- Political views of Rabindranath Tagore
This article deals with the Political views of Rabindranath Tagore.
Rabindranath Tagore was a Bengali poet,Brahmo philosopher, and cultural reformer.Politics
Tagore's politics exhibited a marked ambivalence — on the one hand, he denounced European imperialism,Harv|Dutta|Robinson|1997|p=127.] Harv|Dutta|Robinson|1997|p=210.] occasionally voicing full support for Indian nationalists;Harv|Dutta|Robinson|1995|p=304.] on the other hand, he also shunned the
Swadeshi movement , denouncing it in his acrid September 1925 essay "The Cult of the Charka" (an allusion to elements of Gandhism and theNon-Cooperation Movement ).Harv|Dutta|Robinson|1995|p=261.] For example, in reaction to aJuly 22 ,1904 suggestion by the British that Bengal should be partitioned, an upset Tagore took to delivering a lecture — entitled "Swadeshi Samaj" ("The Union Of Our Homeland") — that instead proposed an alternative solution: a self-help based comprehensive reorganization of rural Bengal.Harv|Chakravarty|1961|p=181.] In addition, he ultimately viewed British control of India not as a primary evil, but as a "political symptom of our social disease", urging Indians to accept that "there can be no question of blind revolution, but of steady and purposeful education".Harv|Dutta|Robinson|1997|pp=239-240.]In line with this, Tagore denounced nationalism, deeming it among humanity's greatest problems. "A nation," he wrote, "... is that aspect which a whole population assumes when organized for a mechanical purpose", a purpose often associated with a "selfishness" that "can be a grandly magnified form" of personal selfishness. During his extensive travels, he formed a vision of East-West unity. Subsequently, he was shocked by the rising nationalism found in Germany and other nations prior to the World War II. Tagore thus delivered a series of lectures on nationalism; although well-received throughout much of Europe, they were mostly ignored or criticized in Japan and the United States.
Yet Tagore wrote songs lionizing the
Indian independence movement . On30 May 1919 , he renounced the knighthood that had been conferred upon him by Lord Hardinge in 1915 in protest against theAmritsar massacre , when British soldiers killed at least 379 unarmed civilians.Harv|Dutta|Robinson|1995|pp=215-216.] He was also instrumental in resolving a dispute between Gandhi and Bhimrao Ramji Ambedkar; it involved Ambedkar's insistence on separate electorates for untouchables and Gandhi's announcement — in protest against the concession — of a fast "unto death" beginning on20 September 1932 .Harv|Dutta|Robinson|1995|pp=306-307.] Harv|Dutta|Robinson|1995|p=339.]Tagore also lashed out against the orthodox rote-oriented educational system introduced in India under the Raj.Ref_label|Education|λ|none He lampooned it in his short story "The Parrot's Training", where a bird — which ultimately dies — is caged by tutors and force-fed pages torn from books.Harv|Dutta|Robinson|1997|p=267.] Harv|Tagore|Pal|1918.] These views crystallised in his experimental school at Santiniketan, (শান্তিনিকেতন, "Abode of Peace"), founded in 1901 on the site of a
West Bengal estate inherited from his father. Established in the traditional "brahmacharya " structure — whereby students live under a "guru " in a self-sustaining community — became a magnet for talented scholars, artists, linguists, and musicians from diverse backgrounds. Tagore spent prodigious amounts of energy fundraising for Santiniketan, even contributing all his Nobel Prize monies.Harv|Roy|1977|p=175.] Today, Tagore's school is a Central University under theGovernment of India .ee also
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Rabindranath Tagore
*"Rabindranath Tagore" (film)—a biographical documentary bySatyajit Ray .
*Life of Rabindranath Tagore (1861–1901)
*Life of Rabindranath Tagore (1901–1932)
*Life of Rabindranath Tagore (1932–1941)
*Works of Rabindranath Tagore
*Rabindra Sangeet
*Ekla Chalo Re Notes
λ. Note_label|Education|λ|none Indeed, Tagore stated that “I suppose it was fortunate for me that I never in my life had what is called an education, that is to say, the kind of school and college training which is considered proper for a boy from a respectable family”.Harv|Chakravarty|1961|p=83.]Citations
References
* Harvard reference
Surname1 = Chakravarty
Given1 = A
Year = 1961
Title = A Tagore Reader
Publisher = Beacon Press
ID = ISBN 0-8070-5971-4.
* Harvard reference
Surname1 = Dutta
Given1 = K
Surname2 = Robinson
Given2 = A
Year = 1995
Title = Rabindranath Tagore: The Myriad-Minded Man
Publisher = St. Martin's Press
ID = ISBN 0-312-14030-4.
* Harvard reference
Surname1 = Dutta
Given1 = K (editor)
Surname2 = Robinson
Given2 = A (editor)
Year = 1997
Title = Rabindranath Tagore: An Anthology
Publisher = St. Martin's Press
ID = ISBN 0-312-16973-6.
* Harvard reference
Surname1 = Roy
Given1 = BK
Year = 1977
Title = Rabindranath Tagore: The Man and His Poetry
Publisher = Folcroft Library Editions
ID = ISBN 0-8414-7330-7.
* Harvard reference
Surname1 = Tagore
Given1 = R
Surname2 = Pal
Given2 = PB (translator)
Year = 1918
Title = The Parrot's Tale
Journal = Parabaas
URL = http://www.parabaas.com/translation/database/translations/stories/gRabindranath_parrot.html
Access-date =April 1 ,2006 .
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