Wednesday 15 October 2014

Smart Notes on Modern Indian History Part - 10



SOCIO-RELIGIOUS REFORM MOVEMENTS
·         In the history of modern India, the socio-religious reforms occupy a significant place
·         The spread of liberal ideas of the west provided further stimulus for the emergence of reform movements.
Raja Rammohan Roy and the Brahmo Samaj
1.       Raja Rammohan Roy established the Brahmo Samajat Calcutta in 1828 in order to purify Hinduism and to preach monotheism.
2.       He is considered as the first ‘modern man of India’.
3.       Born in 1772 in the Hooghly district of Bengal
4.       He studied the Bible as well as Hindu and Muslim religious texts
5.       He had excellent command over many languages including English, Sanskrit, Persian, Arabic, French, Latin, Greek and Hebrew.
6.       In 1815, he established the Atmiya Sabha.
7.       Later, it was developed into the Brahmo Sabha in August 1828.
8.       He preached that there is only one God.
9.       He combined the teachings of the Upanishads, the Bible and the Koran in developing unity among the people of different religions.
10.   The work of the Atmiya Sabha was carried on by Maharishi Debendranath Tagore (father of Rabindranath Tagore),
11.   Who renamed it as Brahmo Samaj
12.   Raj Rammohan Roy is most remembered for helping Lord William Bentinck to declare the practice of Sati a punishable offence in 1829.
13.   He also protested against the child marriage and female infanticide.
14.   He felt that the caste system was the greatest hurdle to Indian unity.
15.   He favoured inter-caste marriages.
16.   He himself adopted a Muslim boy
17.   In 1817, he founded the Hindu College (now Presidency College, Calcutta) along with David Hare, a missionary.
18.   Rammohan Roy started the first Bengali weekly Samvad Kaumudi
19.   Edited a Persian weekly Mirat-ul-akhbar.
20.   He stood for the freedom of the press
21.   Rammohan died in Bristol in England in 1833
Henry Vivian Derozio and the Young Bengal Movement
1.       Henry Vivian Derozio was the founder of the Young Bengal Movement.
2.       He was born in Calcutta in 1809 and taught in the Hindu College, Calcutta.
3.       He died of cholera in 1833.
4.       His followers were known as the Derozians and their movement the Young Bengal Movement.
5.       They attacked old traditions and decadent customs.
6.       They also advocated women’s rights and their education.
7.       They founded associations and organized debates against idol worship, casteism and superstitions

Swami Dayanand Saraswathi and the Arya Samaj
1.       The Arya Samaj was founded by Swami Dayanand Saraswathi at Bombay in 1875.
2.       Born in Kathiawar in Gujarat, Swami Dayanand (1824-83) was a scholar, a patriot, a social reformer and a revivalist.
3.       He believed the Vedas were the source of true knowledge.
4.       His motto was “Back to the Vedas”.
5.       He was against idol worship, Child marriage and caste system based on birth.
6.       He encouraged intercaste marriages and widow remarriage
7.       He started the Suddhi movement to bring back those Hindus who had converted to other religions to its fold.
8.       He wrote the book Satyartha Prakash which contains his ideas.
9.       The Arya Samaj, though founded in Bombay, became very powerful in Punjab and spread its influence to other parts of India.
10.   The first Dayanand Anglo-Vedic (DAV) School was founded in 1886 at Lahore.
Prarthana Samaj
1.       The Prarthana Samaj was founded in 1867 in Bombay by Dr. Atmaram Pandurang
2.       It was an off-shoot of Brahmo Samaj
3.       It was a reform movement within Hinduism and concentrated on social reforms like inter-dining, inter-marriage, widow remarriage and uplift of women and depressed classes.
4.       Justice M.G. Ranade and R.G. Bhandarkar joined it in 1870 and infused new strength to it.
5.       Justice Ranade promoted the Deccan Education Society.
Swami Vivekananda and Ramakrishna Mission
1.       The original name of Swami Vivekanandawas Narendranath Dutta (1863-1902)
2.       He became the most famous disciple of Shri Ramakrishna Paramahamsa.
3.       He was born in a prosperous Bengali family of Calcutta and educated in Scottish Church College.
4.       In 1886 Narendranath took the vow of Sanyasa and was given the name, Vivekananda.
5.       He preached Vedantic Philosophy
6.       Swami Vivekananda participated at the Parliament of Religions held in Chicago (USA) in September 1893 and raised the prestige of India and Hinduism very high.
7.       Vivekananda preached the message of strength and self-reliance.
8.       He asked the people to improve the lives of the poor and depressed classes.
9.       He founded the Ramakrishna Mission at Belur in Howrah in 1897.
10.   It is a social service and charitable society.
11.   The objectives of this Mission are providing humanitarian relief and social work through the establishment of schools, colleges, hospitals and orphanages.
Theosophical Society
1.       The Theosophical Society was founded in New York (USA) in 1875 by Madam H.P. Blavatsky, a Russian lady, and Henry Steel Olcott, an American colonel
2.       Their main objectives were to form a universal brotherhood of man without any distinction of race, colour or creed and to promote the study of ancient religions and philosophies.
3.       They arrived in India and established their headquarters at Adyar in Madras in 1882.
4.       Later in 1893, Mrs Annie Besant arrived in India and took over the leadership of the Society after the death of Olcott.
5.       Mrs Annie Besant founded the Central Hindu School along with Madan Mohan Malaviya at Benaras which later developed into the Banaras Hindu University.
Pandit Ishwar Chandra Vidyasagar
1.       Pandit Ishwar Chandra was a great educator, humanist and social reformer
2.       He was born in 1820 in a village in Midnapur, Bengal.
3.       He rose to be the Head Pandit of the Bengali Department of Fort William College.
4.       Vidyasagar founded many schools for girls
5.       He helped J.D. Bethune to establish the Bethune School.
6.       He founded the Metropolitan Institution in Calcutta
7.       He protested against child marriage and favoured widow
8.       Remarriage which was legalised by the Widow Remarriage Act (1856).
9.       It was due to his great support for the spread of education that he was given the title of Vidyasagar.
Jyotiba Phule
1.       Jyotiba Phule belonged to a low caste family in Maharashtra
2.       He waged a life-long struggle against upper caste domination and Brahmanical supremacy.
3.       In 1873 he founded the Satyashodak Samaj to fight against the caste system.
4.       He pioneered the widow remarriage movement in Maharashtra and worked for the education for women.
5.       Jyotiba Phule and his wife established the first girls’ school at Poona in 1851
Muslim Reform Movements
1.       The Muslim reform movements started a little later because they had avoided western education in the beginning.
2.       The first effort was in 1863 when the Muhammad Literary Society was set up in Calcutta
Aligarh Movement
1.       The Aligarh Movement was started by Sir Syed Ahmad Khan (1817-98) for the social and educational advancement of the Muslims in India
2.       In 1866, he started the Mohammadan Educational Conference as a general forum for spreading liberal ideas among the Muslims.
3.       In 1875, he founded a modern school at Aligarh to promote English education among the Muslims.
4.       This had later grown into the Mohammadan Anglo Oriental College and then into the Aligarh Muslim University.
The Deoband School
1.       The orthodox section among the Muslim ulema organised the Deoband Movement.
2.       It was a revivalist movement whose twin objectives were
3.       To propagate among the Muslims the pure teachings of the Koran and the Hadi
4.       To keep alive the spirit of jihad against the foreign rulers.
5.       The new Deoband leader Mahmud-ul-Hasan (1851-1920) sought to impart a political and intellectual content to the religious ideas of the school.

Sikh Reform Movement
1.       Baba Dayal Das founded the Nirankari Movement
2.       He insisted the worship of God as nirankar (formless).
3.       The Namdhari Movement was founded by Baba Ram Singh.
4.       His followers wore white clothes and gave up meat eating.
5.       The Singh Sabhas started in Lahore and Amritsar in 1870 were aimed at reforming the Sikh society.
6.       They helped to set up the Khalsa College at Amritsar in 1892.
7.       They also encouraged Gurmukhi and Punjabi literature.
8.       In 1920, the Akalis started a movement to remove the corrupt Mahants (priests) from the Sikh gurudwaras
9.       Later, the Akalis organised themselves into a political party
Parsi Reform Movement
1.       The Parsi Religious Reform Association was founded at Bombay by Furdunji Naoroji and S.S. Bengalee in 1851.
2.       The Parsi Religious Reform Association was founded at Bombay by Furdunji Naoroji and S.S. Bengalee in 1851.
3.       Naoroji published a monthly journal, Jagat Mithra
Saint Ramalinga
1.       Saint Ramalinga was one of the foremost saints of Tamil Nadu in the nineteenth century.
2.       His divine powers came to be recognised at the early age of eleven.
3.       In 1865 he founded the Samarasa Suddha Sanmargha Sanghafor the promotion of his ideals of establishing a casteless society.
4.       He composed Tiru Arutpa
5.       In 1870 he moved to Mettukuppam, a place three miles away from Vadalur.
6.       There he started constructing the Satya Gnana Sabaiin 1872.
7.       He introduced the principle that God could be worshipped in the form of Light
Self-Respect Movement and Periyar E.V.R.
1.       Periyar E.V. Ramaswamy was a great social reformer. In 1921, during the anti-liquor campaign he cut down 1000 coconut trees in his own farm.
2.       In 1924, he took an active part in the Vaikam Satyagraha
3.       The objective of the Satyagraha was to secure for untouchables the right to use a road near a temple at Vaikom in Kerala.
4.       He started the “Self-Respect Movement”. The aims of the ‘Self -Respect Movement’ were to uplift the Dravidians and to expose the Brahminical tyrany and deceptive methods by which they controlled all spheres of Hindu life
5.       He denounced the caste system, child marriage and enforced widowhood
6.       He himself conducted many marriages without any rituals
7.       Such a marriage was known as “SelfRespect Marriage.
8.       He attacked the laws of Manu, which he called the basis of the entire Hindu social fabric of caste
9.       He founded the Tamil journals Kudiarasu, Puratchi and Viduthalai to propagate his ideals
10.   On 27th June 1970 by the UNESCO organisation praised and adorned with the title “Socrates of South Asia”
MODEL QUESTIONS
Choose the correct answer.
The Brahmo Samaj was established in the year
(a) 1827
b) 1828
c) 1829
(d) 1838
Who among the following started the Aligarh Movement?
(a) Sir Syed Ahmed Khan
 (b) Salimullah Khan
(c) Muhammad Ali Jinnah
(d) Muhammad al Hasan
Satya Gnana Sabai was started a
(a) Madurai
(b) Rameswaram
(c) Vadalur
d) Chidambaram
Match the following.
1. Atmiya Sabha                                   a. Olcott
2. Young Bengal Movement              b. Raja Rammohan Roy
 3. Prarthana Samaj                            c. Baba Dayal
4. Nirankari Movement                     d. Henry Vivian Derozio
5. Thesopical Society                         e. Atmaram Pandurang

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