- Saroj Nalini Dutt
Saroj Nalini Dutt, MBE, (1887-1925) was a feminist, social reformer, and founder of the Women’s Institute Movement in India.
Background
Saroj Nalini was born in her father’s country house in
Bandel , nearHooghly , in Bengal. Her father,Brajendranath De ,Esq. , was the 8th Indian to become a member of theIndian Civil Service and her mother was Nagendra Nandini.Brajendranath Dé, "Reminiscences of an Indian Member of the Indian Civil Service" (Calcutta, 1929) (partly unpublished memoir); Dé took the open competitive service examination in 1873. He remained in Britain for the next two years as an ICS probationer, coming out to India in 1875. He was inspired by the brilliant batch of 1869, comprisingRomesh Dutt , B.L.Gupta,Surendranath Banerjee , and Sripad Babaji Thakur, all of whom made it to the ICS. Banerjee, the 4th Indian ICS officer was later disqualified from service on grounds of being overage.] She was brought up with her brothers and sisters and shared with them an education under a tutor and a governess.Gurusaday Dutt, "A Woman of India: Being the Life of Saroj Nalini Dutt, Founder of the Women's Institute Movement of India" (Calcutta, 1926).] She was married toGurusaday Dutt ,Esq. , the renowned ICS officer. They had one son called Birendrasaday Dutt,Esq .Work
Saroj Nalini was a well known social reformer, educationist and a pioneer of the movement for the upliftment of women in Bengal. She dedicated herself to the cause of women both inside and outside the home as well as the community. Geraldine Forbes, Women in Modern India (Cambridge, 1996), pp. 28-9.]
C.F.Andrews wrote about her:Rabindranath Tagore wrote about her:Her dedication to the improvement of the condition of Indian women was evident in the great efforts she took to actively participate in the raising of the social status of "zenana" ladies, mostly belonging to the former Presidency of Bengal. She met the "zenana" ladies of the various sub-divisional and district headquarters in Bengal and Bihar, where her husband was posted, and discussed the problems of the "purdah" system with them. She also took the lead in introducing the "charka" (spinning wheel) in village homes. She reorganized the local girls’ school in Birbhum which was called ‘Sir Rivers Thompson School’. She participated in the work of the local Mahila Samities and encouraged their organizers and members to improve the level of teaching in the girl’s schools in the districts. She also set up the Mahila Samities of Pabna and Birbhum.
Positions Held
She became the Secretary of the Indian Section of the Calcutta League of Women’s Workers (later Bengal Presidency Council of Women), Member of the Council of the Nari Siksha Samiti (Women’s Educational League), and Member of the Calcutta Municipal Corporation’s committee which was to make suitable arrangements for allowing women to elect councillors. She was also the Vice President of the Sylhet Union, an association set up for the promotion of female education in the district of Sylhet. For her contribution to the cause of the upliftment of women in Bengal she was awarded an
MBE by the government.References
External links
* [http://www.ngosindia.com/a-z/sndma.htm Saroj Nalini Dutt Memorial Association]
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