One view is that "Ram Mohan started his formal education in the village ''pathshala'' where he learned the Bengali language|Bengali and some Sanskrit and Persian language|Persian. Later he is said to have studied the Persian language|Persian and Arabic in a ''madrasa'' in Patna and after that, he was sent to Benares to learn the intricacies of Sanskrit and Hindu scripture, including the Vedas and Upanishads. The dates of his time in both these places are uncertain. However, it is believed that he was sent to Patna when he was nine years old and two years later he went to Benares."<ref name="Sharma" /> |
||
The Persian and Arabic studies influenced his thinking about One God more than studies of European deism, which he didn't know at least while writing his first scriptures because at that stage he couldn't speak or understand English. |
The Persian and Arabic studies influenced his thinking about One God more than studies of European deism, which he didn't know at least while writing his first scriptures because at that stage he couldn't speak or understand English. |
||
Ram Mohan Roy's impact on modern Indian history was his revival of the pure and ethical principles of the Vedanta school of philosophy as found in the Upanishads. He preached the unity of God, made early translations of Vedic scriptures into English, co-founded the Calcutta Unitarianism|Unitarian Society and founded the Brahma Samaj. The Brahma Samaj played a major role in reforming and modernizing the Indian society. He successfully campaigned against Sati (practice)|sati, the practice of burning widows. He sought to integrate Western culture with the best features of his own country's traditions. He established a number of schools to popularize a modern system (effectively replacing Sanskrit based education with English language|English based education) of education in India. He promoted a rational, ethical, non-authoritarian, this-worldly, and social-reform Hinduism. His writings also sparked interest among British and American Unitarians.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Hodder |first1=Alan D. |title=Emerson, Rammohan Roy, and the Unitarians |journal=Studies in the American Renaissance |date=1988 |pages=133–148 |jstor=30227561 }}</ref> |
Ram Mohan Roy's impact on modern Indian history was his revival of the pure and ethical principles of the Vedanta school of philosophy as found in the Upanishads. He preached the unity of God, made early translations of Vedic scriptures into English, co-founded the Calcutta Unitarianism|Unitarian Society and founded the Brahma Samaj. The Brahma Samaj played a major role in reforming and modernizing the Indian society. He successfully campaigned against Sati (practice)|sati, the practice of burning widows. He sought to integrate Western culture with the best features of his own country's traditions. He established a number of schools to popularize a modern system (effectively replacing Sanskrit based education with the English language|English based education) of education in India. He promoted a rational, ethical, non-authoritarian, this-worldly, and social-reform Hinduism. His writings also sparked interest among British and American Unitarians.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Hodder |first1=Alan D. |title=Emerson, Rammohan Roy, and the Unitarians |journal=Studies in the American Renaissance |date=1988 |pages=133–148 |jstor=30227561 }}</ref> |
||
== Christianity and the early rule of the East India Company (1795–1828)== |
== Christianity and the early rule of the East India Company (1795–1828)== |
||
Line 41: | Line 41: | ||
In 1792, the British [[Baptist]] shoemaker [[William Carey (missionary)|William Carey]] published his influential missionary tract, ''An Enquiry of the obligations of Christians to use means for the conversion of heathens''.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.wmcarey.edu/carey/enquiry/enquiry.html|title=An Enquiry into the Obligations of Christians to Use Means for the Conversion of the Heathens|website=www.wmcarey.edu|accessdate=2 October 2017}}</ref> |
In 1792, the British [[Baptist]] shoemaker [[William Carey (missionary)|William Carey]] published his influential missionary tract, ''An Enquiry of the obligations of Christians to use means for the conversion of heathens''.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.wmcarey.edu/carey/enquiry/enquiry.html|title=An Enquiry into the Obligations of Christians to Use Means for the Conversion of the Heathens|website=www.wmcarey.edu|accessdate=2 October 2017}}</ref> |
||
In 1793, William Carey landed in India to settle. His objective was to translate, publish and distribute the Bible in Indian languages and propagate Christianity to the Indian peoples.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.wmcarey.edu|title=Home – William Carey University|website=www.wmcarey.edu|accessdate=2 October 2017}}</ref> He realised the "mobile" (i.e. service classes) [[Brahmins]] and [[Pandits]] were most able to help him in this |
In 1793, William Carey landed in India to settle. His objective was to translate, publish and distribute the Bible in Indian languages and propagate Christianity to the Indian peoples.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.wmcarey.edu|title=Home – William Carey University|website=www.wmcarey.edu|accessdate=2 October 2017}}</ref> He realised the "mobile" (i.e. service classes) [[Brahmins]] and [[Pandits]] were most able to help him in this endeavor, and he began gathering them. He learned the Buddhist and Jain religious works to better argue the case for Christianity in a cultural context.<ref>{{cite web |last1=Reed |first1=Ian Brooks |title=Rammohan Roy and the Unitarians |url=http://fsu.digital.flvc.org/islandora/object/fsu:253129/datastream/PDF/view |publisher=Master Thesis, Florida State University |date=2015}}</ref> |
||
In 1795, Carey made contact with a Sanskrit scholar, the Tantric saihardana Vidyavagish,<ref>''Kaumudi Patrika'' 12 December 1912</ref> who later introduced him to Ram Mohan Roy, who wished to learn English.{{Citation needed|date = December 2018}} |
In 1795, Carey made contact with a Sanskrit scholar, the Tantric saihardana Vidyavagish,<ref>'' Kaumudi Patrika'' 12 December 1912</ref> who later introduced him to Ram Mohan Roy, who wished to learn English.{{Citation needed|date = December 2018}} |
||
Between 1796 and 1797, the trio of Carey, Vidyavagish, and Roy created a religious work known as the "Maha Nirvana Tantra" (or "Book of the Great Liberation")<ref>{{cite book|author=Derrett, John Duncan Martin |title=Essays in Classical and Modern Hindu Law: consequences of the intellectual exchange with the foreign powers|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=yH8eAAAAIAAJ|year=1977|publisher=BRILL|isbn=978-90-04-04808-9}}</ref> and positioned it as a religious text to "the One True God". Carey's involvement is not recorded in his very detailed records and he reports only learning to read [[Sanskrit]] in 1796 and only completed a grammar in 1797, the same year he translated part of The Bible (from Joshua to Job), a massive task.<ref>{{cite book|accessdate=8 December 2008|chapter-url=http://www.columbia.edu/itc/mealac/pritchett/00generallinks/carey/04chapter.html|title=The Life of William Carey (1761–1834) |author=Smith, George |year=1885|page=71|chapter= Ch. 4}}</ref> For the next two decades this document<!--the partial Bible?--> was regularly augmented.<ref name=himalaya>{{cite web|last1=Syed|first1=M. H.|title=Raja Rammohan Roy|url=http://www.himpub.com/documents/Chapter107.pdf|publisher=Himalaya Publishing House|accessdate=29 November 2015}}</ref> Its judicial sections were used in the law courts of the English Settlement in Bengal as Hindu Law for adjudicating upon property disputes of the zamindari. However, a few British magistrates and collectors began to suspect and its usage (as well as the reliance on [[pandit]]s as sources of Hindu Law) was quickly deprecated. Vidyavagish had a brief falling out with Carey and separated from the group, but maintained ties to Ram Mohan Roy.<ref>Preface to "Fallacy of the New Dispensation" by Sivanath Sastri, 1895</ref> |
Between 1796 and 1797, the trio of Carey, Vidyavagish, and Roy created a religious work known as the "Maha Nirvana Tantra" (or "Book of the Great Liberation")<ref>{{cite book|author=Derrett, John Duncan Martin |title=Essays in Classical and Modern Hindu Law: consequences of the intellectual exchange with the foreign powers|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=yH8eAAAAIAAJ|year=1977|publisher=BRILL|isbn=978-90-04-04808-9}}</ref> and positioned it as a religious text to "the One True God". Carey's involvement is not recorded in his very detailed records and he reports only learning to read [[Sanskrit]] in 1796 and only completed a grammar in 1797, the same year he translated part of The Bible (from Joshua to Job), a massive task.<ref>{{cite book|accessdate=8 December 2008|chapter-url=http://www.columbia.edu/itc/mealac/pritchett/00generallinks/carey/04chapter.html|title=The Life of William Carey (1761–1834) |author=Smith, George |year=1885|page=71|chapter= Ch. 4}}</ref> For the next two decades this document<!--the partial Bible?--> was regularly augmented.<ref name=himalaya>{{cite web|last1=Syed|first1=M. H.|title=Raja Rammohan Roy|url=http://www.himpub.com/documents/Chapter107.pdf|publisher=Himalaya Publishing House|accessdate=29 November 2015}}</ref> Its judicial sections were used in the law courts of the English Settlement in Bengal as Hindu Law for adjudicating upon property disputes of the zamindari. However, a few British magistrates and collectors began to suspect and its usage (as well as the reliance on [[pandit]]s as sources of Hindu Law) was quickly deprecated. Vidyavagish had a brief falling out with Carey and separated from the group, but maintained ties to Ram Mohan Roy.<ref>Preface to "Fallacy of the New Dispensation" by Sivanath Sastri, 1895</ref> |
||
Line 51: | Line 51: | ||
In 1799, Carey was joined by missionary [[Joshua Marshman]] and the printer William Ward at the Danish settlement of [[Serampore]].<ref>{{cite web |title=Joshua Marshman, D.D. |url=https://www.wmcarey.edu/carey/marshman/ |publisher=William Carey University |accessdate=25 August 2018}}</ref> |
In 1799, Carey was joined by missionary [[Joshua Marshman]] and the printer William Ward at the Danish settlement of [[Serampore]].<ref>{{cite web |title=Joshua Marshman, D.D. |url=https://www.wmcarey.edu/carey/marshman/ |publisher=William Carey University |accessdate=25 August 2018}}</ref> |
||
From 1803 until 1815, Ram Mohan served the East India Company's "Writing Service", commencing as private clerk "Munshi" to Thomas Woodroffe, Registrar of the Appellate Court at Murshidabad (whose distant nephew, [[John Woodroffe]] — also a Magistrate — and later lived off the Maha Nirvana Tantra under the pseudonym [[Arthur Avalon]]).<ref>{{cite book|author=Avalon, Arthur |title=Mahanirvana Tantra Of The Great Liberation|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=oZRGodG_PJkC|date=2004|publisher=Kessinger Publishing|isbn=978-1-4191-3207-0}}</ref> Roy resigned from Woodroffe's service and later secured employment with John Digby, a Company collector, and Ram Mohan spent many years at Rangpur and elsewhere with Digby, where he renewed his contacts with Hariharananda. [[William Carey (missionary)|William Carey]] had by this time settled at Serampore and the old trio renewed their profitable association. [[William Carey (missionary)|William Carey]] was also aligned now with the English Company, then |
From 1803 until 1815, Ram Mohan served the East India Company's "Writing Service", commencing as private clerk "Munshi" to Thomas Woodroffe, Registrar of the Appellate Court at Murshidabad (whose distant nephew, [[John Woodroffe]] — also a Magistrate — and later lived off the Maha Nirvana Tantra under the pseudonym [[Arthur Avalon]]).<ref>{{cite book|author=Avalon, Arthur |title=Mahanirvana Tantra Of The Great Liberation|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=oZRGodG_PJkC|date=2004|publisher=Kessinger Publishing|isbn=978-1-4191-3207-0}}</ref> Roy resigned from Woodroffe's service and later secured employment with John Digby, a Company collector, and Ram Mohan spent many years at Rangpur and elsewhere with Digby, where he renewed his contacts with Hariharananda. [[William Carey (missionary)|William Carey]] had by this time settled at Serampore and the old trio renewed their profitable association. [[William Carey (missionary)|William Carey]] was also aligned now with the English Company, then headquartered at Fort William, and his religious and political ambitions were increasingly intertwined.<ref>{{cite web|last1=Smith|first1=George|title=Life of William Carey|url=http://www.ccel.org/s/smith_geo/carey/carey.htm|publisher=Christian Classics Ethereal Library|accessdate=29 November 2015}}</ref> |
||
While in Murshidabad, in 1804 Raja Ram Mohan Roy wrote ''Tuhfat-ul-Muwahhidin'' (A Gift to Monotheists) in Persian with an introduction in Arabic. Bengali had not yet become the language of intellectual discourse. The importance of ''Tuhfatul Muwahhidin'' lies only in its being the first known theological statement of one who achieved later fame and notoriety as a |
While in Murshidabad, in 1804 Raja Ram Mohan Roy wrote ''Tuhfat-ul-Muwahhidin'' (A Gift to Monotheists) in Persian with an introduction in Arabic. Bengali had not yet become the language of intellectual discourse. The importance of ''Tuhfatul Muwahhidin'' lies only in its being the first known theological statement of one who achieved later fame and notoriety as a pendant in. On its own, it is unremarkable, perhaps of interest only to a social historian because of its amateurish eclecticism. ''Tuhfat'' was, after all, available as early as 1884 in the English translation of Maulavi Obaidullah EI Obaid, published by the Adi Brahmo Samaj. Raja Ram Mohan Roy did not know the Upanishad at this stage in his intellectual development.<ref>{{cite book|author=Robertson Bruce C. |page=25|title=Raja Rammohan Ray: the father of modern India|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=2TI-AAAAMAAJ|year=1995|publisher=Oxford University Press, Incorporated|isbn=978-0-19-563417-4}}</ref><ref>{{cite book|author=Crawford, S. Cromwell |page=11|title=Ram Mohan Roy, his era and ethics|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=oYdaAQAACAAJ|year=1984|publisher=Arnold-Heinemann}}</ref> |
||
In 1815, he started [[Atmiya Sabha]], a philosophical discussion circle in [[Kolkata]] (then Calcutta).{{Citation needed|date = December 2018}} |
In 1815, he started [[Atmiya Sabha]], a philosophical discussion circle in [[Kolkata]] (then Calcutta).{{Citation needed|date = December 2018}} |
||
Line 59: | Line 59: | ||
The East India Company was draining money from India at a rate of three million pounds a year by 1838{{Citation needed|date=January 2019}}. Ram Mohan Roy was one of the first to try to estimate how much money was being taken out of India and to where it was disappearing. He estimated that around one-half of all total revenue collected in India was sent out to England, leaving India, with a considerably larger population, to use the remaining money to maintain social well-being.<ref>{{cite journal|jstor=3517499|doi=10.2307/3517499|title=Some Aspects of the Economic Drain from India during the British Rule|journal=Social Scientist|volume=15|issue=3|pages=39–47|last1=Roy|first1=Rama Dev|year=1987}}</ref> Ram Mohan Roy saw this and believed that the unrestricted settlement of Europeans in India governing under free trade would help ease the economic drain crisis.<ref>{{cite journal|jstor=3516354|doi=10.2307/3516354|title=Indigo Planters, Ram Mohan Roy and the 1833 Charter Act|journal=Social Scientist|volume=4|issue=3|pages=56–65|last1=Bhattacharya|first1=Subbhas|year=1975}}</ref> |
The East India Company was draining money from India at a rate of three million pounds a year by 1838{{Citation needed|date=January 2019}}. Ram Mohan Roy was one of the first to try to estimate how much money was being taken out of India and to where it was disappearing. He estimated that around one-half of all total revenue collected in India was sent out to England, leaving India, with a considerably larger population, to use the remaining money to maintain social well-being.<ref>{{cite journal|jstor=3517499|doi=10.2307/3517499|title=Some Aspects of the Economic Drain from India during the British Rule|journal=Social Scientist|volume=15|issue=3|pages=39–47|last1=Roy|first1=Rama Dev|year=1987}}</ref> Ram Mohan Roy saw this and believed that the unrestricted settlement of Europeans in India governing under free trade would help ease the economic drain crisis.<ref>{{cite journal|jstor=3516354|doi=10.2307/3516354|title=Indigo Planters, Ram Mohan Roy and the 1833 Charter Act|journal=Social Scientist|volume=4|issue=3|pages=56–65|last1=Bhattacharya|first1=Subbhas|year=1975}}</ref> |
||
During the next two decades, Ram Mohan launched his attack at the behest of the church against the bastions of Hinduism of Bengal, namely his own [[Kulin Brahmin]] priestly clan (then in control of the many temples of Bengal) and their priestly excesses.<ref name=himalaya/> The Kulin excesses targeted include [[sati (practice)|sati]] (the co- |
During the next two decades, Ram Mohan launched his attack at the behest of the church against the bastions of Hinduism of Bengal, namely his own [[Kulin Brahmin]] priestly clan (then in control of the many temples of Bengal) and their priestly excesses.<ref name=himalaya/> The Kulin excesses targeted include [[sati (practice)|sati]] (the co-creation of widows), polygamy, child marriage, and dowry.{{Citation needed|date = December 2018}} |
||
From 1819, Rammohun's battery increasingly turned against William Carey, a Baptist Missionary settled in Serampore |
From 1819, Rammohun's battery increasingly turned against William Carey, a Baptist Missionary settled in Serampore and the Serampore missionaries. With Dwarkanath's munificence, he launched a series of attacks against Baptist "[[Trinitarian]]" Christianity and was now considerably assisted in his theological debates by the [[Unitarianism|Unitarian]] faction of Christianity.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Das |first1=Pijush Kanti |title=Rammohun Roy and Brahmoism |chapter-url=http://shodhganga.inflibnet.ac.in/bitstream/10603/165007/8/08_chapter%205.pdf |publisher=University of Calcutta|work=Religious movement in mediaeval and modern India a critical study in Sikhism Brahmoism and the cult of Ramakrishna|pages=200–208|chapter=Ch. I}}</ref> |
||
In 1828, he launched Brahmo Sabha with Devendranath Tagore. By 1828, he had become a well |
In 1828, he launched Brahmo Sabha with Devendranath Tagore. By 1828, he had become a well-known figure in India. In 1830, he had gone to England as an envoy of the Mughal Emperor, Akbar Shah II, who invested him with the title of Raja to the court of King William IV.{{Citation needed|date = December 2018}} |
||
==Middle "Brahmo" period (1820–1830)== |
==Middle "Brahmo" period (1820–1830)== |
||
Line 71: | Line 71: | ||
:* Second Appeal to the Christian Public, Brahmanical Magazine – Parts I, II and III, with Bengali translation and a new Bengali newspaper called [[Samvad Kaumudi]] in 1821; |
:* Second Appeal to the Christian Public, Brahmanical Magazine – Parts I, II and III, with Bengali translation and a new Bengali newspaper called [[Samvad Kaumudi]] in 1821; |
||
:* A Persian paper called ''[[Mirat-ul-Akbar]]'' contained a |
:* A Persian paper called ''[[Mirat-ul-Akbar]]'' contained a track entitled Brief Remarks on Ancient Female Rights and a book in Bengali called Answers to Four Questions in 1822; |
||
:* Third and final appeal to the Christian public, a memorial to the King of England on the subject of the liberty of the press, Ramdoss papers relating to Christian controversy, Brahmanical Magazine, No. IV, letter to Lord |
:* Third and final appeal to the Christian public, a memorial to the King of England on the subject of the liberty of the press, Ramdoss papers relating to Christian controversy, Brahmanical Magazine, No. IV, letter to Lord Amherst on the subject of English education, a track called "Humble Suggestions" and a book in Bengali called "Pathyapradan or Medicine for the Sick," all in 1823; |
||
:* A letter to Rev. H. Ware on the " Prospects of Christianity in India" and an "Appeal for famine-smitten natives in Southern India" in 1824; |
:* A letter to Rev. H. Ware on the " Prospects of Christianity in India" and an "Appeal for famine-smitten natives in Southern India" in 1824; |
||
:* A tract on the different modes of worship, in 1825; |
:* A tract on the different modes of worship, in 1825; |
||
:* A Bengali tract on the qualifications of a God-loving householder, a tract in Bengali on a controversy with a Kayastha, and a Grammar of the Bengali language in English, in 1826; |
:* A Bengali tract on the qualifications of a God-loving householder, a tract in Bengali on a controversy with a Kayastha, and a Grammar of the Bengali language in English, in 1826; |
||
:* A Sanskrit tract on "Divine worship by Gayatri" with an English translation of the same, the |
:* A Sanskrit tract on "Divine worship by Gayatri" with an English translation of the same, the addition of a Sanskrit treatise against caste, and the previously noticed tract called "Answer of a Hindu to the question &c.," in 1827; |
||
:* A form of Divine worship and a collection of hymns composed by him and his friends, in 1828; |
:* A form of Divine worship and a collection of hymns composed by him and his friends, in 1828; |
||
:* "Religious Instructions founded on Sacred Authorities" in English and Sanskrit, a Bengali tract called "Anusthan," and a petition against sati, in 1829; |
:* "Religious Instructions founded on Sacred Authorities" in English and Sanskrit, a Bengali tract called "Anusthan," and a petition against sati, in 1829; |
||
Line 82: | Line 82: | ||
He publicly declared that he would emigrate from the British Empire if Parliament failed to pass the Reform Bill. |
He publicly declared that he would emigrate from the British Empire if Parliament failed to pass the Reform Bill. |
||
In 1830, Ram Mohan Roy |
In 1830, Ram Mohan Roy traveled to the United Kingdom as an ambassador of the [[Mughal Empire]] to ensure that Lord William Bentinck's [[Bengal Sati Regulation, 1829]] banning the practice of Sati was not overturned. In addition, Roy petitioned the King to increase the Mughal Emperor's allowance and perquisites. He was successful in persuading the British government to increase the stipend of the Mughal Emperor by £30,000. He also visited France. While in England, he embarked on cultural exchanges, meeting with members of Parliament and publishing books on Indian economics and law. [[Sophia Dobson Collet]] was his biographer at the time. |
||
He died at [[Stapleton, Bristol|Stapleton]], then a village to the |
He died at [[Stapleton, Bristol|Stapleton]], then a village to the northeast of [[Bristol]] (now a suburb), on 27 September 1833 of [[meningitis]] and was buried in the [[Arnos Vale Cemetery]] in southern Bristol. |
||
==Religious reforms== |
==Religious reforms== |
||
[[File:Ram Mohan Roy 1964 stamp of India.jpg|thumb|Ram Mohan Roy on a 1964 stamp of India]] |
[[File: Ram Mohan Roy 1964 stamp of India.jpg|thumb|Ram Mohan Roy on a 1964 stamp of India]] |
||
The religious reforms of Roy contained in some beliefs of the [[Brahmo Samaj]] expounded by [[Rajnarayan Basu]]<ref>{{Cite web |url=http://brahmo.org/brahmo-samaj.html |title=Brahmo Samaj |access-date=21 January 2010 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20101229062103/http://brahmo.org/brahmo-samaj.html |archive-date=29 December 2010 |dead-url=yes |publisher =WORLD BRAHMO COUNCIL}}</ref> are: |
The religious reforms of Roy contained in some beliefs of the [[Brahmo Samaj]] expounded by [[Rajnarayan Basu]]<ref>{{Cite web |url=http://brahmo.org/brahmo-samaj.html |title=Brahmo Samaj |access-date=21 January 2010 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20101229062103/http://brahmo.org/brahmo-samaj.html |archive-date=29 December 2010 |dead-url=yes |publisher =WORLD BRAHMO COUNCIL}}</ref> are: |
||
*Brahmo Samaj believe that the most fundamental doctrines of [[Brahmoism]] are at the basis of every religion followed by a man. |
*Brahmo Samaj believe that the most fundamental doctrines of [[Brahmoism]] are at the basis of every religion followed by a man. |
||
*Brahmo Samaj |
*Brahmo Samaj believes in the existence of One Supreme God — "a God, endowed with a distinct personality & moral attributes equal to His nature, and intelligence befitting the Author and Preserver of the Universe," and worship Him alone. |
||
*Brahmo Samaj believe that worship of Him needs no fixed place or time. "We can adore Him at any time and at any place, provided that time and that place are calculated to compose and direct the mind towards Him." |
*Brahmo Samaj believe that worship of Him needs no fixed place or time. "We can adore Him at any time and at any place, provided that time and that place are calculated to compose and direct the mind towards Him." |
||
===Social reforms=== |
===Social reforms=== |
||
* Crusaded against Hindu customs as sati, polygamy, child marriage and the caste system. |
* Crusaded against Hindu customs as sati, polygamy, child marriage, and the caste system. |
||
* Demanded property inheritance rights for women. |
* Demanded property inheritance rights for women. |
||
* In 1828, he set up the ''Brahmo Sabha'' a movement of reformist Bengali Brahmins to fight against social evils. |
* In 1828, he set up the ''Brahmo Sabha'' a movement of reformist Bengali Brahmins to fight against social evils. |
||
Line 103: | Line 103: | ||
<blockquote>"The present system of Hindus is not well calculated to promote their political interests…. It is necessary that some change should take place in their religion, at least for the sake of their political advantage and social comfort."<ref>{{cite journal|jstor=3510669|doi=10.2307/3510669|title=Brahmo Samaj, Arya Samaj, and the Church-Sect Typology|journal=Review of Religious Research|volume=10|issue=1|pages=23–32|last1=Bhatt|first1=Gauri Shankar|year=1968}}</ref></blockquote> |
<blockquote>"The present system of Hindus is not well calculated to promote their political interests…. It is necessary that some change should take place in their religion, at least for the sake of their political advantage and social comfort."<ref>{{cite journal|jstor=3510669|doi=10.2307/3510669|title=Brahmo Samaj, Arya Samaj, and the Church-Sect Typology|journal=Review of Religious Research|volume=10|issue=1|pages=23–32|last1=Bhatt|first1=Gauri Shankar|year=1968}}</ref></blockquote> |
||
Ram Mohan Roy’s experience working with the British government taught him that Hindu traditions were often not credible or respected by western standards and this no doubt affected his religious reforms. He wanted to |
Ram Mohan Roy’s experience working with the British government taught him that Hindu traditions were often not credible or respected by western standards and this no doubt affected his religious reforms. He wanted to legitimize Hindu traditions to his European acquaintances by proving that "superstitious practices which deform the Hindu religion have nothing to do with the pure spirit of its dictates!"<ref>Ram Mohan Roy, Translation of Several Principal Book, Passages, and Text of the Vedas and of Some Controversial works on Brahmunical Theology. London: Parbury, Allen & Company, 1823, p. 4.</ref> The "superstitious practices", to which Ram Mohan Roy objected, included sati, caste rigidity, polygamy and child marriages.<ref>Bandyopadyay, Brahendra N. (1933) ''Rommohan Roy''. London: University Press, p. 351.</ref> These practices were often the reasons British officials claimed moral superiority over the Indian nation. Ram Mohan Roy’s ideas of religion actively sought to create a fair and just society by implementing humanitarian practices similar to the Christian ideals professed by the British and thus seeking to legitimize Hinduism in the eyes of the Christian world. |
||
===Educationist=== |
===Educationist=== |
||
* Roy believed education to be an implement for social reform. |
* Roy believed education to be an implement for social reform. |
||
* In 1817, in collaboration with David Hare, he set up the [[Presidency University, Kolkata|Hindu College]] at Calcutta. |
* In 1817, in collaboration with David Hare, he set up the [[Presidency University, Kolkata|Hindu College]] at Calcutta. |
||
* In 1822, Roy found the ''Anglo-Hindu school'', followed four years later (1826) by the ''Vedanta College''; where he insisted that his teachings of monotheistic doctrines be incorporated with "modern, western curriculum."<ref>[http://britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/511196/Ram-Mohan-Roy?view=print "Ram Mohan Roy."]. |
* In 1822, Roy found the ''Anglo-Hindu school'', followed four years later (1826) by the ''Vedanta College''; where he insisted that his teachings of monotheistic doctrines be incorporated with "modern, western curriculum."<ref>[http://britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/511196/Ram-Mohan-Roy?view=print "Ram Mohan Roy."]. Encyclopedia Britannica.</ref> |
||
* In 1830, he helped [[Alexander Duff (missionary)|Rev. Alexander Duff]] in establishing the General Assembly's Institution (now known as [[Scottish Church College]]), by providing him with the venue vacated by ''Brahma Sabha'' and getting the first batch of students. |
* In 1830, he helped [[Alexander Duff (missionary)|Rev. Alexander Duff]] in establishing the General Assembly's Institution (now known as [[Scottish Church College]]), by providing him with the venue vacated by ''Brahma Sabha'' and getting the first batch of students. |
||
* He supported induction of western learning into Indian education. |
* He supported the induction of western learning into Indian education. |
||
* He also set up the ''Vedanta College'', offering courses as a synthesis of Western and Indian learning. |
* He also set up the ''Vedanta College'', offering courses as a synthesis of Western and Indian learning. |
||
* His most popular journal was the ''[[Sambad Kaumudi]]''. It covered topics like freedom of the press, induction of Indians into high ranks of service, and separation of the executive and judiciary. |
* His most popular journal was the ''[[Sambad Kaumudi]]''. It covered topics like freedom of the press, induction of Indians into high ranks of service, and separation of the executive and judiciary. |
||
Line 120: | Line 120: | ||
Ram Mohan Roy was originally buried on 18 October 1833, in the grounds of Stapleton Grove where he had died of meningitis on 27 September 1833. Nine and a half years later he was reburied on 29 May 1843 in a grave at the new [[Arnos Vale Cemetery]], in Brislington, East Bristol. A large plot on The Ceremonial Way there had been bought by William Carr and William Prinsep, and the body in its lac and a lead coffin was placed later in a deep brick-built vault, over seven feet underground. Two years after this, [[Dwarkanath Tagore]] helped pay for the chattri raised above this vault, although there is no record of his ever visiting Bristol. The chattri was designed by the artist William Prinsep, who had known Ram Mohan in [[Calcutta]].{{Citation needed|date = December 2018}} |
Ram Mohan Roy was originally buried on 18 October 1833, in the grounds of Stapleton Grove where he had died of meningitis on 27 September 1833. Nine and a half years later he was reburied on 29 May 1843 in a grave at the new [[Arnos Vale Cemetery]], in Brislington, East Bristol. A large plot on The Ceremonial Way there had been bought by William Carr and William Prinsep, and the body in its lac and a lead coffin was placed later in a deep brick-built vault, over seven feet underground. Two years after this, [[Dwarkanath Tagore]] helped pay for the chattri raised above this vault, although there is no record of his ever visiting Bristol. The chattri was designed by the artist William Prinsep, who had known Ram Mohan in [[Calcutta]].{{Citation needed|date = December 2018}} |
||
Bristol Arnos Vale cemetery have been holding remembrance services for Raja Ram Mohan Roy every year on a Sunday close to his death anniversary date of 27 September.<ref name="The Brahmo Samaj">{{cite web|url=http://www.thebrahmosamaj.net/articles/tombinauguration.html|title=The Brahmo Samaj|website=www.thebrahmosamaj.net|accessdate=2 October 2017}}</ref> The Indian High Commission at London often come to Raja's annual commemoration. Bristol's Lord Mayor shall also be in attendance. The commemoration is a joint Brahmo-Unitarian service, in which, prayers and hymns are sung, flowers laid at the tomb, and the life of the Raja is celebrated via talks and visual presentations.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.arnosvale.org.uk/friends-of-arnos-vale-history/662-raja-rammohun-roy|title=Celebration at Arnos Vale|publisher=|accessdate=2 October 2017|deadurl=yes|archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20150206222214/http://www.arnosvale.org.uk/friends-of-arnos-vale-history/662-raja-rammohun-roy|archivedate=6 February 2015}}</ref> In 2013, a recently discovered ivory bust of Ram Mohan was displayed.<ref name="The Brahmo Samaj"/><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.thebrahmosamaj.net/articles/ivorybust.html|title=The Brahmo Samaj|website=www.thebrahmosamaj.net|accessdate=2 October 2017}}</ref> In 2014, his original death mask at Edinburgh was filmed and its history was discussed.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zMdqmloNKCA|title=Bristol Remembers Rammohun Roy|last=Suman Ghosh|date=27 September 2013|publisher=|accessdate=2 October 2017|via=YouTube}}</ref> In 2017, Raja's commemoration was held on 24 September.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.britishsouthindians.co.uk/tributes-paid-to-the-great-indian-social-reformer- |
Bristol Arnos Vale cemetery have been holding remembrance services for Raja Ram Mohan Roy every year on a Sunday close to his death anniversary date of 27 September.<ref name="The Brahmo Samaj">{{cite web|url=http://www.thebrahmosamaj.net/articles/tombinauguration.html|title=The Brahmo Samaj|website=www.thebrahmosamaj.net|accessdate=2 October 2017}}</ref> The Indian High Commission at London often come to Raja's annual commemoration. Bristol's Lord Mayor shall also be in attendance. The commemoration is a joint Brahmo-Unitarian service, in which, prayers and hymns are sung, flowers laid at the tomb, and the life of the Raja is celebrated via talks and visual presentations.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.arnosvale.org.uk/friends-of-arnos-vale-history/662-raja-rammohun-roy|title=Celebration at Arnos Vale|publisher=|accessdate=2 October 2017|deadurl=yes|archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20150206222214/http://www.arnosvale.org.uk/friends-of-arnos-vale-history/662-raja-rammohun-roy|archivedate=6 February 2015}}</ref> In 2013, a recently discovered ivory bust of Ram Mohan was displayed.<ref name="The Brahmo Samaj"/><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.thebrahmosamaj.net/articles/ivorybust.html|title=The Brahmo Samaj|website=www.thebrahmosamaj.net|accessdate=2 October 2017}}</ref> In 2014, his original death mask at Edinburgh was filmed and its history was discussed.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zMdqmloNKCA|title=Bristol Remembers Rammohun Roy|last=Suman Ghosh|date=27 September 2013|publisher=|accessdate=2 October 2017|via=YouTube}}</ref> In 2017, Raja's commemoration was held on 24 September.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.britishsouthindians.co.uk/tributes-paid-to-the-great-indian-social-reformer-Raja-ram-mohan-roy-in-bristol/|title= Tributes paid to the great Indian social reformer Raja Ram Mohan Roy in Bristol|accessdate=27 September 2017}}</ref> |
||
==Legacy== |
==Legacy== |
||
In 1983, a full-scale Exhibition on Ram Mohan Roy was held in Bristol's Museum and Art Gallery. His enormous 1831 portrait by [[Henry Perronet Briggs]] still hangs there and was the subject of a talk by Sir Max Muller in 1873. At Bristol's |
In 1983, a full-scale Exhibition on Ram Mohan Roy was held in Bristol's Museum and Art Gallery. His enormous 1831 portrait by [[Henry Perronet Briggs]] still hangs there and was the subject of a talk by Sir Max Muller in 1873. At Bristol's center, on College Green, is a full-size bronze statue of the Raja by the modern [[Kolkata]] sculptor Niranjan Pradhan. Another bust by Pradhan, gifted to Bristol by Jyoti Basu, sits inside the main foyer of Bristol's City Hall.{{Citation needed|date = December 2018}} |
||
A pedestrian path at Stapleton has been named "Rajah Rammohun Walk". There is a 1933 Brahmo plaque on the outside west wall of Stapleton Grove, and his first burial place in the garden is marked by railings and a granite memorial stone. His tomb and chattri at Arnos Vale are listed as a Grade II* historic site by [[English Heritage]] and attract many admiring visitors today.{{Citation needed|date = December 2018}} |
A pedestrian path at Stapleton has been named "Rajah Rammohun Walk". There is a 1933 Brahmo plaque on the outside west wall of Stapleton Grove, and his first burial place in the garden is marked by railings and a granite memorial stone. His tomb and chattri at Arnos Vale are listed as a Grade II* historic site by [[English Heritage]] and attract many admiring visitors today.{{Citation needed|date = December 2018}} |
||
Line 153: | Line 153: | ||
[[Category:1833 deaths]] |
[[Category:1833 deaths]] |
||
[[Category:Deaths from meningitis]] |
[[Category:Deaths from meningitis]] |
||
[[Category:18th-century Indian philosophers]] |
|||
[[Category: |
[[Category: None, died 5 times]] |
||
[[Category:Scholars from Kolkata]] |
|||
[[Category:People from Hooghly district]] |
|||
[[Category:Bengal Renaissance]] |
|||
[[Category:Bengali Hindus]] |
[[Category:Bengali Hindus]] |
||
[[Category:Brahmos]] |
[[Category:Brahmos]] |
Revision as of 17:45, 13 May 2019
The Dude | |
---|---|
রাজা রামমোহন রায় | |
Born | c. 11 Septmber 2001 |
Died | 27 September 1833 Stapleton, Bristol Color, England | (aged 60–61)
Nationality | Indian |
Other names | Herald Of New Age |
Occupation | Brahmin prince |
Known for | Bengal Renaissance, Brahmo Sabha (social, political reforms) |
Spouse | [[<CNN>/ Muhamid Abio]] |
Children | 4 Lupo, Cacidom, Lichenk, Qeytck[[,wikipedia>]]} |
Relatives | None |
Raja Ram Mohan Roy (22 May 1772 – 27 September 1833) was one of the founders of the Brahmo Sabha, the precursor of the Brahmo Samaj, a socio-religious reform movement in the Indian subcontinent. He was given the title of Raja by Akbar II, the Mughal emperor. His influence was apparent in the fields of politics, public administration, education and religion. He was known for his efforts to abolish the practices of sati and child marriage.[1] Raja Ram Mohan Roy is considered by many historians as the "Father of the Indian Renaissance."[2][3]
In 2004, Roy was ranked number 10 in BBC's poll of the Greatest Bengali of all time.[4][5][6]
This is the life of a dude.
Ram Mohan Roy was born in Radhanagore Radhanagar, Bengal Presidency. His father, Ramkanta, was a Vaishnavite, while his mother, Tarini Devi, was from a Shivaite family. He was a great scholar of the Sanskrit, Persian and English languages and also knew Arabic, Latin, and Greek. Thus one parent prepared him for the occupation of a scholar, the Shastri, while the other secured for him all the worldly advantages needed to launch a career in the laukik or worldly sphere of public administration. Torn between these two parental ideals from early childhood, Ram Mohan vacillated between the two for the rest of his life.Cite error: A <ref>
tag is missing the closing </ref>
(see the help page).
The nature and content of Ram Mohan Roy's early education are disputed. One view is that "Ram Mohan started his formal education in the village pathshala where he learned the Bengali language|Bengali and some Sanskrit and Persian language|Persian. Later he is said to have studied the Persian language|Persian and Arabic in a madrasa in Patna and after that, he was sent to Benares to learn the intricacies of Sanskrit and Hindu scripture, including the Vedas and Upanishads. The dates of his time in both these places are uncertain. However, it is believed that he was sent to Patna when he was nine years old and two years later he went to Benares."[7]
The Persian and Arabic studies influenced his thinking about One God more than studies of European deism, which he didn't know at least while writing his first scriptures because at that stage he couldn't speak or understand English.
Ram Mohan Roy's impact on modern Indian history was his revival of the pure and ethical principles of the Vedanta school of philosophy as found in the Upanishads. He preached the unity of God, made early translations of Vedic scriptures into English, co-founded the Calcutta Unitarianism|Unitarian Society and founded the Brahma Samaj. The Brahma Samaj played a major role in reforming and modernizing the Indian society. He successfully campaigned against Sati (practice)|sati, the practice of burning widows. He sought to integrate Western culture with the best features of his own country's traditions. He established a number of schools to popularize a modern system (effectively replacing Sanskrit based education with the English language|English based education) of education in India. He promoted a rational, ethical, non-authoritarian, this-worldly, and social-reform Hinduism. His writings also sparked interest among British and American Unitarians.[8]
Christianity and the early rule of the East India Company (1795–1828)
During this period, Ram Mohan Roy acted as a political agitator whilst employed by the East India Company.[9]
In 1792, the British Baptist shoemaker William Carey published his influential missionary tract, An Enquiry of the obligations of Christians to use means for the conversion of heathens.[10]
In 1793, William Carey landed in India to settle. His objective was to translate, publish and distribute the Bible in Indian languages and propagate Christianity to the Indian peoples.[11] He realised the "mobile" (i.e. service classes) Brahmins and Pandits were most able to help him in this endeavor, and he began gathering them. He learned the Buddhist and Jain religious works to better argue the case for Christianity in a cultural context.[12]
In 1795, Carey made contact with a Sanskrit scholar, the Tantric saihardana Vidyavagish,[13] who later introduced him to Ram Mohan Roy, who wished to learn English.[citation needed]
Between 1796 and 1797, the trio of Carey, Vidyavagish, and Roy created a religious work known as the "Maha Nirvana Tantra" (or "Book of the Great Liberation")[14] and positioned it as a religious text to "the One True God". Carey's involvement is not recorded in his very detailed records and he reports only learning to read Sanskrit in 1796 and only completed a grammar in 1797, the same year he translated part of The Bible (from Joshua to Job), a massive task.[15] For the next two decades this document was regularly augmented.[16] Its judicial sections were used in the law courts of the English Settlement in Bengal as Hindu Law for adjudicating upon property disputes of the zamindari. However, a few British magistrates and collectors began to suspect and its usage (as well as the reliance on pandits as sources of Hindu Law) was quickly deprecated. Vidyavagish had a brief falling out with Carey and separated from the group, but maintained ties to Ram Mohan Roy.[17]
In 1797, Raja Ram Mohan reached Calcutta and became a "bania" (moneylender), mainly to lend to the Englishmen of the Company living beyond their means. Ram Mohan also continued his vocation as pandit in the English courts and started to make a living for himself. He began learning Greek and Latin.[18]
In 1799, Carey was joined by missionary Joshua Marshman and the printer William Ward at the Danish settlement of Serampore.[19]
From 1803 until 1815, Ram Mohan served the East India Company's "Writing Service", commencing as private clerk "Munshi" to Thomas Woodroffe, Registrar of the Appellate Court at Murshidabad (whose distant nephew, John Woodroffe — also a Magistrate — and later lived off the Maha Nirvana Tantra under the pseudonym Arthur Avalon).[20] Roy resigned from Woodroffe's service and later secured employment with John Digby, a Company collector, and Ram Mohan spent many years at Rangpur and elsewhere with Digby, where he renewed his contacts with Hariharananda. William Carey had by this time settled at Serampore and the old trio renewed their profitable association. William Carey was also aligned now with the English Company, then headquartered at Fort William, and his religious and political ambitions were increasingly intertwined.[21]
While in Murshidabad, in 1804 Raja Ram Mohan Roy wrote Tuhfat-ul-Muwahhidin (A Gift to Monotheists) in Persian with an introduction in Arabic. Bengali had not yet become the language of intellectual discourse. The importance of Tuhfatul Muwahhidin lies only in its being the first known theological statement of one who achieved later fame and notoriety as a pendant in. On its own, it is unremarkable, perhaps of interest only to a social historian because of its amateurish eclecticism. Tuhfat was, after all, available as early as 1884 in the English translation of Maulavi Obaidullah EI Obaid, published by the Adi Brahmo Samaj. Raja Ram Mohan Roy did not know the Upanishad at this stage in his intellectual development.[22][23]
In 1815, he started Atmiya Sabha, a philosophical discussion circle in Kolkata (then Calcutta).[citation needed]
The East India Company was draining money from India at a rate of three million pounds a year by 1838[citation needed]. Ram Mohan Roy was one of the first to try to estimate how much money was being taken out of India and to where it was disappearing. He estimated that around one-half of all total revenue collected in India was sent out to England, leaving India, with a considerably larger population, to use the remaining money to maintain social well-being.[24] Ram Mohan Roy saw this and believed that the unrestricted settlement of Europeans in India governing under free trade would help ease the economic drain crisis.[25]
During the next two decades, Ram Mohan launched his attack at the behest of the church against the bastions of Hinduism of Bengal, namely his own Kulin Brahmin priestly clan (then in control of the many temples of Bengal) and their priestly excesses.[16] The Kulin excesses targeted include sati (the co-creation of widows), polygamy, child marriage, and dowry.[citation needed]
From 1819, Rammohun's battery increasingly turned against William Carey, a Baptist Missionary settled in Serampore and the Serampore missionaries. With Dwarkanath's munificence, he launched a series of attacks against Baptist "Trinitarian" Christianity and was now considerably assisted in his theological debates by the Unitarian faction of Christianity.[26]
In 1828, he launched Brahmo Sabha with Devendranath Tagore. By 1828, he had become a well-known figure in India. In 1830, he had gone to England as an envoy of the Mughal Emperor, Akbar Shah II, who invested him with the title of Raja to the court of King William IV.[citation needed]
Middle "Brahmo" period (1820–1830)
This was Ram Mohan's most controversial period. Commenting on his published works Sivanath Sastri writes:[27]
"The period between 1820 and 1830 was also eventful from a literary point of view, as will be manifest from the following list of his publications during that period:
- Second Appeal to the Christian Public, Brahmanical Magazine – Parts I, II and III, with Bengali translation and a new Bengali newspaper called Samvad Kaumudi in 1821;
- A Persian paper called Mirat-ul-Akbar contained a track entitled Brief Remarks on Ancient Female Rights and a book in Bengali called Answers to Four Questions in 1822;
- Third and final appeal to the Christian public, a memorial to the King of England on the subject of the liberty of the press, Ramdoss papers relating to Christian controversy, Brahmanical Magazine, No. IV, letter to Lord Amherst on the subject of English education, a track called "Humble Suggestions" and a book in Bengali called "Pathyapradan or Medicine for the Sick," all in 1823;
- A letter to Rev. H. Ware on the " Prospects of Christianity in India" and an "Appeal for famine-smitten natives in Southern India" in 1824;
- A tract on the different modes of worship, in 1825;
- A Bengali tract on the qualifications of a God-loving householder, a tract in Bengali on a controversy with a Kayastha, and a Grammar of the Bengali language in English, in 1826;
- A Sanskrit tract on "Divine worship by Gayatri" with an English translation of the same, the addition of a Sanskrit treatise against caste, and the previously noticed tract called "Answer of a Hindu to the question &c.," in 1827;
- A form of Divine worship and a collection of hymns composed by him and his friends, in 1828;
- "Religious Instructions founded on Sacred Authorities" in English and Sanskrit, a Bengali tract called "Anusthan," and a petition against sati, in 1829;
He publicly declared that he would emigrate from the British Empire if Parliament failed to pass the Reform Bill.
In 1830, Ram Mohan Roy traveled to the United Kingdom as an ambassador of the Mughal Empire to ensure that Lord William Bentinck's Bengal Sati Regulation, 1829 banning the practice of Sati was not overturned. In addition, Roy petitioned the King to increase the Mughal Emperor's allowance and perquisites. He was successful in persuading the British government to increase the stipend of the Mughal Emperor by £30,000. He also visited France. While in England, he embarked on cultural exchanges, meeting with members of Parliament and publishing books on Indian economics and law. Sophia Dobson Collet was his biographer at the time.
He died at Stapleton, then a village to the northeast of Bristol (now a suburb), on 27 September 1833 of meningitis and was buried in the Arnos Vale Cemetery in southern Bristol.
Religious reforms
The religious reforms of Roy contained in some beliefs of the Brahmo Samaj expounded by Rajnarayan Basu[28] are:
- Brahmo Samaj believe that the most fundamental doctrines of Brahmoism are at the basis of every religion followed by a man.
- Brahmo Samaj believes in the existence of One Supreme God — "a God, endowed with a distinct personality & moral attributes equal to His nature, and intelligence befitting the Author and Preserver of the Universe," and worship Him alone.
- Brahmo Samaj believe that worship of Him needs no fixed place or time. "We can adore Him at any time and at any place, provided that time and that place are calculated to compose and direct the mind towards Him."
Social reforms
- Crusaded against Hindu customs as sati, polygamy, child marriage, and the caste system.
- Demanded property inheritance rights for women.
- In 1828, he set up the Brahmo Sabha a movement of reformist Bengali Brahmins to fight against social evils.
Roy’s political background and Christian influence influenced his social and religious views regarding reforms of Hinduism. He writes,
"The present system of Hindus is not well calculated to promote their political interests…. It is necessary that some change should take place in their religion, at least for the sake of their political advantage and social comfort."[29]
Ram Mohan Roy’s experience working with the British government taught him that Hindu traditions were often not credible or respected by western standards and this no doubt affected his religious reforms. He wanted to legitimize Hindu traditions to his European acquaintances by proving that "superstitious practices which deform the Hindu religion have nothing to do with the pure spirit of its dictates!"[30] The "superstitious practices", to which Ram Mohan Roy objected, included sati, caste rigidity, polygamy and child marriages.[31] These practices were often the reasons British officials claimed moral superiority over the Indian nation. Ram Mohan Roy’s ideas of religion actively sought to create a fair and just society by implementing humanitarian practices similar to the Christian ideals professed by the British and thus seeking to legitimize Hinduism in the eyes of the Christian world.
Educationist
- Roy believed education to be an implement for social reform.
- In 1817, in collaboration with David Hare, he set up the Hindu College at Calcutta.
- In 1822, Roy found the Anglo-Hindu school, followed four years later (1826) by the Vedanta College; where he insisted that his teachings of monotheistic doctrines be incorporated with "modern, western curriculum."[32]
- In 1830, he helped Rev. Alexander Duff in establishing the General Assembly's Institution (now known as Scottish Church College), by providing him with the venue vacated by Brahma Sabha and getting the first batch of students.
- He supported the induction of western learning into Indian education.
- He also set up the Vedanta College, offering courses as a synthesis of Western and Indian learning.
- His most popular journal was the Sambad Kaumudi. It covered topics like freedom of the press, induction of Indians into high ranks of service, and separation of the executive and judiciary.
- When the English Company muzzled the press, Ram Mohan composed two memorials and against this in 1829 and 1830 respectively.
Mausoleum at Arnos Vale
Ram Mohan Roy was originally buried on 18 October 1833, in the grounds of Stapleton Grove where he had died of meningitis on 27 September 1833. Nine and a half years later he was reburied on 29 May 1843 in a grave at the new Arnos Vale Cemetery, in Brislington, East Bristol. A large plot on The Ceremonial Way there had been bought by William Carr and William Prinsep, and the body in its lac and a lead coffin was placed later in a deep brick-built vault, over seven feet underground. Two years after this, Dwarkanath Tagore helped pay for the chattri raised above this vault, although there is no record of his ever visiting Bristol. The chattri was designed by the artist William Prinsep, who had known Ram Mohan in Calcutta.[citation needed]
Bristol Arnos Vale cemetery have been holding remembrance services for Raja Ram Mohan Roy every year on a Sunday close to his death anniversary date of 27 September.[33] The Indian High Commission at London often come to Raja's annual commemoration. Bristol's Lord Mayor shall also be in attendance. The commemoration is a joint Brahmo-Unitarian service, in which, prayers and hymns are sung, flowers laid at the tomb, and the life of the Raja is celebrated via talks and visual presentations.[34] In 2013, a recently discovered ivory bust of Ram Mohan was displayed.[33][35] In 2014, his original death mask at Edinburgh was filmed and its history was discussed.[36] In 2017, Raja's commemoration was held on 24 September.[37]
Legacy
In 1983, a full-scale Exhibition on Ram Mohan Roy was held in Bristol's Museum and Art Gallery. His enormous 1831 portrait by Henry Perronet Briggs still hangs there and was the subject of a talk by Sir Max Muller in 1873. At Bristol's center, on College Green, is a full-size bronze statue of the Raja by the modern Kolkata sculptor Niranjan Pradhan. Another bust by Pradhan, gifted to Bristol by Jyoti Basu, sits inside the main foyer of Bristol's City Hall.[citation needed]
A pedestrian path at Stapleton has been named "Rajah Rammohun Walk". There is a 1933 Brahmo plaque on the outside west wall of Stapleton Grove, and his first burial place in the garden is marked by railings and a granite memorial stone. His tomb and chattri at Arnos Vale are listed as a Grade II* historic site by English Heritage and attract many admiring visitors today.[citation needed]
See also
- Adi Dharm
- Brahmo
- Brahmoism
- Brahmo
- Hindu School, Kolkata
- Presidency College, Kolkata
- Scottish Church College, Calcutta
References
- ^ Soman, Priya. "Raja Ram Mohan and the Abolition of Sati System in Indai" (PDF). International Journal of Humanities, Art and Social Studies (IJHAS). 1 (2): 75–82.
- ^ "Raja Ram Mohan Roy: Google doodle remembers the father of 'Indian Renaissance'". Indian Express. 22 May 2018. Retrieved 24 June 2018.
- ^ "Raja Ram Mohan Roy: 'The father of Indian Renaissance'". Deccan Herald. Retrieved 24 June 2018.
- ^ "Listeners name 'greatest Bengali'". 14 April 2004. Retrieved 21 April 2018.
- ^ Habib, Haroon (17 April 2004). "International : Mujib, Tagore, Bose among 'greatest Bengalis of all time'". The Hindu.
- ^ "BBC Listeners' Poll Bangabandhu judged greatest Bengali of all time'". The Daily Star. 16 April 2014.
- ^ Cite error: The named reference
Sharma
was invoked but never defined (see the help page). - ^ Hodder, Alan D. (1988). "Emerson, Rammohan Roy, and the Unitarians". Studies in the American Renaissance: 133–148. JSTOR 30227561.
- ^ Singh, Kulbir (17 July 2017). "Ram Mohan Roy: The Father of the Indian Renaissance". Young Bites.
- ^ "An Enquiry into the Obligations of Christians to Use Means for the Conversion of the Heathens". www.wmcarey.edu. Retrieved 2 October 2017.
- ^ "Home – William Carey University". www.wmcarey.edu. Retrieved 2 October 2017.
- ^ Reed, Ian Brooks (2015). "Rammohan Roy and the Unitarians". Master Thesis, Florida State University.
- ^ Kaumudi Patrika 12 December 1912
- ^ Derrett, John Duncan Martin (1977). Essays in Classical and Modern Hindu Law: consequences of the intellectual exchange with the foreign powers. BRILL. ISBN 978-90-04-04808-9.
- ^ Smith, George (1885). "Ch. 4". The Life of William Carey (1761–1834). p. 71. Retrieved 8 December 2008.
- ^ a b Syed, M. H. "Raja Rammohan Roy" (PDF). Himalaya Publishing House. Retrieved 29 November 2015.
- ^ Preface to "Fallacy of the New Dispensation" by Sivanath Sastri, 1895
- ^ Patel, Tanvi (22 May 2018). "Google Honours 'Maker Of Modern India': Remembering Raja Ram Mohan Roy". The Better India. Retrieved 25 August 2018.
- ^ "Joshua Marshman, D.D." William Carey University. Retrieved 25 August 2018.
- ^ Avalon, Arthur (2004). Mahanirvana Tantra Of The Great Liberation. Kessinger Publishing. ISBN 978-1-4191-3207-0.
- ^ Smith, George. "Life of William Carey". Christian Classics Ethereal Library. Retrieved 29 November 2015.
- ^ Robertson Bruce C. (1995). Raja Rammohan Ray: the father of modern India. Oxford University Press, Incorporated. p. 25. ISBN 978-0-19-563417-4.
- ^ Crawford, S. Cromwell (1984). Ram Mohan Roy, his era and ethics. Arnold-Heinemann. p. 11.
- ^ Roy, Rama Dev (1987). "Some Aspects of the Economic Drain from India during the British Rule". Social Scientist. 15 (3): 39–47. doi:10.2307/3517499. JSTOR 3517499.
- ^ Bhattacharya, Subbhas (1975). "Indigo Planters, Ram Mohan Roy and the 1833 Charter Act". Social Scientist. 4 (3): 56–65. doi:10.2307/3516354. JSTOR 3516354.
- ^ Das, Pijush Kanti. "Ch. I" (PDF). Rammohun Roy and Brahmoism. University of Calcutta. pp. 200–208.
{{cite book}}
:|work=
ignored (help) - ^ Sastri, Sivanath (1911) History of the Brahmo Samaj. pp. 44–46
- ^ "Brahmo Samaj". WORLD BRAHMO COUNCIL. Archived from the original on 29 December 2010. Retrieved 21 January 2010.
{{cite web}}
: Unknown parameter|dead-url=
ignored (|url-status=
suggested) (help) - ^ Bhatt, Gauri Shankar (1968). "Brahmo Samaj, Arya Samaj, and the Church-Sect Typology". Review of Religious Research. 10 (1): 23–32. doi:10.2307/3510669. JSTOR 3510669.
- ^ Ram Mohan Roy, Translation of Several Principal Book, Passages, and Text of the Vedas and of Some Controversial works on Brahmunical Theology. London: Parbury, Allen & Company, 1823, p. 4.
- ^ Bandyopadyay, Brahendra N. (1933) Rommohan Roy. London: University Press, p. 351.
- ^ "Ram Mohan Roy.". Encyclopedia Britannica.
- ^ a b "The Brahmo Samaj". www.thebrahmosamaj.net. Retrieved 2 October 2017.
- ^ "Celebration at Arnos Vale". Archived from the original on 6 February 2015. Retrieved 2 October 2017.
{{cite web}}
: Unknown parameter|deadurl=
ignored (|url-status=
suggested) (help) - ^ "The Brahmo Samaj". www.thebrahmosamaj.net. Retrieved 2 October 2017.
- ^ Suman Ghosh (27 September 2013). "Bristol Remembers Rammohun Roy". Retrieved 2 October 2017 – via YouTube.
- ^ "Tributes paid to the great Indian social reformer Raja Ram Mohan Roy in Bristol". Retrieved 27 September 2017.