Modern Is Ing Bengal Women
Modern Is Ing Bengal Women
Modern Is Ing Bengal Women
to Modernisation, 1849-1905
G. Murshid
This book is a modest study of how a section of English educated Bengali men exposed
their women to the process of modernization during the late nineteenth century and how
women responded to these male efforts. It also gives an evaluation of how far some Bengali
women were modernized as a result of the male initiated reform movement. While a number
of books on how social reformers such as Rammohan Roy, Iswar Chandra Bidyasagar,
Akshay Kumar Datta, Keshab Chandra Sen and Dwarkanth Ganguli contributed to the
elevation of the downtrodden Bengali women have been published, no one has tried to give
an account of how women themselves responded to modernization. This book seeks
particularly to throw some light on this aspect, so long neglected.
I am grateful to the University of Melbourne for giving me a post-doctoral research
fellowship for two years (1978-1980) as well as for giving a grant for securing research
material from overseas.
I appreciate the help of Professor Sibnarayan Ray under whose supervision I did my
research. He helped me in clarifying my ideas.
I am very much indebted to Professor David Kopf, Dr Marian Maddern, Dr Ellen
McEwan and Dr Meredith Borthwick for reading the manuscript and for suggesting
improvements. I am also grateful to James Wise, Patrick Wolfe, Professor Joan Hussein, Ali
Anwar and Pauline Rule for their valuable suggestions.
I am extremely grateful to the Ford Foundation, Dacca, for giving me a generous grant,
which covered almost the entire cost of publishing the first edition of this book. I am also
grateful to Ms A. Germain for the keen interest she showed in the publication of this book.
First the work of writing my PhD dissertation and then the work of writing this book kept
me considerably away from my wife, Eliza, my daughter, Gargi, and from my son, Panini.
Besides, Eliza helped me in various ways. My indebtedness to my family is indeed hard to
acknowledge properly. My two younger brothers, Dr M. G. Quibria and Dr M.G. Kabir also
helped me in many ways. I am really thankful to them.
Finally I would like to thank the Chaturanga Press and its workers for printing the book in
less than three months. Because it was rather hurriedly printed, there are quite a few printing
mistakes. The index is also inadequate.
2
Contents
Introduction
I "Lead kindly light": The Beginnings of Female Education and Women's Attitudes
Towards it
II Unlatching the Cage: Male Efforts to Free Bengali Women
III In the Wide World: Women's Changing Concept of Freedom
IV The Disputed Image: The Figure of Women in Society
V In Their Master's Footsteps: The Dependent Nature of Women's Attitudes to Social
Reform
Conclusion
Appendices
a. Modernization of Bengali Women and the Toga Family
b. Bamabodhini Patrika, 1863-1923
c. Bengali Women's Dress
d. A list of Members of the Sakhi Samiti
e. A list of Bengali Women Graduates
f. A list of Bengali Women Writers
Select Bibliography
Index
3
INTRODUCTION
If any one phase of Bengal's history has attracted the particular attention of modern
historians, it is the nineteenth century. The specific area of interest of these historians is the
awakening of Bengal, which includes both the process of modernization that set in possibly
from the beginning of the century1 and the emergence of nationalism, a later phenomenon.2
Whether or not this awakening can be called a "renaissance" is also a point of great debate.
Economic and socio-cultural aspects of nineteenth century Bengal have also been the subject
matter of many studies.3 Because of the pluralistic nature of Bengali society, all these studies
whether on modernization or on the growth of the middle classes,4 have tended to be partial.
In most cases, nineteenth century historiography of Bengal concerns the rise and development
of an educated elite popularly known as the bhadralok.5 This segment, for most part,
belonged in area to the city of Calcutta; in religion, they were Hindus; and by caste, they were
Brahmans, Kayasthas and Baidyas. These three castes constituted only about five percent of
the total population of Bengal.6 The number of Brahmans, Kayasthas and Baidyas residing in
Calcutta was, of course, smaller and did not even constitute one percent of the populations.
Thus despite the fact that it is perhaps the most important part of Bengal's history of that
period, the historiography of the bhadralok is only partial. It is more so since historians of
1. For example see Asiatic Society, Renascent Bengal (Calcutta : Asiatic Society, 1972) ; N.S. Bose, The Indian
Awakening and Bengal ( 3rd ed. ; Calcutta : Firma K. L. Mukhopadhyay,1969) ; K . K. Datta, Renaissance Nationalism and
Social Changes in Modern India (Calcutta Bookland Private Limited.,1965) ; B. Ghosh, Banglar Nabajagriti (Calcutta :
International Publishers, 1948) ; A. C. Gupta (ed.), Studies in the Bengal Renaissance (Jadavpur : National Council of
Education, 1958 ) D. Kopf, British Orientalism and the Bengal Renaissance (Berkeley : University of California Press,
1969) ; D. Kopf. The Brahma Samaj and the Shaping of Modern Indian Mind (Princeton : Princeton University Press ,
1979) ; R. C. Majumdar, A. K. Majumdar & D. K. Ghosh, British Paramountcy and Indian Renaissance (Bombay :
Bharatiya Bidya Bhavan, 1965) ; A. Mukherjee, Reform and Regeneration in Bengal (Calcutta : Rabindra Bharati
University, 1968) ; A. Poddar, Renaissance in Bengal : Search for Identity ( Simla: Indian Institute of Advance Study ,
1977) ; S. Sarkar, Bengal Renaissance and Other Essays (New Delhi : People's Publishing House, 1970).
Besides, such biographical works as S. Sastri's Ramtanu Lahiri O Tatkalin Banga Samaj ( Calcutta : S. K. Lahiri &
Co., 1904); B. Ghosh's Bidyasagar O Bangla Samaj (1st Orient Longman ed.; Calcutta : Orient Longman, 1973) ; and N.
Mukherji's A Bengal Zamindar : Jaykrisna Mukherji of Uttarpara and His Times ( Calcutta : Firma K. L Mukhopadhyay,
1974 ) are also very good documents of the awakening that took place in the nineteenth century.
2. This has been discussed more or less in all the works on the development of Indian politics, especially in the ones
that trace the emergence of nationalism in India. The following works deal in the subject in detail : S. N. Banerjea, A Nation
in the Making ( London : Oxford University Press, 1925) ; L. A. Gordon, Bengal : The Nationalist Movement ( New York :
Columbia University Press, 1974), and B.B. Majumdar , History of Political Thought from Rammohun to Dayanda
(Calcutta: University of Calcutta, 1934).
3. See, for example, A.F. S. Ahmed, Social Ideas and Social Change in Bengal (Leiden : E.J Brill, 1965) ; N.C
Chaudhuri, Bangali Jibane Ramani ( 3rd ed.; Calcutta : Mitra O Ghose, 1971) ; B. Ghose , Banglar Samajik Itihaser Dhara
(Calcutta : Author, 1968) ; R. C. Majumdar, Glimpses of Bengal in the Nineteenth Century (Calcutta : Firma K. L.
Mukhopadhyay, 1960) ; S. Sastri, History of the Brahmo Samaj (2nd ed.; Calcutta : Sadharan Brahmo Samaj,1974) ; and P.
Sinha, Nineteenth century Bengal : Aspects of Social History (Calcutta : Firma K. L. Mukhopadhyay,1965).
4. Books on the development of the Bengali middle classes are few in number. Of these, B. B. Misr' as Indian Middle
Classes: Their Growth in Modern Times ( London : Oxford University Press, 1961) still appears to be the best . B Ghosh's
Banglar Samajik Itihaser Dhara and N. K. Sinha's The Economic History of Bengal ,Vol. 3 (Calcutta : Firma K. L.
Mukhopadhyay, 1970) are also useful.
5. For a comprehensive definition of the term bhadralok see J. H Broomfield, Elite Conflict in a Plural Society,
(Berkeley : University of California Press, 1968, pp. 5-7.
The term has been widely used by A. Seal in his The Emergence of Indian Nationalism (Reprint ; Cambridge:
Cambridge University Press, 1970) and by D. Kopf in his The Brama Samaj and the Shaping of Modern Indian Mind.
In the present work , I used the term to mean educated middle class including Bengali speaking Muslims.
6. Report on the Census of India, 1901, Vol. pt. 1 ( Calcutta : Bengal Secretariat Press, 1902) , p. 459.
4
Bengal have completely ignored one half of the bahadralok - their women. It has been
considered important to study the role of women in the changing Bengali society for a better
understanding of Bengal's awakening.
The recent studies of Bengali women, based mostly on secondary sources and perfunctory
in nature, a number of which were done by women, record some important events that took
placed among Bengali women during the nineteenth and twentieth centuries.7 These studies
show how and when female education was introduced and gradually accepted in Bengal,
when the female BA or MB came out from the Calcutta University, when women started to
publish, when women's seclusion was broken and such other things. To have brought to light
these developments, for so long unknown, is certainly a significant step towards the
understanding of the history of Bengali women. However, like the male historians, the female
historians also treated these developments separately, as though they took place outside the
general historical scene and neither influenced the male-defined world nor were influenced
by it. Besides some very important questions such as how the roles and status of women
changed, how their attitudes towards the institution of marriage were being increasingly
based on new values, and how the growth of the individuality and personal autonomy
affected the relationship between man and woman in the context of the family remained
unasked. However it is difficult, if not impossible, to understand the socio-cultural history of
nineteenth century Bengal without the knowledge of how men first initiated, and then, seeing
that women were becoming less subordinate and orthodox, reacted against the modernization
of women. Above all, one has also to know how women themselves responded to the process
of modernization and how their self-perception became transformed.
The purpose of this book is to assess the impact of modernization on Bengali women as
part of the modernization of Bengal. Whether or not women, locked up in the zinana , were
satisfied with their very inferior position in the family and considered their lives meaningful
with their social, and work roles, it was the concern of a section of English-educated men to
give to their women some education and thereby modernize them, because they found it
impossible either to advance their society or to fulfill their own lives without uplifting their
women. They therefore launched a movement, which at once aimed to elevate their women
and to enrich their own lives. By the end of the nineteenth century, this movement coupled
with other aspects of social change, brought about a considerable transformation of the roles
and status of women as well as of their self-perception. How a male-initiated movement, is
an area of interest that this study points to. How partly owing to the change in women's
behaviour patterns and values and partly owing to the emergence of nationalism, men reacted
and even became hostile to the movement they themselves had started is also considered.
However, the focus of the study is on how women with different social and familial
backgrounds responded differently to the process of modernization.
The term" modernization" as used in this book might seem unsatisfactory to some.
Definitions of modernization as given by different social scientists are dissimilar; no two
definitions carry the same meaning. In Modernization: The Dynamics of Growth (edited by
M. Wiener), for instance, C. Black, D. McClelland, E. Shils, A. Inkeles and other social
scientists give widely different definitions of and look from different angles at modernization.
7. These studies include J.C Bagal's Women's Education In Eastern India (Calcutta : World Press, 1956) and Jatiya
Andolane Banganari (Calcutta : Bishva Bharati, 1954); B.N. Bandyopadhyay's Banga Sahitye Nari (Calcutta : Bishva
Bharati, 1951) and Samayikpatra Sampadane Banga Nari (Calcutta : Bishva Bharati, 1951) ; U. Chakravarty's Condition of
Bengali Women Around the Second Half of the Nineteenth Century (Calcutta: Author, 1963) ; C. Deb's Thakurbarir Andar
Mahal (2nd Print ; Calcutta : Ananda Publishers, 1980) ; P. C. Ganguli's Banglar Nari Jagaran (Calcutta : S.B.
Samaj,1946) ; M. Roy's Bengali Women (Chicago : University Press , 1975 ) ; S. Sen Gupta's A Study of Women in Bengal
(Calcutta : Indian Publications, 1970) ; and M. M. Urquhart's Women of Bengal (London : Y.M.C.A., 1925).
5
While to Cyril Black the growth of new knowledge and its application to human affairs are
the most significant features of modernization, to D. McClelland they are self-reliance and an
achievement orientation. Edward Shills attaches more value to the development of skills and
to a spirit of creativity. Alex Inkeles finds the following characteristics common in all
modern men: 1. disposition to accept new ideas and try new methods; 2. a readiness to
express opinion; 3.a time sense that makes men more interested in the present and future than
the past ; 4. a better sense of punctuality; 5. a greater concern for planning, organization, and
efficiency; 6. a tendency to see the world as calculable; 7. a faith in science and technology;
and 8. a belief in distributive justice. Moreover, the concept of modernization, for example,
of an economist and that of an educationist differs widely. However, I have used the term to
describe the change the women of bhadralok families experienced during the nineteenth and
twentieth centuries.
The change that these women underwent appears to constitute modernization at least
according to the definition given by Inkeles. Whether or not other social scientists would call
this change modernization in the strict sense of the term, the extent of change was
considerable. Women in general as described in early nineteenth century Bengali literature
and press accounts, and some individual women of the early twentieth century are so different
in their lifestyles, behaviour patterns, values and self-perception that it is hard to comprehend
the change. In education and accomplishments, in her attitudes towards her husband, in-laws
and family, in work roles and social activities, the modern woman had moved quite a distance
from the traditional woman. That she had redefined her life in the light of new ideas, and that
she had an opinion of her own which she was ready to express separated her from tradition. I
have used the word " modernization" to describe this change.
The term "emancipation" did not seem to me appropriate; because whatever meaning it
originally carried, it now refers to a kind of modernization of women that Bengali women had
not reached early in the present century. It is doubtful if they have reached that stage even
now; although there may be a handful of Bengali women who can be called emancipated. To
some feminists "liberation" means even more radical change. Despite their long exposure to
modernization, educated Bengali women are still quite traditional in some respects. For
example, they are not sexually "liberated", and most of them would not be aware of such a
concept. Premarital and extramarital sex is still regarded as extremely exceptional. In married
life, a woman probably remains satisfied with her sexual experiences irrespective of quality
and quantity; in any case, she would neither complain to any one nor seek satisfaction
elsewhere. Most probably she would not even know of a higher level of sexual experience.
Therefore, she is not fully aware of sexual rights, let alone the idea of sexual liberation.
Similarly although she has social, legal and political rights theoretically on a par with men,
she would seldom exercise them. Therefore, both ''emancipation" and "liberation" seemed
unsatisfactory to me to describe the kind of change Bengali women had undergone; I chose "
modernization" instead, because it is a relative term and has a wider connotation.
Ancient Sanskrit sources suggest that some Brahman and Kshatriya women were
educated. Besides, there is nothing against educating women in Hindu scriptures.
Nevertheless, female education was considered forbidden during the eighteenth and early
nineteenth centuries, if not during earlier centuries as well. Although a handful of English
educated bhadralok started to educate their women privately in the 1830s and 1840s, it was
not until 1849 that the first school for girls belonging to bhadralok families was established.
However, it took quite a while before the bhadralok decided to break female seclusion and
send their daughters to school. Therefore women's writings in any significant number did not
come out until the 1870s. The women who published during the 1860s were mostly educated
at home. Extremely shy and diffident, these women would not express their opinions, not to
6
speak of publishing articles. However, Bamabodhini Patrika (1863-1923), Abala-bandhab
(1869-1873), Banga Mahila (1875-1877), Bharati (1877-1926) and such other periodicals,
which had regular sections for women's writings, encouraged these women to publish their
writings. Apart from this, there were exceptions, like that of Kailasbasini Debi, whose
immediate inspiration was her husband, a publisher and printer.
Except through secondary sources, it was not known what attitudes Bengali women had
towards their position in the family and society during the first half of the nineteenth century
and how they responded to the bhadralok efforts to elevate them until their writings started to
come out. However, it is not clear how far the opinions expressed in these writings were
genuinely their own. Even if they wrote on social problems, they did not expose either their
private life or their own views. In any case, these writings of women were highly influenced
by male-defined values. However, as time passed, they acquired more self-confidence and
expressed some of their genuine views. Their attitudinal and value changes are to some
extent reflected in their later writings.
Only a small number of studies have so far been published on nineteenth century Bengali
women. These are mostly accounts of what men such as Rammohan Roy, Gouramohan
Bidyalankar, Ishwar Chandra Bidyasagar, Akshay Kumar Datta, Pearichand Mitra, J. E. D.
Bethune and Dwarkanath Ganguli did for the introduction and expansion of female
education. Patchy accounts are also available on major women writers in some of these
studies. It is not known why these accounts are based primarily on secondary sources, and
why women's writings have not been explored. However, to find out women's response to the
process of modernization, I have had naturally to rely on women's writings, published during
the period under review, a substantial portion of which I have brought to light.
If the writings of these women offered me a better view of their roles and status and
particularly their self-perception, they imposed a limitation as well. The periodicals
mentioned above and the women who wrote in them were predominantly Brahmo in
character. While editors of Bamabodhini Patrika, Abala-bandhab and Paricharika as well as
those of later Bharati, Bharati O Balak and Antapur regularly initiated Brahmos, the editor of
Banga Mahila, Bhuban Mohan Sarkar, was Brahmo-influenced. As for the women who
published in these periodicals, they were mostly Brahmos or English educated Hindus such as
Krisnabhabini Das, who came into close contact with the Brahmos. Thus this book is actually
a study of women of bhadralok families, especially Brahmos. The views of some traditional
Hindu women and a few Muslim women such as Taherannessa and Rokeya Sakhawat
Hossein have been included and evaluated, nevertheless this book represents the
transformation of a small segment of Bengali women, even less than one percent. However,
as a wider section of women were exposed to modernization in the twentieth century, they
followed the examples of and modelled their lives after the earlier women. The nature of their
modernization is not significantly different. Therefore, despite its limitations, this book might
help to throw light on evaluation of a much bigger section of Bengali women.
In chapter 1, I trace the growth of a new consciousness regarding women and the family
among the bhadralok. Led by this consciousness, the bhadralok introduced female education,
which they considered a precondition of women's modernization. How this gave rise to a
conflict between tradition and modernism and was reflected in the attitudes of women are
also discussed in this chapter.
Chapters 2 and 3 show how men, as the second step towards elevating women's
condition, uncaged women from the zenana and later encouraged them to involve themselves
in social activities. They also allowed a small number of women to play an economic role.
These efforts were even more strongly resisted by traditional society. It was thought that
women were losing all their womanly qualities as a result of their exposure to the process of
7
modernization, which, in the opinion of traditionalists, was nothing but Westernisation. As
seclusion became less rigorous and as they could now take part in roles outside the four walls
of the zenana, women, for the first time, got the taste of limited "emancipation". In Chapter 4,
I further analyse how women's status in the family was elevated and how their work and
social roles as well as their self-perception underwent significant change.
In chapter 5, women's response to the social reform movement is investigated. Since
nineteenth century social reform movement was both the cause and effect of modernization,
women's response to modernization as a whole cannot be determined without evaluating their
attitudes to the social reform movement. How with the emergence of nationalism the reform
movement soon ebbed away and how this adversely affected the cause of women is also
shown in this chapter. Moreover, in all the chapters the limitation of the male-initiated
movement for the elevation of women, particularly how men reacted to women's
emancipation after a certain degree, are discussed. Finally, I analyse how, despite all
opposition, women continued to modernize, slowly but surely.
8
CHAPTER ONE
“Lead kindly light”: The beginnings of female education and
women's attitudes towards it
For long before the advent of the English, Bengal had been under foreign rules. If British
rule had any novelty, therefore, it was not in its alien character, but in the ideas, which it
brought with it. The same Bengal, which apparently underwent little or no change and upheld
its medieval character during the five and a half centuries of Muslim rule, suddenly
responded positively to these modernizing ideas. The impact of the West brought about not
vitalization alone, but also a significant change in the very attitudes of its middle class
educated elite, or the bhadralok. These people redefined their deep-rooted values as well as
their hopes and aspirations in the light of Western liberalism and rationalism.
The discussion below shows how a new consciousness regarding women and the family
emerged among the bhadralok and how they later tried to modernize their women by giving
them some education. It also shows how women responded to male efforts to educate them
and how their values, attitudes and even self-perception were modified.
9
culture, being the culture of the rulers, was the dominant one, profoundly affected some of
the values that Bengalis had maintained for centuries.3
During the period under review, Bengali women occupied a very inferior social position.
In his second pamphlet on suttee, published in 1819, Rammohan Roy observed that a woman
was considered to be no more than a useful creature who could be at once a cook, a sexual
partner and a faithful housekeeper.4 That a woman was inferior to a man was a popular belief,
at that time, not only in India, but all over the world. As late as 1845, an official report,
published in Russia, thus defined women's subordinate status:
Woman, as a lower creation appointed by nature to be dependent on others, must know that she is not fated
to rule but to submit herself to her husband and that only through strict fulfillment of her responsibilities to
her family can she assume her happiness and gain love and respect both within the family circle and
without.5
The status of women in Bengal, as defined by men, was similar if not inferior to that of
women in Russia.
A handful of Bengali women were exceptions to the general rule of female illiteracy.
These include the few middle-class childless widows who learnt how to read in order to read
religious literature, and a few zamindars who learnt how to keep accounts and manage their
estates.6 Men did not recognize the need to educate women. Worse still, men held an
extremely poor opinion of women maintaining that women were devoid of all intellectual
abilities and could never be educated.7 If popular male opinion in England, at that time was
not so severe, some men still held that women were intellectually inferior to men. A
physician and a surgeon of some fame, Sir A. E. Wright wrote a letter to the editor of The
Times, published on March 28, 1912, saying that women were intellectually much less
developed and that they had a distorted mental picture.8 However, as English education and
Western ideas permeated a segment of urbanized middle-class men, that segment, though
small, came to question the existing status of Bengali women. These men compared the
position of their women with that of European women and found a great difference in that the
latter were not secluded in their homes nor were they kept completely illiterate. On the
contrary, they found that English women were given some education and were encouraged to
acquire such accomplishments as singing and dancing. Even if they still believed that women
were intellectually inferior to men, they were convinced that women could be educated. They
also became conscious of the very subordinate position of their women and started, at first
differently, a movement for their elevation.
Rammohan Roy was the earliest to expose the deplorable condition of the womenfolk of
Bengal. No one knows exactly how he became conscious of the very low position of women.
Since he was a friend of Jeremy Bentham9 and of Robert Owen,10 both of whom advocated
3. J. N. Gray, 'Bengal and and Britain : Culture contact and the Reinterpretation of Hinduism in the Nineteenth Century
' in Aspects of Bengali History and Society, ed. by R. V. M. Baumer (Hawaii : The Univ. Press of Hawaii, 1975), pp. 99-
103.
4. Raja Rammohan Ray-Pranita Granthabali (Collected Works of Raja Rammohan Roy), ed. by R. Basu and
A.C.Bedantabagish ( Calcutta : Adi Brahmo Samaj, 1873-74), p. 205.
5. Quoted in R.T. Evans, The Feminists : Women's Emancipation Movement in Europe, American and Australia
(London : Croom Helm, 1977), p. 114.
6. W. Adam, Report on the State of education in Bengal 1835 & 1838 ed. by A. Basu ( Reprint, Calcutta: Calcutta
Univ., 1941 ),p. 147 ; Kailasbasini Debi, Hindu Abalakuler Bidyabhyas O Tahar Samunnati ( Calcutta : Gupta Press, 1865),
pp. 13-14.
7. Roy strongly deplored this popular attitude. Raja Rammohan etc., pp. 205-06.
8. C. Rover, Love, Morals and the Feminists ( London : Routledge & K. paul, 1970), p. 149.
9. The letters exchanged by J. Bentham and Roy indicate that they had great admiration for each other. When Roy
went to England , Bentham came to visit him, although he had not called on anyone for about 15 years. For details see , S.
D. Colette, The life and Letters of Raja Rammohan Roy (3rd ed. ; Calcutta : Sadharan Brahmo Samaj, 1962), pp.313, 488-
93.
10
better social status for women, it is quite possible that he got the idea from their writings.
Besides, he read James Mill's celebrated work History of India (1818)11 in which it was
argued that among rude people the women are generally degraded; among civilized people
they are exalted ... As society refines upon its enjoyments, and advances into the state of
civilization, the condition of the weaker sex is gradually improved.12 Voracious reader as he
was, it is not unlikely that he also read about the contemporary debate on women's
emancipation that had started with the publication of M. Wollstonecraft's famous book in
1792.13 Whatever, his sources of inspiration, he severely attacked the male-dominated Hindu
society, saying that it was selfish and hypocritical and that it denied to them (women) those
excellent merits that they are entitled to by nature.14 When he went to England, he was most
impressed by the female virtue and excellence in this country.15 Indeed he realized the need
to educate and thereby raise the status of Bengali women. By the end of the first quarter of
the nineteenth century, quite a few people, including such friends of Roy as Dwarkanath
Tagore and Prasanna Kumar Tagore, became convinced that a woman should be given some
education.16 Even the great leader of the orthodox Hindus, Radhakanta Deb, realized that
women should be educated. In spite of the fact that Gouramohan Bidyalankar's book
Strishikshabidhayak (Arguments in Favour of Female Education, 1822), the first of the
hundreds of booklets later published on female education, was based mainly on Roy's
arguments and materials, it was Deb who encouraged Bidyalankar to compile his book,
which he thought would pave the way towards female education.17 Whether or not people
like Deb were prepared to educate their women and raise their status, this was the beginning
of an era when a cross section of Bengali men became aware of the need to educate and thus
“emancipate” their women.
The highly Western-influenced students of H. V. L. Derozio, who emerged as a radical
group called Young Bengal in the late 1820s, were more articulate and demanded equal status
for women. Such thinkers as Tom Paine, who was a friend of Mary Wollstonecraft, was their
philosopher and guide.18 They were acquainted with Richard Carlile's writing as well.
Carlile, who advocated birth control, was one of the supporters of radical feminism. Carlile's
Every Woman's Book (1826) and William Thompson's Appeal of One Half the Human Race
Women against the Pretensions of the other Half Men (1825) were the two publications that
10. From Roy's letter to owen's son, it seems he was very much impressed by Owen's social ideas. For the text of this
letter, see Collect, pp. 494-95.
Owen advocated equality for women and easier marriage laws. Owen's disciples, such as Emma Martin and Catharin
Watkins, came to be konwn as radical feminists in the 1840s. See for details, C. Rover,op. cit., p. 23 and B. Tailor,'The
women-Power', in Tearing the Veil ed. by S. Lipshitz (London : Routledge & K. Paul, 1978), pp.127-32.
11. Roy referred to Mill's book in his Preliminary Remarks-Brief Sketch of the Ancient and Modern Boundaries and
History of India (1832).
12. J. Mill, The History of British India, Vol. 1 (2nd ed. ; London : Baldwin, Cradock and Jay, 1820), p. 383, 385.
13. Though such books as Dr. J. Gregery's A Father's Legacy to His Daughters and Her Own Thoughts on the
Education of Daughters (1787) had been published before, Wollstonecraft's Vindication of the rights of Woman (1972) was
the first significant protest by a woman and with this began the early efforts to improve the social position of
Englishwomen.
14. The English Works of Raja Rammohan Roy, Vol. 2, ed. by J. C. Ghose (Calcutta : S. Roy, 1901), p. 177.
15. Ibid., p. 9.
16. B. B. Kling, Partner in Empire: Dwarkanath Tagore and the Age of Enterprise (Berkley: Univ. of California
Press, 1976), p. 183.
For Prassanna Kumar Tagore, see Editorial notes, Sangbadpatre Sekaler Katha, 2 Vols., ed. by B. N. Bandyopadhyay
(4th ed. ; Calcutta : Bangiya Sahitya Parishat, 1971-77),1, 367-68 (Hereinafter SSK.) .
17. Deb's letter to J. E. D. Bethune, 20 March 1851. For full text see J. C. Bagal, Women's Education in Eastern India
(Calcutta : World Press, 1956), pp. 102-04.
18. Particularly Age of Reason became very popular among them. A. F. S. Ahmed, Social Ideas and Social Change in
Bengal, p. 42.
11
most profoundly influenced the later feminist movement in England.19 Apart from them,
Young Bengal had their ideas from the Benthamites, the Owenites and the romantic poets
who led the anti-establishment movement in the first few decades of the nineteenth century.
The Unitarian movements also have its impact on Bengal. The Unitarians efforts to raise
the condition of women as well as that of the industrial proletariat caught the imagination
first of Rammohan Roy and his friends and later of Akshay Kumar Datta, Pearychand Mitra,
Kissory Chand Mitra, Durgamohan Das, Sibnath Sastri and even of Ishwar Chandra
Bidyasagar later, Mary Carpenter and Annette Akroyd helped the diffusion of female
education in Bengal.20
All these factors gave birth to a new concept of civilization and to a regard for a new set
of values, especially in relation to women. Men who had for so long been satisfied with
illiterate wives and who had never bothered about husband-wife relationships felt, for the
first time, a communication gap between their wives and themselves. Despite his
extraordinary reforming zeal, Roy, for example, could not and possibly would not reform
either of his two wives. Not only did his modern ideas and social activities fail to appeal to
his orthodox wife, who lived with him in Calcutta, but she carefully kept herself aloof from
him so that she might not lose her caste and religious “purity”.21 Dwarkanath Tagore's wife
was afraid of losing her caste and kept herself away from her unorthodox husband. In fact his
family life was marred by the insularity and piety of his wife.22 He was therefore forced to
live away from the harem in a house he had built to receive guests. He also developed
intimate relationships with European women.23 Ishwar Chandra Bidyasagar, who was a
champion of the cause of women, could neither educate his wife nor make her share his
success and failures in public life. Frustrated and unhappy, he wrote to his wife that his
relationship with her was one of supporting financially.24 Prasanna Kumar Tagore too felt
this communication gap, but as a solution to the problem, he started giving proper education
to his wife.25
In fact, newly educated Bengalis soon developed this sense of the inadequacy of domestic
relationships. A Brahman from Chinsura pointed it out as early as 1838 in a letter published
in Samachar Darpan:
Bengali men are now receiving education and consequently their minds are being enlightened. Under the
circumstances how can they get on with their unlettered wives? Can they expect from these wives the sort of
company they require after a long day of physical and mental labour? Will they be able to communicate
their real feelings to these women?26
Another reformer voiced the same feeling but in more specific terms. In his opinion
educated men had become very unhappy in one respect - their wives did not give them peace
of mind and happiness.27 Yet another went on to give a true picture of this unhappiness:
His wife, amiable good-natured, thoughtless, foolish, is a veritable chatterbox, whose talk is as unprofitable
and unless as if it were nothing more than an embodiment of a series of inarticulate sounds. She tries to
12
please her beloved husband, but she succeeds only in adding to his sense of vexation and wretchedness. She
sits on the floor beside him; she relates the occurrences of the day, the incidents of her domestic life, with a
volubility, which can not be admired. She describes graphically how the cat got into the kitchen, overturned
the brazen jug and threw down the milk, how a beautiful but brittle vessel, given her by her dear old granny,
bless her! has been broken through the carelessness of her stupid housemaid; how she has been literally
frightened out of her wits by the sudden fall of a lizard on the bed; and lastly how bitterly she has wept to
think of the calamities which the sudden pain she feels in her left eye is calculated to portend! But she is
not, good soul, altogether selfish, and so after having exhausted the indigents of the house, extends her
generous concern to the affairs of other persons and so begins the work of the relating the gossip of the
neighbourhood. The Babu has been shrewd to imitate his Anglo-Saxon cousin, and to take to beer to
drinking with a view to balance and counteract the sorrows of life. The Babu's life is entirely destitute of
poetry and romance, it is the very essence of dullness and monotony.28
The sort of young men described above contended that education and an amount of
modernization could give their wives the desired refinement and accomplishments and turn
them into better wives.
Aprt from this, as another contemporary writer claimed, English ideas had caused an
increase in affection and sympathy for daughters, who had for so long been much neglected
and looked down upon.29 Thus Western influence brought a remarkable change of attitudes
towards womenfolk among Bengali literati from the 1820s onward. At the initial stage of
this change, men like Rammohan and Mrityunjay Bidyalanker became aware of the inhuman
cruelty of such socio-religious institutions as suttee, but later Bhabanicharan Bandyopadhyay
became conscious of the debased nature of husband-wife relationship,30 whilst many others,
as already mentioned, were concerned about women's illiteracy. In fact, a new ideal was
gradually emerging in the 1820s and 1830s according to which Bengal would become
civilized only if its women were educated along with its men.31
Further away from tradition, the radical Young Bengal questioned not only the degree of
subordinate of women, but also the principle of subordination itself. They declared: 'God
created both men and women's equal'. He never intended that one would be subordinate to
another. Women therefore must be treated as equal to men in every respect'32 The ancient
law-givers, in their eyes, were hypocritical in that they, in the name of religion, did sheer
injustice to women.33 The plea for equality of women was indeed radical at that time not only
in Bengal but in England as well. Consequently, Young Bengal, who were only a handful
compared to the whole population and who had alienated themselves from the society as a
whole by their unorthodox life style, were unable to impress their ideas upon society at large,
notwithstanding the forcefulness of their ideas in their own circle.34
The question of giving elementary education to women might possibly have attracted the
attention of wider circle if reforms closer to traditional society had worked from within. This
was partly achieved during the 1840s and 1850s by Akshay Kumar Datta, Madan Mohan
Tarakalankar. Dwarkanath Roy and, of course, Bidyasagar. Akshay Kumar Datta, as editor of
Bidyadarshan (1842) and Tattvabodhini Patrika (1843-55), argued that women were not by
any means inferior to men, rather they were superior in many respects.35 Bidyasagar in his
articles published in Bengal Spectator (1842). Sarbasubhakari Patrika (1850) and
28. A Hindusthani ' The Great Want of the Babu Community', Bengali Magazine, Vol. 3 ( Feb., 1875), pp. 326-30.
29. 'Banga Mahilar Abastha', Tamoluk Patrika, Vol 1 ( 1874-75), p. 220.
30. This can be found in his books Naba Babu Bilas (1825) , Duti Bilas ( 1825) and Naba Bibi Bilas (1831).
31.Letter from a Brahman , Samachar Darpan, 3 Mar, 1838, SSK II, 99. Also see Chapter 2.
32. Jnananveshan, quoted in Samachar Darpan, 16 Dec.1837, SSK, II, 262-63.
33. Jnananveshan, quoted in Samachar Darpan, 5 Jan., 1833, SSK,II, 96.
34. S. N . Ray, ' From Derozio to Nazrul : Radicalism and the Bengali Intelligentsia'. New Quest, No. 5 (Dec.,1977), p.
6.
35. For example, Tattvabodhini Patrika, 1 Push 1766 Shakabda ( Dec., 1844), p. 134.
13
Bibidhartha Sangraha (1854), and in his first pamphlet in favour of widow remarriage,
(1855) expressed his profound sympathy for the oppressed women of Bengal. Through their
publication during the 1850s and 1860s, Madan Mohan, Pearychand Mitra, Peary Charan
Sarkar and Dwarkanath helped to promote that concept of civilization according to which a
nation could claim to be civilized only if its women enjoyed an exalted social position. They
also helped to create a deep sense of sympathy for the womenfolk.
36. M. A. Laird , Missionaries and Education in Bengal (London : Oxford U. P., 1972), p. 134.
37. 37 Samachar Darpan, 8 Mar., 1823, and 28, Jun., 1828, SSK I, 14, 16.
38. This letter was written on 2. 12. 1823. For the text of the letter see The English Workers of Raja Rammohan Roy,
II, 323-28.
39. Deb to Bethune, J. C. Bagal, p. 103.
40. A striking exception is the case of Raja Baidyanath Ray, who donated a large amount of money -20,000 Rupees -
for the support of these schools. See Samachar Darpan, 31, Dec., 1825 SSK, I, 15.
41. Bangadut, quoted in Samachar Darpan, 25 Jun., 1831, SSK, II, 91-92.
42. W. Adam, Reports on the State of Education in Bengal 1835 & 1838, pp. 452-53.
43. Ibid., pp. 41-49.
44. More Hindus were converted to Christianity during 1823 to 1832 than during 1793 to 1822. For details see 'Results
of the Missionary Labours in India', Calcutta Review, Vol. 16 ( 1851), p. 255.
14
the fear of proselytization and partly owing to the strict adherence to seclusion' early attempts
to institutionalize female education in Bengal failed.
A few liberal Hindus of the 1830s who really felt that their women should receive
education, arranged it privately. P. K. Tagore, for example, with the help of Baisnabis and
Missionary women, educated his wife and daughters. His eldest daughter, Surasundari, is said
to have attained a high standard of education,45 including proficiency in English.
Harasundari, daughter of Sibchandra Ray and a niece of Raja Baidyanath Ray, Drabamayi,
daughter of Chandi Charan Tarkalankar, and the daughter of Ashutosh Deb (whose name is
not known) were also educated at home.46 Even R. Deb is said to have established in his own
house a private school for the female members of his family.47
Although these private efforts yielded some positive results, they had some definite
limitations as well. First they remained confined to the small circles of either the Brahmos or
the Christians. Secondly, most of these efforts were carried out secretly and therefore had no
effect on the hostile attitudes of conservative society. Thirdly, the small numbers of teachers,
especially female teachers, available at that time were unable to educate women from a large
number of families. Fourthly, middle or lower middle class families could not afford the
luxury of retaining private teachers. Hence the establishment of girls' schools and their
acceptance by the bhadralok were essential for the expansion of female education.
The milestone was reached when, in May 1849 the Victoria Girls' School later known as
the Bethune School was founded by J. E. D. Bethune.48 Unlike the earlier schools run the
Christian Missionaries, the Victoria Girls' School was intended for only the upper class
Hindu girls49 and had no proselytizing objectives. It was managed by a committee consisting
of renowned Hindus who reflected both conservative and liberal views.50 The syllabus
included nothing that could hurt the feelings of the Hindus and the teachers were all Hindus.
The Bethune School thus threw a challenge to the bhadralok : would they send their
daughters to school, now that the fear of proselytization was not there ? However, only a few
accepted this challenge. Men like Haradeb Chattopadhyay who sent their daughters to this
school had to bravely face the fear of being ostracized by traditional society.51 Debendranath
Tagore, Rabindranath's father, who had so many times ignored the social customs relating to
religious rites, hesitated for some time before sending his daughter, Saudamini, to the
school.52 Bethune himself wrote of how conservative Hindus were totally opposed to sending
girls to his school and how , at the death of an influential leader of these Hindus (whose name
he did not mention), the number of students rose.53 Many still maintained that education
would spoil the womanly qualities in the womenfolk and bring disgrace on their families. For
example, Ishwar Gupta, who strongly supported the establishment of the Bethune School in
1849, soon became hostile towards female education. In his poem "Durbhiksha", he deplored
the fact that women were losing their virtues as a result of the expansion of female education:
45. Kailasbasini Debi, Hindu Abalakuler Bidyabhyas O Tahar Samunnati ( Calcutta : Gupta Press, 1865) , p. 30.
46. Samabad Bhaskar,31 May 1849 and 19 Apr., 1851, SSK, I, 367-68.
47. SSK, Editorial notes, I, 396.
48. Surprisingly, it was an Englishman again who took this bold step. Bethune ( 1801-51 was a brilliant student at
Oxford University . He came to India in 1848. He donated everything he had for this school. After his sudden death, the
Government of India financed the school.
49. See the prospectus of this school as published in Samabad Bhaskar, 3 Jan. , 1857, quoted in Samayikpatre Banglar
Samajchitra, Vol. 3, ed. by B. Ghosh (Calcutta : Bikshan, 1964 ) , p. 450.
50. This included men like Kalikrisna Deb, Harachandra Ghosh and Bidyasagar.
51. K. N. Thakur , Arya Ramanir Shiksha O Swadhihnata (Calcutta : Elgin Press, 1901 ), p. 128.
52. Debendranath's letter to R. Bose, Jul., 1851, Debendranather Patrabali, ed. by P. Sastri (Calcutta : Adi Brahmo
Samaj , 1909), p. 40.
53. Bethune to Lord Dalhousie, 29. 3. 1850, in Selections From Educational Records, Vol. 2, ed. by J.A.Richey
(Calcutta : Bengal S. Press. 1922), pp. 52-53.
15
The women were, in the older days, virtuous ,
They used to observe the rituals and abide strictly by the religious codes,
Bethune alone has destroyed all their womanly qualities.
Don't you expect to get them as before.
Ignoring everything around them, the girls are holding books,
They must learn ABC and speak the language of England.....
Most certainly they will themselves drive their carriage and go to Garer Math for an airing .
Perhaps they will also wear boots and smoke cigars!54
Ishwar Gupta wrote this poem during the early 1850s when there had been virtually no
expansion of female education. This poem, therefore, does not reflect what was actually
taking place, it rather shows what the conservative people were thinking of female education.
The Bethune school started with 11 students, but soon the number fell to seven.55 At one
stage, only three girls attended the school - two of them being the daughters of Madan
Mohan, a teacher at that school.56 After 15 years of labour and zealous service rendered by
Ishwar Chandra Bidyasagar and his friends, the number of students rose to 64. The standard
of education was still very low- only 21 of the 64 students could read and understand a
simple story.57 The success therefore was not remarkable by any means. But the Bethune
School undoubtedly assisted the development of female education in Bengal in the sense that
the bhadralok, by sending their daughters to this school, publicly broke the age-long custom
of strict seclusion, and female education was thus institutionalized.
Following the example of Bethune, Joykrisna Mukherji established a girls' school at
Uttarpara, near Calcutta, in the same year,58 and Kissorichand Mittra soon established
another school at Rajshahi.59
Ishwar Chandra Bidyasagar was an ardent supporter of female education and devoted
much of his time and energy to the management of the Bethune School during the first 20
years of its existence. Encouraged by its success, albeit limited, he wanted to spread female
education in rural Bengal. Between November 1857 and May 1858, he established as many
as 35 Girls' schools in the district of Hugli, Burdwan , Midnapur and Nadia.60 But the schools
were soon closed when the Bengal Government withdrew financial support.
54. "Durbhiksha," Kabita Sangraha, Vol I, ed. by Bankimchandra Chatterji ( Calcutta, 1885) , pp. 121-22.
55. Selection from Educational Records, II, 52-53.
56. K. N. Thakur p. 128.
57. General Report on Public Instruction in Lower Provinces of Bengal Presidency, 1863-64 (Calcutta: Government of
Bengal, 1865), p. 59.
58. Selection from Educational Records, II, 48-49 ; N. Mukherji, A Bengal Zamindar : Joykrisna Mukherji, p. 154. N.
Mukherji argues that Joykrisna established his school earlier.
59. M. N. Ghosh, Karmabir Kissorichand Mitra ( Calcutta : Adi Brahmo Samaj, 1927), pp. 73-74.
60. Bidyasagar Rachanabali, Vol. 4, editorial notes, pp. 63-65.
61. According to Sibnath Sastri, this fear of being ostracized continued even as late as the 1870s . See his article
'Shastra Deshachar O Dharma' Nabya Bharat, Aug.-Sep.,1884, p. 229.
62. Tattavabodini Patrika, Magh 1785 (Jan.-Feb., 1864), p. 173 ; S. Sastri, Atmacharit ( 1st Signet ed. ; Calcutta :
Signet Press, 1952), pp. 58-60.
16
a handful of female teachers and they too were half educated. Moreover, in those days girls
used to be married when they attained the age of 10 or 11.63 They could, therefore, attend
school only for a brief period and were unable to learn even simple reading, writing and
arithmetic.64
The best educated women at this stage ( 1850s and 1860s) were the ones who had their
education privately at home from either their husband or, in some cases, from their parents.
This type of education, known as zenana education, gradually came to be widely approved by
traditional society.
The success of zenana education during the 1850s and 1860s was largely due to the
young Brahmos and the Brahmo-influenced Hindus. They took up the cause of women's
education with almost religious zeal. Brahmo leaders such as Keshab Chandra Sen, Bijoy
Krisna Goswami, Sibnath Sastri, Aghore Nath Gupta and Umesh Chandra Datta, who were
imbued with the newly emerging Western ideas of husband -wife relationships, found it
essential to give some education to their partners to turn them into better wives and better
companions.65 These Brahmo as well as enlightened Hindu leaders had their contributions
too. They were “progressive” in the sense that they wanted to educate their wives, but they
were quite traditional in the sense that they could not and possibly did not want to break the
social custom of seclusion and send them to school . None of the wives of the above-
mentioned Brahmo leaders, including Keshab Sen's, attended any school. We will later see
how disillusioned Miss Annette Akroyd was when she found that Keshab, so “progressive”
outside , had been unable to educate his wife properly.66 Admittedly, the wives of these
Brahmo leaders and women of other Brahmo and “progressive” Hindu families started to
receive education privately in their homes and later to sit for examinations conducted by the
Bamabodhini Sabha, which launched a scheme of zenana education in 1863.67 Many young
Brahmo men began to educate their wives and sisters secretly without the knowledge of the
old fashioned parents and other members of the joint family. Moreover, their daughters did
not remain uneducated.
The name of Kailasbasini Debi can be mentioned here. Kailasbasini (b. 1837), when
married to Durga Charan Gupta in 1849 , did not know how to read or write. She even
despised the idea of women being educated. But , at the instance of her Brahmo husband , she
learnt how to read and write,68 gradually reaching a standard hardly attained by any one else
of her sex at that time. In India, she became the first authoress of a book of essays when she
published her book Hindu Mahilar Hinabastha in 1863.She went on to publish two other
books and a number of periodical articles during the next six years.69 Similar were the cases
of Kumudini (c.1840-65),70 Nistarani Debi (1840-60),71 Brahmomayi (1845-76),72
63. General Report on Public Instruction in Lower Provinces of the Bengal Presidency for 1863-64, p. 59 ; Abodh -
Bandhu, Aug.-Sep., 1869, pp. 116-17.
64. General Report on Public Instruction in Bengal for 1871-72 (Calcutta: Bengal S. Press, 1873), p. 81.
65. How men like S. Tagore, M. Ghosh, K. M. Datta, W. C. Bonnerji and S. Banerji “reformed” their wives by giving
them education can be seen in the third chapter as well.
66. W. H. Beveridge, India Called Them (London: George Allen and Unwin, 1947), pp. 88-89; p. Barr, The
Memsahibs (London: Secker & Warburg, 1976), p. 163.
67. Bamabodhini Sabha was established by some followers of Keshab Sen, headed by Umesh Chandra Datta. They
published the monthly magazine, Bamabodhini Patrika, in 1863. The magazine continued for 60 years and had made a
significant contribution to the emancipation of Bengali women. The scheme of zenana education was conducted through its
magazine. For details see appendix 2.
68. K. Debi, Hindu Mahilar Hinabastha (Calcutta: Gupta Press, 1863), pp. 1-11.
69. The other two books: Hindu Abalakuler etc. and Bishvashova (1869).
70. For an account of her life, see Kumudinicharit (Calcutta, 1867; A. C. Chakrabarti, Naricharit (Mymenshing, 1866),
pp. 70-115; 'Kumudinijibani,' BBP, Jul.-Oct., 1868; 'Kumudinijibani', BBP, Apr.-Jul., 1865.
71. A. C. Chakrabarti, pp. 47-58: 'Nistarini', BBP, May-Jun., 1864.
17
Manorama Majumdar (1848-1936),73 Jnanadanandini Debi (1852-1941),74 Saudamini Debi
(?-1874),75 Swarnalata Ghosh76 and Hemangini Debi.77 They were all illiterate before their
marriage and were educated by their husbands. The following table may give some idea of
how the first handful of Bengali women received education in their homes in the absence of
school education.78
TABLE 1
72. D. N. Gangopadhyay, Jibana Lekhya (2nd ed.; Calcutta, 1879. Ist ed.; 1876).
73. A biography of Manorama, in 2 Vols. was published by M. R. Guha-Thakur in the 1930s. Copies to which I have
access lack publication details.
74. Her autobiography: ' Smritikatha', in Puratani, ed. by I. Debi Chaudhurani (Calcutta: Indian Associated Publishing,
1957). For details see Appendix I.
75. R. C Ray, Jiban-bindu (Calcutta, 1879).
Saudamini died in her early twenties. The two articles she published in Bamabodhini Patrika indicate that she
received a high standard of education. Rajnarayan Bose narrates, in his autobiography, how Saudamini would render
devotional songs during the weekly services at the Bowbazar Brahmo Samaj, established by the progressive faction of the
Brahmo Samaj of India, in 1872. See R. Bose, Rajnarayan Basur Atmachrit (Calcutta: Kuntaline Press, 1909), p. 197.
76. Swarnalata was illiterate when married to Manomohan Ghose. Imbued with Western ideas, Manomohan returned
from England, in 1867, as a barrister. To turn Swarnalata into a better companion. Manomohan sent her to a convent. She
came out as a changed person. Later, Ghose took her to England on a couple of occasions. See also Chapter 3.
77. As a child wife of W. C. Bonerji, Hemangini was illiterate, but later became a highly educated and accomplished
woman. For details see Chapter 3.
78. Some of these women were born after the Bethune School had been established. But, excepting Swarnakumari,
they lived outside Calcutta or in some suburbs of Calcutta from where it was impossible to attend this school.
79. K. Debi, Hindu Abalakuler etc., p. 34.
18
Besides, the periodical like Masik Patrika (1854), Bamabodhini Patrika and Abala-
Bandhab (1869) which were solely devoted to the elevation of the condition of women,
greatly helped them to educate themselves.80 Furthermore, instances of the women writers of
the 1860s, like Kailasbasini Debi, Taherannessa,81 Saudamini Debi, Madhumati Ganguli and
Krisnakamini, demonstrated the good effects and the necessity of female education. It may be
mentioned here that, although orthodox Hindus were hostile towards female education, the
early women writers were welcomed and even praised. Ishwar Gupta, the editor of Sambad
Prabhakar, was well known for his conservatism. In his opinion, as we have already seen,82
female education would destroy the feminine virtues of the womenfolk of Bengal.
Nevertheless, when Krisnakamini Dasi sent her poems to him, he readily accepted them for
publication.83 Krisnakamini soon came to be known as the first poets of modern Bengal.
Kailasbasini and Kaminisundari (under the pen name of Dwijatanaya) published in all five
books in the 1860s. They were quite well received by the reading public.84 Abodh Bandhu, a
monthly journal, while reviewing Kailasbasini's book Bishvashobha (1869), remarked that it
was an excellent work. The Bengali word for authoress is granthakartri (with feminine
ending), but Abodh Bandhu used the masculine form, granthakartri, with a footnote saying
that it did not consider that the use of the feminine ending was reasonable, because
qualitatively there should not be any difference, between writers - men and women.85
By the 1870s, whether in practice or not, a section of the educated urban elite of Bengal
recognized the good effects of female education. The demand for educated wives was on the
increase, as a contemporary writer pointed out :
The educated young men want to get educated girls as their wives. Why will they not ? If you educate your
boys, you must educate your girls as well. Soon it will be difficult to get bridegrooms for girls of upper and
middle class Hindu families, unless these girls are given some education. These days the relatives of girls
look for college-going bridegrooms and the college -going bridegrooms are looking for school -going
brides. A marriage between an educated man and an illiterate girl cannot be a happy one, discord and
disagreement will naturally be the result of such a marriage.86
As a result of this value change, it was becoming increasingly difficult to get an educated
and well-placed bridegroom for an unlettered girl.87 Conservative Hindus, too, were,
therefore, constrained to give some education to their daughters.88
The ideal of an attractive women was indeed changing fast in the 1860s and 1870s. This
was clearly reflected in contemporary Bengali literature. Almost all the heroines of
Dinabandhu Mitra, Jyotirindranath Tagore and Upendranath Das, who excited the admiration
of the reading public and of the theatre-goers, were educated. Even Bankim Chandra
Chatterji, who was conservative in his social outlook, portrayed his heroines as educated.
These plays and novels, especially the novels of Bankim, had a tremendous influence over
80. The contribution of Bamabodhini Patrika was acknowledged by women themselves. See, for example, Sreemati....
Chattapadhyay, BBP, Mar.-Apr., 1867, p. 481; Anon., 'Bamarachana', BBP, Oct.-Nov., 1869, p. 140; Mankumari Basu,
'Amar Atit Jiban', quoted in B. Bandyopadhyay, Mankumari Basu (2nd ed.; Calcutta: Bangyia Sahitya Parishat, 1962), p.7.
81. Taherannessa was the first Bengali Muslim woman to publish an article in Bengali prose, See my article '
Taherannessa: Pratham Muslim Gadya Lekhika' in Bangla Academy Gabeshana Patrika, Magh-Asharh, 1383-1384 (B .S.) ,
pp. 71-77.
82. Supra, p. 34.
83. Krisnakamini Dasi's anthology of poems Chittabilasini was published in 1856.
84. Kaminisundari published two plays and a reader for girls during the years 1866 to 1871. Later she published four
more books.
85. Abodh Bandhu, Jun.-Jul. , 1869, pp. 60-63.
86. 'Strishikha,' Jnaankur, Sep.-Oct., 1875, p. 524.
87. Anujanandini Ray, ' Mahilaganner Bidyabhyaser etc.', BBP, Oct-Nov., 1883, pp. 223-24; 'Edeshe Swamir Prati
Strir Byabahar,' BBP, Apr.-May, 1873, p. 15.
88. A lady, 'Bengali Strilokdiger Bartman Abastha,' BBP, May-Jun., 1892, p.40.
19
the educated Bengalis who almost unknowingly accepted the idea of female education.89
Describing this change, Umesh Chandra Datta, the editor of Bambodhini Patrika, wrote that
people who were previously very opposed to female education and would even refuse to hear
this topic being discussed before them, were then sending their daughters to school.90
The following table indicates how, as a result of this overall social consciousness, female
education was accepted by the bhadralok, if at first reluctantly, later quite earnestly.
TABLE 2
Source : General Report on Public Instruction in Bengal for the years 1863-64, 1871-72,
1881-82 and 1890-91.
The zenana education Programme, as well as the establishment of adult and female
normal schools, gave basic education to a good number of older women who, in their turn,
were able to serve as female teachers. This apparently was a factor that helped the spread of
female education. Moreover, in 1871-73, under the Campbell scheme, the Bengal
government decided to give more financial assistance to private schools. This soon
encouraged the establishment of hundreds of schools especially in the mofussil. This was the
most significant reason for the establishment of about two thousand girls' schools in the
1870s and 1880s. By 1901, female education had considerably spread among the upper caste
Hindus, as the following table suggests:
TABLE 3
Source : Census of India, 1901, Vol. VIA, pt. II (Calcutta : Bengal Secretariat Press, 1902) ,
pp. 60-61, 100-04, 106-11.
89. See my published Ph. D. thesis 'Hindu' Samajsanskar Sachetanatar Itihas Ebong Bangla Natya Rachanay Tar
Pratiphalan' ( Rajshahi University, Bangladesh, 1977), p. 305-06.
90. 'Bamabodhinir Dasham Janmotsab' , BBP Aug.-Sep., 1873, p. 132. Also see K. Debi, Hindu Abalakuler etc. p.
34;'Strishiksha', Jnanankur, Sep.-Oct., 1875, p. 571.
20
The high rate of literacy among the Brahmo women was comparable only to the native
Christians (particularly the ones who had formerly belonged to upper caste Hinduism).
Unfortunately, the census reports did not treat their figures separately. How earnestly female
education was accepted the by the Brahmos and the Christians mentioned above becomes
quite apparent from two examples: one that of Sitanath Tattvabhushan's (Brahmo) family and
another that of Bhuban Mohan Basu's (Christian) family. Sitanath Tattvabhushan had a rural
background and his ancestors had held female education in abhorrence. However, all his six
daughters received good education. While four of them became graduates, the other two
passed the FA examination.91 Bhuban Mohan Basu had four daughters. The eldest of them,
Chandramukhi, was the first female MA in India, the second, Bidhumukhi, one of the first
two MBs, the third, Bindhyabasini, a brilliant medical student, and the fourth, Rajkumari, an
M. A.92
21
Grade V- Bengali: Meghanadabadhakabya, Narijati Bishayak Prastab; English: McCulloch's Course of
Reading ; English grammar; History; Arithmetic.97
Despite the fact that both Umesh Chandra Datta and Keshab Chandra Sen, the former
editor of Bamabodhini Patrika and the latter the founder of the School for Adults and Female
Teachers, were strongly in favour of " womanly" female education, the above reading lists
did not include subjects like childcare, cooking, needlework and housekeeping, due possibly
to lack of publications. However, the debate over whether women should receive the same
kind of education as men became sharper. The question of higher education also provoked a
lively discussion. In 1872-73, the members of the Brahmo Samaj of India, who were known
to hold a "progressive" social outlook, stood divided on these two questions. While Sen and
his close followers thought women were not required to learn "manly" subjects like Geometry
and Philosophy, the more liberal members like Sibnath Sastri, Durga Mohan Das,
Dwarkanath Ganguli, Annada Charan Khastagir and Sasipada Banerji claimed that women
were entitled to every branch of human knowledge and to the highest level of education.98
For this, they were ridiculed and defamed by conservative Hindus.99 These conservative
Hindus, including some women themselves, argued that women were becoming lax in their
housekeeping and even in the bringing up of children and that this was the bad effect of
"manly" female education.100 Even Tattvabodhini Patrika, the organ of the Adi Brahmo
Samaj of Debndranath Tagore, declared:
We are no against female education. Women should, of course, receive some education and thus free
themselves from the clutches of superstition. Moreover, we except that education will give them such
refinement of character as will make them acceptable as well as respectable to the educated men of Bengal.
However, we are against the kind of education now being given to women ... The books women are asked to
read are either translation from English or are English-influenced. Consequently, our women become
denationalized. We believe women should read only those books that will help them to become better wives
and better mothers. This is an age of luxury. Most of the women are luxurious and indifferent to
housekeeping and to the bringing up of their children.101
With the establishment of the Hindu Mahila Bidyalay under the supervision of Annette
Akroyd, the debate concerning higher education and the possibility of girls taking university
examinations became shaper. Annette Akroyd started the School with the help of her Bengali
friends, such as Manomohan Ghose, Dwarkanath Ganguli and Durga Mohan Das. This was
the first girls' school where teenaged Bengali girls were able to receive a higher education,
which , for all practical purposes, meant higher primary or lower secondary education. In any
case, this was the beginning of secondary education for Bengali girls. It was first from this
school that a girl, Kadambini Basu, was officially allowed by the Calcutta University to
appear at a public examination.102 This school also marked the beginning of boarding schools
for girls. Only handfuls of Brahmos, however, were brave enough to send their daughters to
this school. As Annette married H. Beveridge in April, 1875, the school temporarily closed
down. However, the Brahmos especially Dwarkanth Gangali, revived it in 1876. Later in
1876 , it was merged with the Bethune School.103 During the next two decades , this School
22
and its college section, Bethune College, played a very significant role in the development of
higher education among Bengali women. However, men continued their propaganda against
women's higher education and against Bethune College, which symbolized women's
education in Bengal.
This kind of hostility was, however, not unique to Bengal. In England, men's prejudice
against women's higher education was much more vigorous. A women's committee, with
Emily Davies as its secretary, was formed in London in 1863 to promote the cause of
women's higher education. There were many women who had attained a high proficiency, but
they were not allowed to sit for any university examinations. Therefore, petitions containing
the signatures of hundreds of women were sent to universities and to the Parliament, asking
for the admission of women to degrees. Moreover, male academics urgued university
senators to allow women to sit for public examinations. Some university professors even
permitted women to attend their lectures. These women performed much better than they
were expected to. Notwithstanding all this, no British University allowed women to any
official degrees until 1878.104 While the "modern" London University gave this permission in
1878, the more traditional Oxford did so in 1920 and Cambridge in 1923. Apart from this
kind of general hostility, some teachers were so prejudiced that the papers of a number of
women, like Sophia Jex-Blake and Annie Besant, were unfairly judged and they were
failed.105 However, women themselves fought this long struggle of gaining women's rights.
One of the reason for male opposition was the apprehension that men's job opportunities
would suffer.106
In Bengal, like other colonies such as Australia and New Zealand,107 opposition was
much less strong . In fact, the official attitude was, on the contrary, quite favourable, and
women got the right without any struggle at all. When Chandramukhi Bose, a native
Christian girl from Dehra, asked the Calcutta University through her Headmaster to permit
her to take the Entrance Examination of 1876, she was, after some hesitation on the part of
the Calcutta University authority ,put through the question papers to see whether she had
attained the expected standard. Chandramukhi proved herself worthily of the permission. In
view of this, the Syndicate of the University asked a sub-committee to frame rules of women
candidates on 27th January, 1877. The Syndicate adopted these rules on 27th March and the
Faculty of Arts on 12th May. The faculty also appointed a sub-committee to frame rules for
women candidate who might ask permission to sit for FA, BA and MA examinations. These
rules were approved by the Syndicate on the 23rd February, 1878 and by the Senate on the
27th April, 1878.108
These rules were similar to those for male students except that women were to sit in a
separate hall and were allowed to offer Political Economy because, in those days, it was
believed that they were weak in Maths. In 1879, the Syndicate extended permission to
Also see Bethune College Centenary Volume 1849-1949, ed. by K. Nag & L. Ghose (Calcutta: West Bengal
Government, 1951).
104. R. Strachy, The Cause (New York: Kennikat Press, 1969. First published in 1928), pp.132-84, 246-60.
105. Ibid., p. 184; A. H. Nethercot, The First Five Lives of Annie Besant (Chicago: University of Chicago
Press,1960), p. 182.
It happened in Bengal as well. It is said that a Begali professor of the Calcutta Medical College was against women's
admission to that College. When the first girl student of that College, Kadambini Ganguli, appeared at the final examination,
he failed her in one of the practical papers. However, the Principal of the College was convinced that she was too good a
student to fail and, therefore, gave her a certificate of proficiency. Like Sophia Jex-Blake, she later got deplomas from other
universities.
106. R, Strachy, p. 263.
107. See, for details, R. T. Evans, The Feminists, p. 59.
108. Hundred Years of the University of Calcutta (Calcutta: Calcutta Univ., 1957), pp.121-22; J. C. Ghosh
'Bishvabidyalaye Strishikshar Pattan', pp. 493-94.
23
Chandramukhi to appear at the FA examination. Chandramukhi and Kadambini Basu passed
the BA examination in early 1883.109
With this official recognition, the people who were against women's higher education lost
their case. But they continued to fight a lost battle, as their prejudice did not wane for a long
time. When they found no other plea against higher education they alleged, both that
excessive “brain work” badly affected the delicate health of women and that competition
between male and female was undesirable.110 Liberal minded people, however, hailed these
decisions of the University of Calcutta as having opened the way to progress for the whole
society.111
24
receive education , although mostly at home. In a few decades, traditional Hindu women too
were becoming aware of the need for female education.120
Women's writings first appeared in the 1850s.121 Almost all of the earlier women writers
were of the opinion that, lacking education, Bengali women's minds were uncultivated and
uncouth and there was little difference between these women and beasts.122 Some of these
women who had educated husbands suffered from a sense of inferiority. They thought that
they were being looked down upon by their husbands as animals or as household pets.123 The
women who acquired some education and refinement immediately recognized the state of
ignorance and lowliness in which they were living . They found around them an entire female
population who had neither the refinement nor the accomplishments for which their
modernized husbands were looking. The newly emerging Brahmo women looked at the
traditional Hindu women with contempt and regarded them as superstitious and idolatrous.
They held lack of education to be responsible for this debasement of mind and soul.124
For the first time in Bengal's history, the newly educated women evaluated themselves
with a yardstick long inapplicable to them . Some of them, like Madhumati Ganguli, declared
:
Dear Bengali sisters ! We have been created by the same God who created men. He has given men and
women the same organs, feelings and faculties of mind. Men are acquiring learning and wisdom and are
meeting with His blessings by doing every thing according to His will. Why should we disprove ourselves
of all these ? God certainly does not wish that only men would enjoy the pleasure of learning and women
the agony of ignorance. On the contrary, He has given men and women the same physical and mental
abilities so that both can enjoy endless happiness by acquiring the wealth of learning.125
While asking the womenfolk to raise themselves, some women even accused men:
Why should men keep us in such deplorable condition? Aren't we the daughters of God? Isn't it unjust to
deprive women of education, which alone could give them the “heavenly” pleasure now being enjoyed by
men alone? 126
An articulate women, Rajbala Debi directly accused men:
Only men are to be blamed for the deplorable condition of women. They are the one who do not allow us to
receive education and thereby enlighten our minds. They keep us shut in the zenana as animals.127
Explaining the reasons why women were left uneducated, Kailasbasini Debi wrote :
According to all religious beliefs , whether Hinduism , Islam or Christianity, a wife is a man's better half
and is supposed to share half of his happiness or sorrows, but Indians, in practice, have only given their
share of sorrows, not happiness. Otherwise why should they forbid education to their women ? Actually
they wanted to keep their women in perpetual slavery and were afraid of imparting education to them, which
, as men feared, might elevate them to men's level.128
120. Rasasundari was the most striking example of this. She was born and brought up in a traditional Hindu family in a
Bengal village. Her husband was also a traditional Hindu, unlike the Brahmos. Also see N. Debi, ' Strishiksha Bishaye etc',
Anthapur, Aug.-Sep., 1901, p.175.
121. A few letters were published earlier. But these were probably written by men. Bamabodhini Patrika published
women's writings after proper verification.
122. Sarala, 'Bangadesher Lokdiger etc.' BBP Oct.-Nov., 1866, p. 387; K. Debi, Hindu Abalakuler etc., p. 1; Kamini
Datta, 'Strishiksha', Bamarachanabali, p.64; A Lady of Dattapukur, 'Strishiksha Hitaishiganer Prati', Bamarachanabali, p.86;
Gopalmohini, 'Bidyashikshar Sange etc.', Bamarachanabali, p. 103; R. Devi, BBP Feb.-Apr., 1874, p.395.
123. Premamayi, p. 26; R. Devi, p. 395.
124. Ramasundari, ' Edeshe Strishiksha etc.', BBP, Jul.-Aug., 1855, p.73; Sarada, 'Bangadeshiya Lokdiger etc.', BBP,
Oct.-Nov., 1866, p. 384; Kshhiroda Mitra, 'Dushita Deshacharer etc.', BBP , Aug.-Sep., 1866, p. 341.
125. Madhumati Ganguli, ' Bamaganer Rachana', BBP, Oct.-Nov., 1864. p. 229.
Also see Taherannessa, BBP, Feb.-Mar., 1865, pp.276-77 ; Anujanandini Ray,' Mahilaganer Bidyashiksha
etc.',BBP, Oct.-Nov., 1883. p. 221.
126. Saudamini Debi, BBP, May-Jun., 1865, p.40.
Also see Anon.,BBP, Oct.-Nov., 1869, p.140; Anujanandini Ray, p.221.
127. Rajbala Debi, p. 395.
128. Kailasbasini Debi, Hindu Abalakuler etc., pp. 11-12.
25
Basantikumari, moreover, deplored the fact that Indian people, who were otherwise so
loyal to religious customs and codes, had little or no respect for the shastric precepts relating
to the bringing up of their daughters and giving them some education.129 Some other women
too accused men of hypocrisy and selfishness.130
Taherannessa argued from yet another angle. In her opinion, men and women together
constituted the whole society. Therefore, men alone could not give it the desired prosperity.
Women had definite role to play in the society but they were unable to do so. owing to their
ignorance and backwardness.131 If Taherannessa failed to put her argument convincingly in
an easy to understand language, four decades later Rokeya Sakhawat Hossein gave the same
argument in a powerful diction.132 Indeed more and more women came to believe that
Bengali society would never be able to make any advancement with only its men receiving
education and enlightenment.133 An anonymous lady argued that a person could not be
termed healthy if half of his or her body was diseased. She therefore opined that, for the
welfare and upliftment of society itself, women were to be raised from the darkness in which
they were immersed.134 In short, quite a few women became aware of the needs for
education and held men responsible for their backwardness.
Also see Hemangini Chaudhurani, ' Striloker Bidyabhyaser Prayojaniyata', Anthapur, Vol.IV, No. 1 (Jan.-Feb.,
1901), p.13.
129. Basantikumari Basu, ' Strishiksha O Tahar Bartaman Abastha.' Anthapur, Vol.II (1899), p.109.
130. See, for example, Premamaya, p. 26; Kamini Datta, p.65.
131. Taherannessa, pp. 275-77.
Also see Kulabala Debi, ' Strishiksha ', Antapur, Vol.I (1898), p.52.
132. R.S Hossein , ' Strijatir Abanati', in Rokeya Rachanabali , ed. by A. Qadir ( Dacca ; Bangla Academy, 1973.First
pub.1904), pp. 17-31.
133. Nagendrabala Debi, p.175.
134. -----Debi, 'Ekti Prastab ', Bharati, Apr.-May, 1885, p. 14.
Also see Krisnabhabini Das , ' Ingrej Mahilar Shiksha O Swadhinata', Bharati O Balak; Jul.-Aug., 1890, p.202.
135. R. Stracy, The cause, p. 125.
136. Premamayi, p. 26.
26
the motion of a comet, the wife move in her kitchen, measures rice and lentil, and watches the movement of
the cook. Hello, Mr. Astronomer ! Why isn't your wife by your side? Are you afraid that you might vanish
in the intense heat of the sun if you want to approach it along with your wife? Is it because of this that you
think she should better stay in?137
That in the absence of proper education the husband-wife relationship had become a
constant source of suffering was maintained by Jnanadanandini Debi, Krisnabhabani Das and
Kamini Datta as well. While K. Datta felt that an uneducated wife was ignorant of her duties
to her husband138 J. Debi contended that education alone could turn women into the right
kind of companions that modern husbands were looking for.139 A distinguished poetess of
her time , Priyambada Debi, even claimed that the best female education , was one that made
a wife her husband's mistress, guide, friend and disciple.140
The advocates of female education, both men and women, in those days argued that
education alone could make better mothers. With the examples of English mothers before
their own eyes, these Bengalis realized that educated Bengali mothers would be able to bring
up their children properly. Uneducated mothers neither had the knowledge of everyday
hygiene nor the much desired ability to impart elementary education. These writers therefore
believed that education alone would better equip them to be better mothers.141 They further
argued that a child would only become free from superstition if his or her mother were
educated and had a cultivated mind.142 Some of them even mentioned examples of great men
like Scott, Johnson and Washington, who, they claimed, had their best education from their
mothers.143
The joint family system was the ideal of the nineteenth century bhadralok. These women
therefore thought that education would enlighten and broaden the minds of the "mean and
quarrelsome" Bengali women, so that they would become better mistresses of big joint
families, whilst their relationships with members of families into which they were married
would improve.144 Moreover, they believed that they would be better organized to do
housework if they had education.145
Apart from these benefits relating to their every day life, the educated women were
conscious of the fact that education could elevate them from the inglorious social position
they were occupying. Although totally unjust,146 it was a popular belief during the last
century that women were fickle-minded and devoid of all scruples regarding sexual matters.
The Bengali proverb which says women had double the hunger, four times the cleverness and
eight times the sexual desire of a man is a typical example of this belief. Whether this owes
its origin to Manu who described women as having no sense of morality and no scruples
regarding sexual matters and as being always ready to sleep with any man, young or old,
learned or ignorant, handsome or ugly,147 cannot be ascertained. However, the belief was so
popular that even women themselves conceded that there might be some truth in it. They
therefore argued that, given proper education, women would become conscientious and
27
religious and would give up the vices for which they were notorious148 Besides, they
reasoned, education would develop their mental faculties as well as womanly virtues.149 That
education would bring them some fame and earn a reputation for their families was another
argument.150 Basantikumari observed that enlightened and accomplished ladies like Taru
Datta, Ramabai, Kamini Sen and Mankumari Basu had emerged as a result of the spread of
female education.151
By the end of the century, women of bhadralok families regarded education as invaluable
and the life of unlettered persons as not worth living.152 They had by then not only accepted
that education was a necessity, but had also developed an ideal of education. Most of them
contended that the centre of women's activities was certainly their home,153 and hence, that
the education which was desirable was that which might make them better wives and better
mothers and equip them better of housework. J. Debi and Krisnabhabini Das, for instance,
considered that women's first and foremost duties were to do such work as childcare, cooking
and nursing and to make the members of their family happy.154 Kulabala Debi thought that
the existing female education in Bengal had failed to produce ideal women. She therefore
advocated that kind of education, which would develop womanly virtues.155
Radharani Lahiri observed that men and women had distinctly different natures and were
destined to play different roles. She therefore suggested:
Of all the subjects that women might learn, housework is the most important. Whatever subjects a women
may learn, whatever knowledge she may acquire, she cannot claim any reputation unless she is proficient in
housework. She must also learn childcare, because nothing is more important to her than this.156
Priyambada Debi (herself a graduate of the University of Calcutta) and Kulabala Debi
were more articulate. They termed the existing female education as “manly” and therefore
unsuitable for women.157 Kulabala emphasized the need for education which helped to
develop such womanly virtues as chastity, self-sacrifice, submission devotion, kindness,
patience and the labours of love.158
148. S. Debi, p. 40; Shailajakumari, p. 68; Kamini Datta, pp. 63-64; B. Devi, ' Bangabasini Bhagnider Parti',
Bamarachanabali, p.81.
149. K. Datta, pp. 63-64; Taherannessa, pp. 276-77, Kulabala Debi, p. 54.
150. Taherannessa, p.276; Upendramohini, BBP, Apr.-May, 1865, pp. 18-19.
151. Basantikumari Basu, pp. 110-11.
152. S. Debi, p. 40; Nagandrabala Debi, pp. 175-76.
153. P. Debi, p. 105; Krisnabhabini Das, ' Striloker Kaj O Kajer Mahatmya', Bharati O Balak, Aug.-Sep., p.247.
154. J. Debi, ' Strishiksha', pp. 263-73 ; Krisnabhabini Das, ' Striloker Kaj etc.', p.248.
155. Kulabala Debi, p. 51, 52,55. Also p. Debi, pp. 105-106.
156. R, Lahiri, pp. 62-63. Also Kulabala Debi, p.53.
157. P. Debi, p. 106 ; Kulabala Debi, pp. 52-53 ;
158. Kulabala Debi, p. 55.
159. I found only one exception to this. Sharatkumari Chaudhurani, in 1891, wrote that the nuclear family was better in
the sense that it at least helped to improve husband-wife relationships. Educated outside Bengal and wife of a highly
28
wanted in the name of education was a kind of training that would enable them to be more
accomplished and to live up to the standard of a society which, although basically traditional,
was progressively modernizing with the penetration of alien ideas from the West.
Though a handful of women, like Chandramukhi Basu, Kamini Sen and Kumudini Das,
had accepted salaried jobs during the last two decades of the 19th century, Bengali women
still did not contend that education would give them an economic independence.160 In
England, on the contrary, a large portion of women had acquired their education in the
second half of the 19th century with the objective of getting jobs.161
Despite their deplorable social status and the extreme male-dominance over them,
Bengali women were far from conceiving themselves as an oppressed group. That
consciousness had not developed in them at that time. Consequently, there was no organized
movement on their part to educate the female population of Bengal and/or the elevate their
position in society by new enactments (like the Married Woman's Property Act or a Divorce
Act). On the contrary, they still prayed to men to give them the light of learning and thereby
raise them to men's level. They were quite content with and eager to receive the kind of
education that men arranged for them to turn them into better wives and better mothers, or, in
other words, to play their traditional roles and to be exploited as wives and mothers by men.
educated Westernized man, she herself had tasted the fruits of the nuclear family and hence her support for such a system.
See her 'Ekal O Ekaler Meye', Bharati O Balak, Sep.-Nov., 1891,pp.391-92, 394. For details see Chapter 3.
160. This was not unique to Bengal alone. In many other countries such as Russia women wanted education with no
economic objectives. See R. T. Evans, The Feminists, p.123.
161. R. Strachy, pp. 94-98, 185-241.
29
CHAPTER TWO
Unlatching the Cage: Male Efforts to Free Bengali Women
30
alone protest, the mother-in-law, in her zeal, would feed her more than she could eat and
consequently as soon as Jnanadanandini found the opportunity she would be off to vomit.5
As years went by, the rigorousness of the purda was certainly relaxed nevertheless, it
appears that, as late as the 1890s, the newly married wife was required to observe the rules of
purda even with her mother-in-law. This was even true in the cases of some English educated
and Brahmo-influenced families as well. Nirad C. Chaudhuri describes in his Autobiography
of an Unknown Indian how his mother, married towards the end of 1887, was to abide by the
rules of seclusion:
My mother did not speak a word to her mother-in-law for five whole years after her marriage, nor could she
uncover her face. She had to carry on her intercourse with the mistress of the house with the help of only
two movements of the head, the up-and-down positive nod and the side-to side negative shake. If she
wanted anything she had to go without it until the other young girls of the family discovered it and made
representations to the old lady.6
If purda was so strict in an educated Brahmo-influenced family like that of the
Chaudhuris, it can be guessed how faithfully the traditional Hindu families adhered to it.
Among the bhadralok Muslim families, female seclusion was even stricter. In these
families, the unmarried daughters were also to abide by the customs of purda. Rokeya
Sakhawat Hossein describes how, during a visit of a few of their female relations for several
days, she was asked to observe purda. She went on hiding herself now behind the door, then
under the cot and then in the garret. As she remained hidden in these places, her mother
forgot on a number of times to give her any food. Consequently she was almost starving. This
happened in the 1880s when Rokeya was only about five.7 Decades later, when Begum
Shaista Ikramullah was a child, purda had become less rigorous. Nevertheless, she was put
under purda when she attained the age of nine. However, her mother considered this age to
be too late.8
If female children were to observe purda so fastidiously among women themselves, it can
be imagined how strict it was when they confronted men. For the wives to go outside their
houses at any time during the day or night was prohibited. They were not allowed to talk to
men, even if they were their near relations or close friends of their husbands.9 Until the wife
became the mistress of the family, usually after the death of the mother-in-law, she was not
even allowed to talk to her husband during the day.10 Rasasundari Debi did not see her
husband during the day even after she became the mistress.11 In the fourth chapter, we will
see how the custom of female seclusion was a great obstacle to the healthy growth of marital
relationships.12
This custom was so deeply rooted among woman that they were extremely embarrassed at
the contravention of it. Jnanadanandini Debi's husband, Satyendranath Tagore, was an ardent
supporter of the upliftment of women. He wanted his wife, at that time only about 10 or 11,
to meet his close friend, Manomohan Ghose. However, no men other than the members of the
family were allowed to come into the zenana, nor were any women to go out. Therefore, one
night Satyendranath and Manomohan came into the zenana walking and if any one would ask
who it was, Satyendranath would reply. After entering Jnanda's room, Satyendranath pushed
31
Manomohan into the mosquito curtain along with Jnanada. But Jnanada was so overcome
with shyness that she was unable to speak a single word to Manomohan. The “interview”
nded after a while and Satyendranath and Manomohan marched out again in unison.13
Several years later, Jnanada was living in an enlightened Parsi family in Bombay. She
was, at first extremely shy and would not speak to any male members of that family.
Satyendranath described her condition like that of a caged bird recently released.14 Manekji,
the head of the family, named her ‘ugimasi’ meaning dumb.15 One day, Sir Bartle Free, the
Governor of Bombay, came to see her, she being the wife of the first native civil servant. The
Governor endeavoured for quite some time to talk to her, but she would not speak a single
word.16 In the first dinner party arranged by Satyendranath, her experience was rather
unpleasant. When her partner came and held her arm to lead her to the table, she ran away.17
Like most of the child wives, she did not talk to her husband for quite a long time after she
was married. How Satyendranath finally made her talk is, indeed, interesting. One day, he
promised that he would give her any thing she wanted if she talked. Being tempted, she
broke her silence and according to her wish, Satyendranath gave her a watch, a rare thing for
a Bengali woman of that time.18 Talking to men was certainly a difficult thing for women to
do when we consider the fact that talking to female relations was also disfavoured.19
Far more serious than talking either to men or to women was an almost unbelievable
incident that Begum Rokeya narrated. The incident took place during the first decade of the
present century. It gives an idea of how religiously women used to observe purda.
Accompanied by a maidservant and veiled by a heavy burkha, an upper-class Muslim
woman, a relation of Rokeya, was boarding a train at Kiul station. She accidentally fell down
in the space between the train and the platform. The maidservant pulled her by the burkha.
But the burkha caught and the woman was unable to rise. Some porters present there offered
to help, but the maidservant would not allow them to do so. The train was due to leave.
However, it waited for about half an hour and at last ran her over.20 The other forty-six
incidents that Rokeya mentioned in her book were not as horrifying as this but they were also
cruel examples of female seclusion.21
The example of how Sarada Debi. Rabindranath Tagore's mother and Debendranath's
wife, used to take a bath in the “holy” water of the Ganges may seem bizarre, but it clearly
reflects the strictness of female seclusion. Whenever Sarada Debi wanted to take a bath in the
Ganges; the palanquin bearers were obliged to immerse the whole of her palanquin while she
remained sitting within it.22
Apart from this physical seclusion, which was, for all practical purposes, comparable, if
not to imprisonment, at least to the condition of a caged bird, women of bhadralok families
were not permitted to ride carriage or to wear shoes.23 They had also no “mental” freedom.
32
The Brahmos of the 1860s moreover argued that they had no spiritual freedom either, since
they were supposed to follow blindly the idolatry and superstitions of their husband.24
24. K. P. Ghosh, Narijati Bishayak Prastab (Calcutta: Kabyaprakashan Press, 1869), p. 138.
25. Supra, p. 33
26. K. P. Ghose, Narijati Bishayak Prastab pp.60-61, 151,156,198.
27. K.C. Mitra, 'Hindu women and their connection with the improvement of the country', The Proceedings and
Transactions of the Bethune Society (Calcutta; Bishop's College Press,1870), p.XXV.
28. N. K. Bose, Female Education (Calcutta; J. P. Sabha, 1873), p.7.
33
argued that the Hindu introduced the purda partly in imitation of the rules and partly to
protect their women from the lust of these rulers.29
Despite this kind of criticism which undoubtedly showed a change in the attitude towards
female seclusion and female upliftment, no one was brave enough to start the process of
modernization of the women locked up their own harem, except for the giving of some
education to them and that too, in most cases, was given privately. Some one had to break the
ice. Then suddenly it all began, in 1862, Keshab wanted to take his wife to Debendranath
Tagore's house, where the ceremony to appoint him the acharya of the Brahmo Samaj was to
be held. It was possibly the most significant occasion of his life till then. Profoundly imbued
with European ideas as he was, it was only natural that he would expect his wife to witness
the celebration and to share the success of his public life. But Keshab's near relation could
not conceive that a bhadralok should take his wife to a house other than that of a close
relation. They tried, even with the help of a Bhojpuri gatekeeper, to prevent what seemed to
them an indiscreet and impertinent act on his part.30 But Keshab took his wife out of the four
walls of the zenana in the following years; so did a number of his followers.
Keshab had set the first example of taking his wife out from the harem, but was not much
of a radical so far as breaking the purda of Bengali women was concerned, in fact, he had,
like most of the other reformers of his time, his contradictions. He inspired his followers to
free the womenfolk, but that freedom was to be partial only. As we have already seen, he only
partially freed his wife.31 Indeed, Keshab only set the ball rolling, and it was through the
collective efforts of many others that Bengali women were modernized to some extent.
Satyendranath Tagore was one of the bravest men who, in the 1860s, took some steps that
later came to be recognized as milestones in the history of Bengali women's modernization.
Educated in England, and the first native member of the Indian Civil Service, Satyendranath
translated J.S. Mill's celebrated work Subjection of Women.32 As his father wished,
Satyendranath married the seven year old Jnanada Debi when he himself was only 17. He
went to England in1862 and was most profoundly influenced by the position of English
women in society, which he considered much higher than that of Bengali women. He was
also influenced by the contemporary movement for the emancipation of women in England.
The letters he wrote during this time to his child-wife show how concerned he was to educate
and "emancipate" his wife. Unlike most of the reformers, he sincerely wanted his wife to
develop her individuality and to become his true companion. He also wanted to base his
relationship with his wife on equality and mutual respect. As early as 1863, he wrote to her
from London:
I have written to father. I expect him to send you to England......I have written that you were just a child
when you were married to me, that you and I could not marry of our free will, and that our guardians
arranged our marriage....Until you attain the proper age and education, and you can acquire a
sophistication in every respect, we will not enter the husband-wife relationship ....Your body and soul are
still dry within the four walls of the zenana, you will find a new world when you come to England.33
29. See, for example, 'Edeshiya Bamaganer Bahirbhraman', BBP, Sep.-Oct., 1871,p.185; 'Aborodh-prathar Utpatti',
BBP jul.-Aug.,1891, pp. 107-08; Krisnakamini, 'Strilokdiger Sambhram', BBP, Jul.-Aug.,1873 p. 139; Mrinmayi Sen,
'Bharatmahilar Shiksha', Anthapur, Aug.-Sep.,1902, p. 92.
30. P.C. Mazoomder, The Life and Teachings of Keshab Chunder Sen (Calcutta : Baptist Mission Press, 1887), pp.
138-42: U.G. Ray, Acharya Keshab Chandra, Vol.I (2nd ed., Calcutta; Brahmo Samaj, 1938), pp.180-81.
31. Supra, p. 37.
32. It is not known when this translation was published, nor, in fact, whether it was published at all. B. N.
Bandyopadhyay has given to understand that it was published before 1868. But that is impossible, because the original work
of J. S. Mill was not published before 1869. See, B.N. Bandyopadhyay, Satyendranath Thakur, Amritalal Basu, Biharilal
Chattopadyay (2nd ed.; Calcutta: Bangiya Sahitya Parishat , 1960), p. 28.
33. S.N. Tagore to Jnanadanandini Debi , letter dated 11.1.1864, Puratani, pp. 48-49.
34
No one is known to have written such things to his father or to his wife at that time. In
another letter he wrote to his wife that she was like a bird in a cage and that at the Jorasanko
house there was no place where her body and soul could develop.34 Disappointed and
dejected, in yet another letter he wrote to his wife that his father wanted him to abide by the
conventions and customs of the zenana and he should keep her caged. But, he declared, he
would never be happy keeping her chained.35
Satyendranath came back from England in 1864 and was appointed as the Assistant
Collector and Magistrate of Ahmedabad (Bombay). While he was in England, he could not
get his wife to join him there, because his father, on whom he was totally dependent
economically, would not allow to do so. But now that he had a good job, he wanted to take
her to Ahmedabad. Debendranath reluctantly consented. However, he asked Satyendranath to
take her to the ship in a palanquin of in a carriage, because going by carriage was taboo to a
women at that time.36 As we will see in the fourth chapter it was forbidden for men to take
their wives to the places of their work. It was, therefore, a very bold step on Satyendranath's
part to have taken his wife to Ahmedabad. No Bengali bhadralok of their status had
previously done so.37
Two years later, in 1866, when she returned to Calcutta, Jnanada Debi went to the Tagore
house in a carriage. This aroused noisy disapproval among the members of the family, as well
as among the neighbours. Debendranath was also very annoyed and could not for a long time
forgive Jnanada Debi for what he saw as an unbecoming behaviour. In fact, Satyendranath
and his wife became outcastes in their own house.38
Undaunted, a few months later, Satyendranath sent his wife to a party given by the
Governor-General at his residence in Calcutta. Satyendranath being ill, he sent his wife alone.
She was the first Bengali lady to attend such a party. The Indians and the Europeans were all
taken by surprise at her presence. Prasanna Kumar Tagore, as we saw in the preceding
chapter, was in favour of female education and gave some education to his wife and
daughters, but he too was so upset and pained by her presence that she immediately left the
party.39
Satyendranath's examples naturally encouraged other young Brahmos who wanted to free
their wives from the zenana but had not the courage to ignore the popular social custom of
seclusion. For instance, in 1866, two brothers, Rakhal Chandra and Biharilal Roy, who were
two enthusiastic members of the Barisal Brahmo Samaj, went in carriages round the roads of
Barisal with their wives, creating a commotion among the local people.40 On another
occasion soon afterwards, they invited the local European officers to a dinner party at their
house in which their wives participated.41 The Lt. Governor of Bengal, Sir C. Beadon, was
so impressed by this incident that he wrote a letter to the Collector of Barisal praising the Roy
brothers for their fearlessness.42 It should however be mentioned that such examples were at
35
that stage exceptions. Owing to hostile public opinion, it was extremely difficult to break
female seclusion, even if modernized young men sincerely wanted to free their women from
the harems. Satyendranath and the Roy brothers could venture to do such unorthodox things
because they held high positions in the society, had independent incomes and as members of
the Brahmo Samaj, had alienated themselves from traditional society. Thus it was possible
for them to ignore social disapproval.
Most of the young men, on the contrary, as members of joint families, were closely bound
to many familial and social obligations. Some of them were even dependent for their living
on the incomes of the other members of their families. They were therefore unable to do
anything as spectacular as Satyendranath and the Roy brothers did. Nevertheless, many other
members of the Brahmo Samaj of India gradually violated the custom of female seclusion in
a less conspicuous way. All these helped Bengali women to modernize in general and to
come out of the purda in particular. Two incidents that took place during Mary Carpenter's
visit to Calcutta in November- December, 1866 were very important in this connection. They
reflect the changing attitudes of both men and women, especially men belonging to the
Brahmo Samaj, towards female seclusion.
36
of the Western educated young men, including himself began to meet one other's wives, they
and their wives were deeply gratified.47
These women had no previous experience of conversing with men other than their
husbands and close relations. Most of them were therefore shy and uncomfortable at first,
later, however, they became used to it. For example, Jnanada Debi, as described earlier, was
very shy and ill at ease among men. She soon became very sophisticated and fashionable.48
She learnt not only to talk gracefully to men in a number of languages, but also ventured to
take part in theatrical performances.49 She also visited England and France without any male
companion. Brahmomayi Debi, Durga Mohan Das's wife, was born and brought up in the
mofussil and was very traditional in her behaviour. As will be shown below, she was one of
the first women to take part in religious services with men.50 She also began to sing
devotional songs in such services. Saudamini Roy (Rakhal Chandra Roy's wife), Rajkumari
Banerji, Radharani Lahiri, the Bose sisters (Swarnaprabha, Subarnaprabha, Labanyaprabha
and Hemaprabha) and many other Brahmo ladies turned into "social'' women in the late
1870s.51 A number of such "enlightened" Brahmo ladies can be seen not only in
Rabindranath Tagore's novel Gora, but several women of the Tagore family were also
examples of such a change among women during the last two decades of the 19th century.
For example, Indira Debi, Hiranmayi Debi, Sarala Debi, Pratibha Debi etc. became well
known as "emancipated" women. They were all sophisticated and accomplished, and could
freely mix with their male friends. Indira and Hiranmayi became intimate with Pramatha
Chaudhuri and Phani Bhushan Mukherji respectively and later married them. Sarala's close
friend was Loken Palit with whom she could, in her own language, discuss politics and
literature and share her happiness and amusements.52 Manomohan Ghose, a young poet, was
another of her close friends. Sarala claims that her desk was filled with his poetical and
emotional letters.53 This kind of social contact between men and women was totally
unknown to Bengal before.
When the following facts are considered, it has to be admitted that Bengali women who
had never been in public before 1866 went a long way towards "emancipation" within a
single decade. Not only were they going abroad (as will be shown below), but they began to
attend public meetings as well. Possibly the first incident took place on the 26th January,
1871, when two or three women, including Annette Akroyd, attended a meeting addressed by
Keshab Chandra Sen.54 Within a month or so, more women attended the convocation of the
Calcutta University, held at the Town Hall.55 Even people who were trying to break female
seclusion did not expect that women, for so long secluded in the zenana would attend public
lectures so soon. Men's reactions were therefore mixed, mostly unfavourable. In the March-
April (1871) issue of Bamabodhini Patrika, the visit to the Indian Reform Association was
praised on the ground that it would enlighten them, and the attendance of the convocation
meeting by the aforesaid women was termed to be injudicious on the ground that the proper
37
time had not come.56 Indeed, popular attitudes were so offended by their attendance of public
meetings that a man like Pearichand Mitra, who was an ardent supporter of the upliftment of
womenfolk, criticized Ramtanu Lahiri for having taken some of his female relations to a
meeting of Keshab Chandra Sen.57
In December, 1875, when the Prince of Wales came to visit Calcutta, Jagadanada
Mukherji, a Calcutta High Court advocate, arranged a reception in his honour. The Prince
was warmly received in the zenana by quite a few traditional Hindu women belonging to the
Mukherji family.58 The Brahmo women had started to become unorthodox several years
earlier, but this was the first well known example of traditional Hindu women disregarding
the custom of female seclusion. Jagadanada and his family were severely criticized by both
the traditional Hindus, for having violated purda and by educated young men who had
recently become imbued with a strong sense of nationalism, for having invited the Prince into
the zenana.59
Women, most probably prostitutes, started to take part in theatrical performances on the
public stage in August, 1873.60 Public opinion was very hostile towards the inclusion of
women in such performances. Even Vidyasagar and Sibnath Sastri, two champions of the
cause of women, were so angered by it that they never again went to a public theatre.61
However, in the next decade, women of the Tagore family were taking part in private
theatrical performances and a section of men who had earlier disapproved of women's
participation in such activities expressed praise for the Tagore women.
56. Ibid.
57. Ramtanu Lahiri O Tatkalin Banga Samaj, p. 289.
58. B. Bandyopadhyay, Bangiya Natyashalar Itihas (4th ed.; Calcutta: Bangiya Sahitya Parishat, 1961), p.172; A.
Choudhuri, 'The Theatre, in Studies in the Bengal Renaissance ed. by A. Gupta (Jadavpur; National Council of Education,
1958), pp. 301-02.
59. B. Bandyopadhyay, Bangiya Natyashalar Itihas, pp. 172-73
A farce ridiculing Jagdananda was written and performed immediately. This farce, entitled Gajadananda O Yubaraj,
was so applauded by the nationalists to the embarrassment of the Government that the Governor-General soon promulgated
an ordinance banning the performances of all plays considered "scandalous, defamatory, seditious, obscene and otherwise
prejudicial to the public interest .'' For details see P. Pundit, 'The Dramatic Performances Bill'. Mookerjee's Magazine, New
Series, Vol. V. Nos. 36-40 (Jan.-Jun.,1876).
60. Women appeared on the public stage on the 16th August 1873. See Madhyastha, 14 Bhadra 1280 (Aug., 1873), pp.
405-06.
61. S. Sastri, Atmacharit (First Signet ed.; Calcutta: Signet Press, 1952), P. 90; Indra Mitra, Sajghar (Calcutta; ,1960),
p. 40.
62. BBP, Oct.-Nov., 1869, p. 137; 'Notes on Govin Chunder Dutt' Calcutta Review, Vol. CXV (1902), pp. 400-02.
63. For details see H. Das, Life and Letters of Toru Dutt. (Oxford : Oxford U. P., 1921).
38
The Dutts being Christians, these instances may be regarded as exceptions. However soon
Brahmo women were to visit Europe. Sasipada Banerji, a distinguished social worker and a
young Brahmo leader, asked his wife to accompany him on his European tour in 1871.64
Possibly he hoped that such a tour would broaden the outlook of his wife and "modernize"
her. The result was almost immediate. After having lived with different English families for
eight months, Rajkumari, his wife, returned to Bengal with a changed outlook and
personality.65 Satyendranath Tagore sent his wife, Jnadanandini Debi, to England in 1877. In
Jnanada's own language, her husband 'so profound an admirer of English civilization' had
expected that their visit to England would help to learn both the English language and
manners.66 Satyendranath sent her and the three children aged 5, 4 and 2 accompanied by an
English family... this he thought would compel her to learn English even sooner. Jnanda lived
in England for about two and a half years and in France for a few months. She and her
children learnt not only English but picked up a bit of French as well.67 (Later their daughter,
Indira, got first class Honours in French from the Calcutta University.) Besides,
Jnanadanandini turned into a fashionable and sophisticated women.
The examples of women visiting Europe were not limited to the Brahmo and Christians
alone. Traditional Hindu women too followed. Manomohan Ghose was undoubtedly very
much influenced by the Brahmos, but he never formally accepted Brahmoism.68 After
having returned to Bengal from England in 1867 as a barrister, Ghose realized the need to
“reform” his uneducated and unsophisticated wife. He immediately sent her to a convent
where she received a good English education. She also learnt English manners and adopted
Western dress.69 Not satisfied with this, Ghose took her to England twice with him. The
apparent result was, in the eyes of a contemporary biographer, that 'she is able to mix in
English society like any English lady'.70 Yet another striking example was that of W.C.
Bonnerji's wife Hemangini Debi. Bonnerji, later a President of the Indian National Congress,
was a member of a traditional Hindu family. One of his ancestors was the renowned Sanskrit
scholar Jagannath Tarkapanchanan. While studying law in England during the years 1864-
68, Bonnerji realized the need to educate womenfolk. Immediately after his return to Bengal
as a barrister, he started to educate his wife. To further this, he sent his wife to England. Later
she turned into ' an accomplished lady'.71 It seems that English education had shaken her
religious belief and the accepted Christianity, although Bonnerji himself stuck to Hinduism.
However, both of them became ardent supporters of female education and determined to give
their daughters a medical education.72 Bonnerji educated his sisters, Mokshadayini as well.
Mokshadayini published a fortnightly, Bangamahila, in 1870.73
Of the four books, only one-A Sheaf Gleaned in France Fields (1876) was published before her death. Her other books
are: Binaka (published in Bengal Magazine in 1878); Le Journal de Mademoiselled Arvers (1879); and Ancient Ballades
and Legend: of Hindustan (1882).
64. BBP, Feb.-Mar., 1871, p.334.
65. A. R. Banerji, An Indian Pathfinder: Memoris of Sebabrata Sasipada Banerji (2nd ed.; Calcutta: Sadharan Brahmo
Samaj,1973), passim.
66. J.Debi, Smritikatha, p.38
67. Ibid., pp. 38-39.
68. According to D. Kopf. Ghose was a Brahmo. See The Brhmo Samaj and the Shaping of the Modern Indian Mind,
p. 97,259.
69. J, Debi 'Smritikatha', p.29.
70. R. G. Sanyal, A General Biography of Bengal Celebrities Both Living and Dead (Reprint: Calcutta Rddhi, 1976;
First ed. 1889), p.24.
71. Ibid., p.48.
72. Ibid., p.49.
73. B. N. Bandyopadhyay, Bangla Samayikpatra, Vol. II (2nd ed.; Calcutta: Bangiya Sahitya Parishat, 1952), p. 11.
39
Krishnabhabini Das was possibly closer to traditional Hinduism than all the other women
who went to Europe during the 1870s and 1880s. However, she had a strong desire to see the
world outside the zenana and to visit Europe. In the introduction to her book on her journey
and experience in England, she said:
(Female) readers! I was locked up in the zenana just like you and I had no connection with anything of
either my country or the world. I used to keep myself satisfied with the few things I found in the small world
of the zenana, but I could do so with difficulty. I longed to know all I could about my country. I would
almost become crazy whenever I heard that someone was going to or returning from England. If I ever met
anyone coming from abroad, I used to ask him a lot of questions about the countries he had visited.
However, I would never express my desire to visit these countries, because I knew that such desires of
Bengali women were not be fulfilled.74
She wrote more about her desire to get out of the zenana.
For years I cherished the hope that one day I would go to England, the abode of liberty and freedom,
I would go to that country where there is freedom in every house,
To that country where people live in the open air of freedom.
O Mother Bengal! Many of your sons go there in order to receive education,
Why then, Mother, can't we, your daughters, go there?
And illuminate our heart with knowledge?
We too are human beings, and have eyes;
But we are blind, and live in cages.
With what difficulties have I come out of one of these cages!
I have come out, Mother, to fill my heart with the nectar of knowledge.75
After having lived in England for about a decade (1882-1890), she was, indeed, a
changed women. She herself was aware of this change. In an interesting passage she thus
described this change:
There is popular saying that even a slave becomes free as soon as he steps on the soil of England. I myself
can feel it very well that there has been a significant change in my attitudes and values since I started to
breathe in the open air of England and to live with the free people of that country. I am unable to describe
this change to the brothers and sisters of my country. I did not know anything of this while I was in India. I
even did not think that the life of a person could be so different. I used to read about other countries-some
independent, some under the rule of others, some democratic and some autocratic- but was unable to realize
the significance of all these terms. I can now see that I used to imagine all other countries more or less like
mine, because at that time, I was like a blind person to whom day and night had no difference.76
A purdahnashin (one who observes the purda) woman with elementary education, she
soon immensely enhanced her knowledge. This was reflected in her writings which she
started to publish while she was still in England. Her book on England came out in 1885 and
her articles soon started to appear in different magazines including Bharati. The ideas of
women's modernization expressed in her writings were most certainly "modern'' and
remarkable. She was the only women writer of that time who introduced the contemporary
English women's movement for emancipation to Bengali readers and advocated the
upliftment of Bengali women on the same lines.77
A visit to Europe may not mean anything today, but it was quite significant a century ago.
Sea voyage was prohibited to Hindus. One would lose one's Jati or caste if one went on a sea
voyage. Earlier, Rammohun Roy and Dwarkanath Tagore had gone to Europe.78 But they
were able to do this because they were wealthy and influential and could possibly disregard
social customs. Most of the ambitious young men of that period who went to England for
74. Also see my article on Krisnabhabini Das, Englande Banga Mahila, p. 2. Krisnabhabini in Jijnasa, Vol.3, No. 2
(Oct.-Dec., 1982), pp. 128-43.
75. Ibid., pp.19-21.
76. Ibid., pp. 253-54.
77. For example, see her article on English women's education and emancipation: 'Ingrej Mahilar Shiksha O
Swadhinatar Gati', Bharati O Balak, Jul.-Aug., 1891.pp.198-202. Also see her Englande Banga Mahila, Chapters X and
XII.
78. Roy went in 1880, Dwarkanath in 1832 and 1845.
40
higher studies and later earned considerable fortunes, had to perform atonement for crossing
the kalapani, or sea (literally ''dark water''), after they had returned home.79 The journeys
undertaken by these women were, therefore, extraordinary acts of disobedience towards
society and, as is evident from the above instances, had a tremendous impact on their
education and personality.
79. The prejudice against sea travel was quite strong until the end of the nineteenth century. A committee consisting of
the leaders of the traditional Hindus was formed in Bengal in order to fight against this prejudice. This committee was still
working in 1894. See P. Sinha. Nineteenth Century Bengal: Aspects of Social History ( Calcutta: Firma K. L.
Mukhopadhyay, 1965), pp. 139-41, 157-59.
41
CHAPTER THREE
In the Wide World : Women's Changing Concept of Freedom
Although during the first half of the nineteenth century the condition of Bengali women
was not at all enviable because they were uneducated and licked up in the zenana, they were
perhaps no less happy than the later women who received some formal education and were
also allowed to move beyond the four walls of the zenana. While the earlier women were,
since their childhood, taught to remain content with the kind of life-style prevalent at that
time, later women gradually acquired a set of new values which they found were totally
unacceptable to most people around them. They were slowly but surely overcome by a sense
of dissatisfaction relating to the fulfilment of their own lives within the context of the zenana
or of the family. Once they had some education, they could no longer think in the same way
as the women of the preceding generation. Moreover, the ones who had tasted a life outside
the zenana found it impossible to shut themselves again inside it. They therefore started to
look beyond the domestic chores for the realization of their hopes and aspirations. They for
the first time came to nurture the idea that like all men, women were also born free and equal
and that it was a traditional male-defined society that had kept them chained. Indeed they not
only conceived of women's rights, but soon developed their own concept of freedom as well.
Social Activities
As female education spread, and female seclusion became less rigorous among the
bhadralok, particularly the Brahmos, there was an increased amount of women's participation
in social activities outside the context of the family. Apparently it all started with their
attendance at religious services. The first example was that of about 50 Brahmo women of
Calcutta who attended the annual religious festival of the Brahmos, called the Maghotsab, at
the Jorasanko house of Debendranath Tagore in January, 1866. After the men had left the
function, women were allowed to sit behind a curtain and hear Debendranath's sermon.1 A
few months later, Brahmomayi Debi, Durgamohan Das's wife, and another woman of Barisal
(whose name has not been mentioned) attended a religious service of the local Brahmos.
They were one step forward in the sense that they attended it with the other male members of
the local Samaj.2 The Barisal Brahmo women, being only a few, were unable to do anything
other than attend religious service, but the Calcutta Brahmo women organized during the
same year the first women's association of Bengal, called the Brahmika Samaj. In November
that year, as we already saw, they gave a reception to Miss Mary Carpenter and later started
to organize monthly meetings.
Although the Brahmika Samaj's objectives were predominantly religious in nature, this
was a test case of how far men were prepared to allow women to come out of purda as well
as to participate in social activities. The conservative Adi Brahmo Samaj of the Tagores had
already rejected the idea of women's participation in social activities even in the name of
42
religious services.3 Even the so-called ''progressive'' Brahmo Samaj of India, under the
leadership of Keshab chandra Sen, stood divided when, in January, 1872, a number of
women tried to sit outside the curtain with the male members of their families during a
religious service. These included Durgamohan Das's and Annada Charan Khastagir's
families. Keshab, well-known for some of his progressive ideas, would not allow the women
to sit outside the curtain, because, he argued, this would distract the attention of the other
male members.4 Offended by this, Das, Khastagir, Dwarkanath Ganguly and some others
organized a separate service at a Bowbazar house. Debendranath Tagore and Rajnarayan
Bose, both of whom were conservative with regard to women's modernization, encouraged
this faction to set up this separate Samaj, most probably because they welcomed a split in the
Brahmo Samaj of India.5 When, within several months, Keshab conceded to the demand of
this faction, the weekly services, the attendance of women at the services, however, did not
tremendously improve as a result of this.6 The women were actually fighting for a right.
When they got it, their enthusiasm started to ebb. This, of course, shows growing awareness
on their part. Whether or not they coveted increased social contact with men, they certainly
found a life outside their homes and desired to mingle with fellow women.
This temporary split among the ''progressive'' members of the Brahmo Samaj on the
question of women's right polarized the difference between the two groups of the Brahmo
Samaj of India-one in favour equal rights of men and women and another in favour of limited
rights for women.7 In 1874, the issue of women's rights to higher education further divided
the Brahmo Samaj on India, and Sibnath Sastri, Das, Khastagir, Ganguly, Sasipada Banerji,
etc., emerged as a separate faction named the Samadarshi Dal.8
It is difficult to say whether women were losing their keen interest in religion, but there is
no doubt that their attention was being channelled in other directions as well. Knowingly or
unknowingly, men themselves were helping women to look at other issues For example, with
renewed reforming zeal, Keshab returned from England in 1870 with certain ideas, such as
elevating women and industrial labourers. He soon started the Indian Reform Association and
a ladies' school under that association.9 Keshab then organized the first ''social'' association of
women, named the Bamahitaishini Sabha, with the teachers and the students of this school,
he himself being the President. Apart from two European women–Miss Pigot and Lady
Phear, Mrs. Manomohan Ghosh, Mrs. Durgamohan Das, Mrs. W. C. Bonnerji and a number
of other women were on the committee. The association decided to meet every alternate
friday.10 In its second meeting, 30 women attended and four read papers.11 Keshab was,
3. Although Debendranath allowed women to participate in religious services on the occasion of the annual Moghotsab
in 1866, he refused to allow them to do so in 1867. BBP, Jan.-Feb., 1867, p. 444
4. Ramtanu Lahiri O Tatkalin Banga Samaj, p.270.
5. Debendranath, as a mark of his encouragement, gave a sermon at this Samaj in March, 1872 (Tattvabodini Patrika,
May-Jun., 1872, pp. 27-30). Rajnarayan Bose agreed to act as the acharya at the request of Debendranath (Rajnarayan
Basur Atmacharit, p. 197).
6. BBP, Aug.-Sep., 1872 p.168.
7. Madhyastha, the conservative Hindu perodical, sarcastically named the Keshabites the ''progressive''. See
Madhyastha, 20 Jyaistha, 1279 (June,1872), p. 127. Halisahar Patrika named them the ''lectures'' and the ''feminists''
respectively.
8. S. Sastri, History of the Brahmo Samaj (2nd ed., Calcutta: Sadharan Brahmo Samaj, 1974), pp. 163-64.
Samadarshi Dal published a monthly journal named Samadarshi in 1874 with Sastri as its editor. It was a bilingual
Journal. Surprisingly enough, it did not publish anything on the contemporary movement for the emancipation of Bengali
women, during at least the first year.
9. BBP, Dec., 1870-Jan., 1871, p. 273.
10. BBP,Apr.-May, 1871, pp. 392-93.
Whether a woman's association could be started was first discussed at a meeting of the Brahmo Samaj of India in
October, 1870. The meeting was presided over by Pratapchandra Mazumdar, Keshab had not till then returned from
England. (BBP, Oct.-Nov., 1870, p. 224.)
43
therefore, at the same time encouraging women to get involved in social activities and mingle
with male members of the Samaj and trying to prevent them from sitting with male members
during the weekly services. This contradiction resulted, as we have seen, almost in a schism
of the Brahmo Samaj of India in 1872.
Although they got valuable support from men such as Sibnath Sastri and Umesh Chandra
Datta, women themselves established and ran the Banga Mahila Samaj. Soon after the schism
of the Brahmo Samaj of India in 1878, the women members of the newly formed Sadharan
Brahmo Samaj felt the necessity of having their own association and they finally started the
Banga Mahila Samaj in August 1879.12 Radharani Lahiri, Swarnaprabha Basu, Kadambini
Basu, Kailas Kamini Datta, Saraswati Sen, Kamini Sen, etc., who were previously associated
with the Bamahitaishini Sabha, were the most prominent members of the Banaga Mahila
Samaj during the first few years. The association started with 41 women . But it soon
attracted more. The annual meeting of 1880 was attended by about 100 women.13
Bamabodhini Patrika claimed that only those women who believed in the principles of
Brahmoism were eligible for membership of this association,14 but it appears that, unlike the
Bamahitaishini Sabha, it was based on a broader principle and paid little attention to religious
matters. The papers read at its meetings included subjects like ethics, men-women
relationships, science and hygiene, but none on any institutionalized religion. Before long, it
enlisted the support of some European woman. It published at least two books -one by
Radharani Lahiri and another by Ramasundari Ghosh-during the first three years of the
existence.15 Encouraged by the success of the Bamahitaishini Sabha and the Banga Mahila
Samaj, the native Christian women started their own association in 1881, with Kamini Shil as
its secretary. It had 35 regular members and the first annual meeting held on 12th November,
1881, was attended by about 300 men and women. Like the Banga Mahila Samaj, it also
started organising regular monthly meetings where papers of different subjects were
presented. However, it went a step further when it launched its monthly magazine,
Khristiaya Mahila, edited by Kamini Shil, in 1881.16 This periodical came to be known as
the second monthly to be edited by a woman, the first one being Anathini (1875), edited by
Thakamani Debi of Dhulian.17
Now that women belonging to both the Brahmo Samaj of India and the Sadharan Brahmo
Samaj as well as to Bengali Christian society, had their respective associations, the women of
the Adi Brahmo Samaj felt the need to have a similar association. In the early 1880s, they
were occupied with the popular theosophical movement led by Col. H. S. Olcot. But as the
theosophical movement lost much of its popularity, the Adi Samaj women felt this need for
an association even more strongly. At last, Swarnakumari Debi started her Sakhi Samiti
(Friends' Association) in 1886. However, she included women of the other two factions of
the Brahmo Samaj as well as of educated Hindu families. The Sakhi Samiti aimed to bring
about better understanding among women belonging to different social and religious groups.
It also aimed to educate helpless widows and unmarried girls and thus make them
economically self-supporting. Further, the Association aimed to organize exhibitions of
44
handicrafts collected from districts of Bengal.18 This, it hoped, would encourage women to
make more of such things. According to Sarala Debi, the Sakhi Samiti also offered legal aid
to raped women.19
Whether or not it could bring about a better understanding among women belonging to
different segments of society, it certainly educated quite a few women through its zenana
education programme, and its exhibitions too proved successful. Moreover, it seems, the
Sakhi Samiti was able to attract far more women to it than the other women's associations. In
1888, for example, 162 women contributed an amount of Rs 2,405 to its fund.20 The
contributions the others associations received annually were about one tenth of this amount.21
The list of the members of the Sakhi Samiti published in Bharati indicates that most of the
members were Brahmos, but there were also many Hindus, several Christian and a few
Muslims, and these members were from different parts of Bengal.22 The Sakhi Samiti did
not publish its own magazine, nevertheless it had its organ in Bharati as it was being edited
by Swarnakumari Debi at this stage. Swarnakumari so efficiently edited this monthly
magazine that it inspired a number of women to start magazines such as Antapur and Janhabi
(1904).
By the middle of the 1890s, both the Banga Mahila Samaj and the Sakhi Samiti lost much
of their enthusiasm, not because women were becoming uninterested in social activities but,
possibly, because there was no one such as Swarnakumari Debi, who could constantly look
after the working of the associations and thus sustain their activities. In fact, socially
speaking, the women mentioned above were becoming more and more active and at the same
time were enlarging the sphere of their activities. They realised that they certainly had some
social roles to play outside the sphere of their families, without which their lives would
remain unfulfilled.
It was at this stage that some women were politicised. This first began during the Ilbert
Bill agitation in 1883. The Calcutta bhadralok were very excited about the Bill and the
opposition of the Europeans towards it.23 Some of them influenced the girls attending the
Bethune School to participate in the agitation. Sarala Debi describes how girls’ participation
in its turn influenced many reluctant members of the bhadralok to take part in the agitation.24
When later, the Indian National Congress was founded, in 1885, some Bengali women
soon joined it. In the annual conference of 1889 Dr. Kadambini Ganguli and Swarnakumari
Debi attended as delegates from Bengal. Dr. Ganguli even addressed the conference.25
Admittedly, this did not mean that women in general had become highly politicised, but it
showed that at least some Bengali women were being increasingly influenced by a political
awareness. Sarala Debi's involvement in politics, for instance, was much deeper than that of
most of the moderate bhadralok politicians. She was convinced that agitational politics was
18. 'Sakhi Samiti Uddeshya O Niyamabali', Bharati O Balak, Dec., 1891-Jan,1892, p. 508.
19. Sarala Debi, Jibaner Jharapata, p.59.
20. 'Sakhi Samiti Uddeshya O Niyamabali', Bharati O Balak, pp.509-15.
21. The income of the Banga Mahila Samaj during the 5 months on its existence was only 91 rupees. During the
second year, its income was 252 rupees.-BBP, Jan.-Feb., 1880, p. 119. The income of the Khristiya Mahila Samaj during the
first year was 281 rupees. -BBP, Dec., 1881-Jan. 1882, p. 264.
22. The list of members can be seen in Appendix 4.
23. For details see A. Seal, The Emergence of Indian Nationalism (Reprint; Cambridge : Cambridge U. Press, 1970),
pp.165-69; B. Martin, Jr., New India ( Bombay: Oxford U. Press,1970), passim.
Annette Akroyd, who was so devoted to the cause of the native women, was opposed to the proposed Bill.-P.Barr, p.
186.
24. Sarala Debi, Jibaner Jharapata, p. 28.
25. J.C. Bagal, Jatiya Andolane Banganari (Calcutta: Visva Bharati, 1954), p. 2; P. C. Gangopadhyay, Banglar Nari-
Jagaran (Calcutta; Sadharan Brahmo Samaj, 1946), p.87.
45
not sufficient for freeing the country from the clutches of alien rulers and that a militant
nationalist movement, including terrorism, was essential. She reached this conclusion before,
or at the same time, as Tilak. Whether or not her conclusion was valid, she was a forerunner
in this sphere of Indian politics. The way she encouraged young men to take physical
training, as well as to undergo a political orientation, helped to organize the later terrorist
movement in Bengal. She also successfully started the Pratapaditya festival and the
Beerastami Brata and these aroused a strong sense of nationalism among the Bengalis,26 even
if these were to some extent communal in nature. Although women like Sarala Debi were
exceptional, the writings of Krisnabhabini Das and Rokeya Sakhawat Hossain suggest that,
albeit moderate, a political consciousness was permeating a section of the educated women.27
After the partition of Bengal in 1905, the number of women who took part in active politics
soon multiplied.
Economic Activities
During the period under review, among Bengali women mainly maidservants, illiterate
midwives and prostitutes had independent incomes. Besides, women of working class
families participated in economic activities by helping their male relations by doing such
work as feeding the domestic animals, milking cows, husking rice and selling fish. Some
women even helped men by taking part in planting and harvesting. In short, low class
women played a significant economic role, whether or not they earned any money. In order
to do this, they were naturally required to ignore the purda. Moreover, as already mentioned,
this meant that they held a higher status in their families than women of the bhadralok
families. The latter women did not play any economic role, and, in any case, they did not earn
any money. Indeed, there was a strong prejudice against any economic activities being
undertaken by such women. It will be shown in Appendix 1 that, even as late as the 1930s,
Rabindranath Tagore, so well known for his advanced ideas and so sympathetic to women,
was opposed to women's acceptance of any salaried jobs. Even in the popular novels of
Sharat Chandra Chatterjee, published during the first forty years of the twentieth century, the
women characters like Rajlaxmi and Sabitri who have their own incomes are depicted as
either prostitutes or maidservants. None of the educated women in Chatterjee’s novels look
for any jobs even if they are in desperate poverty. One might remember Kiranmayi of
Charitraheen in this context.
From the scant evidence available, it is almost impossible to tell why with the passing of
the time women in growing number started to involve themselves in economic activities.
However, it seems, as a result of the spread of female education and of the overall social
change that was taking place in the nineteenth century including increased economic pressure
on families, women started to accept jobs in the last two decades of that century. Especially,
the expansion of female education invited a new set of problems for the educated women.
These women, particularly the ones having college education, had tasted a life so long
unknown to them and wanted to play some social roles in addition to their traditional roles
within the family. Moreover, since they had been unorthodox with regard to social customs
such as female seclusion, female illiteracy and early marriage, it became difficult for them to
find husbands. They possibly chose to take up jobs until they were married, albeit a stop gap
arrangement for many. One might mention the name of such highly educated women in this
category as Chandramukhi Bose and Jamini Sen, Kumudini Khastagir and Sarala Debi who
46
accepted teaching positions, and Bidhumukhi Bose and Jamini Sen who began to practise
medicine. Later, some of these women, willingly or not, gave up their jobs when they were
married. It is, however, difficult to tell why the aforesaid women chose to ignore the social
opprosition and accepted the jobs. It is known that Kamini's father strongly objected when he
heard that Kamini would like to take up a teaching position at Bethune College. Kamini's
father, a junior judge, was not particularly rich, but he did not expect Kamini to augment his
income and thus help him support his family. Yet Kamini persuaded her father to allow her to
accept the job. Several years later her younger sister, Jamini, came out of the University as a
qualified physician. She also accepted a job. Perhaps this was because brilliant and
successful students as they were, the prospects of a life of inactivity after the completion of
their college years, were unacceptable to them. And the other time honoured alternative of
getting married, doing housework and bringing up children did not appear to them extremely
rosy. Perhaps all the other educated women since then faced more or less the same problems.
One of the factors which encouraged moderately educated women, mostly married, to
take up teaching jobs, salaried or honorary, was the rapid expansion of female education.
Men had by then realised that female education would not become popular unless female
teachers could be found out. This put a pressure on the aforesaid women to take up teaching.
The Calcutta Campbell Medical School introduced a nursing and midwifery course for
women in the early 1880s. It also admitted women students to its degree course in 1883.
To encourage women, the government next year declared a scholarship for all the women
students to enrol in the course.28 The response of women to the nursing and midwifery
course was more than what people had earlier expected. But few ventured to enrol in the
degree course. It may be mentioned here that when the Calcutta Medical school was first
established in 1835, few Hindus attended it, because the dissection of human corpse was
taboo to them. Apart from this, Hindu attitudes towards Western medicines and medical
treatment were also hostile.29 Calling a doctor during pregnancy and childbirth was out of
question. Infant mortality and death of both the mother and the child during childbirth were
therefore very common, even in educated middle class families.30 As Western ideas
progressively influenced urban society, these popular attitudes were gradually replaced.
Therefore, when qualified nurses and midwives started private practice, people did not
ostracise them, rather they were quite often called in to help during pregnancy and childbirth.
However, owing to reasons not clear, most people were still hostile towards qualified
physicians like Kadambini Ganguli and Bidhumukhi Bose. To discredit Kadambini, the then
popular Hindu periodical, Bangabasi, started a slandering campaign which resulted in a legal
suit.31 In the face of this kind of hostility, no women were brave enough to take up medicine
during the next two decades. Between 1890 and 1910, Jamini Sen was the only Bengali
woman to have come out of the Medical College. Bindhyobasini, younger sister of
Bidhumukhi, was a brilliant student of this College. And for inexplicable reasons, she too
discontinued her studies. Whether the hostility of the Hindus towards the qualified
physicians was because all the five women were either non-Hindus (Brahmos and
Christians), or whether it was promoted by male jealousy because Kadambini, Bidhumukhi
47
and Jamini were holding jobs that paid much more than most of the jobs that Bengali men
occupied at that time, cannot be ascertained.
Possibly the first known case of a woman of a bhadralok family accepting a paid position
was that of Radharani Debi of Dacca. An elderly women (most likely a widow), she was
offered a teaching position in early 1866 by the Sherpur Strishiksha Bidhayini Sabha at a
monthly salary of Rs 30. This was so unique an incident that the Lt.Governor of Bengal
asked the Commissioner of Dacca to arrange to take her photograph, which the former
intended to send to England. Bamabodhini Patrika too was apparently very much impressed.
Not only did it publish the news item, but it also mentioned therein the only thing it knew
about the woman that she used glasses while reading.32 In the 1870s, Radharani Lahiri,
Rajlaxmi Sen, Mahamaya Basu etc., were teaching at the Female Normal School founded by
Keshab Sen.33 But it is not known whether they held salaried positions or not.
The next decade saw a major change when women were offered government positions
having handsome salaries. The first such appointment was that of Manomohini Wheeler,
daughter of Krisna Mohan Banerji. Manomohini was appointed Inspector of School in
1879.34 Next year, Radharani Lahiri was appointed teacher of Bethune School. But the first
significant appointment was that of Chandramukhi Bose as assistant superintendent of
Bethune College in 1884. Her initial salary was Rs. 75. This undoubtedly was the highest
salary that any Bengali woman received till then. Nevertheless, Bamabodhini Patrika was
critical. It claimed that she was an MA and that she deserved a higher salary of at least Rs.
100.35 However, she was made superintendent of Bethune College in 1886 and her salary
more than doubled.36 Kamini Sen was offered the position of an assistant teacher at Bethune
School in 1886 and later of a lecturer at Bethune College. Kumudini Khastagir, who was
appointed a teacher in 1890, became the 2nd Headmistress in 1891 and a lecturer in 1896.
She later rose to the position of the Principal of Bethune College in 1902. By 1907, she was
made a full professor, a position that only Chandramukhi Bose earlier held. Hemaprabha
Bose, Surabala Ghosh, Surabala Mitra etc. were also appointed teachers at Bethune
College.37 Dr. Kadambini Ganguli was made the superintendent of Dufferin Hospital in
1893. Jamini Sen, the younger sister of Kamini Sen, worked as Medical Officer in different
Northern Indian towns as well as in Kathmondu.
Sarala Debi's appointment at Hydrabad Girl's School in 1895 deserves to be mentioned
for at least two reasons. First, she was offered an almost incredible a salary of 450 rupees for
a woman at time.38 Second and more important, of all the women mentioned above, she was
the only one to have explained in writing why she took up the job. In her autobiography, she
claims that all her relations were opposed to her accepting a job. However, she persuaded her
parents - Janakinath Ghosal and Swarnakumari Debi to allow her to take up the position.
Later Debendranath Tagore, her maternal grandfather, also reluctantly consented. Sarala
argues that she accepted the job because she wanted to establish her right to earn her own
2
bread as her male relations did.39 While describing why she gave up the job in six months
following an attack on her by a young man at night, she explains :
I was overcome by a strong “fancy'” to work, when I accepted my job. Of course, one of my objectives was
to establish women's right to earn their own bread; but this was, I suppose, only superficial. Indeed, my
''fancy'' was very strong and that was the principal reason why I accepted my job. When people have a
''cause'', they can fight to the finish -that reflects their greatness as well. However, a fancy has only a weak
foundation, like that of sand. It soon gives way. As in most cases, fancies are satisfied in no time. My fancy
too was gratified within a period of about six months.40
Indeed, as we will later see, it was too early for Bengali women to conceive of economic
independence and popular opinion was too hostile. The animosity of traditional Hindus
becomes apparent when we consider the fact that these working women were almost all
either Brahmos or Christians. There were, of course, a handful of Hindus and Muslims, but
they were rather exceptions to the general trend. However, it is not clear why all these
Brahmo and Christian women confronted some difficulties in connection with their
matrimony. Was it because they were overqualified in the eyes of men? Was it because men
still believed that educated women would not make submissive wives? Or was it because
men thought that being economically independent these women would be too arrogant to be
ideal wives? Whatever be the reason, none of these women, excepting Kadambini,41
succeeded in finding a husband before the age of 30. Chandramukhi was still unmarried at
the age of 41,42 while her younger sister, Bidhumukhi, who was one of the first women MBs,
remained so throughout her life. Bidhumukhi's friend, Virginia Mary Mitra passed the MB
examination the same year (1890) and topped the list. She married Purna Chandra Nandi in
1904, at the age of 39. Kamini Sen, who earned quite a reputation as a brilliant student and
later came to be known as one of the best poetesses married when she was 30. But after her
marriage, she was to give up her job. More important, she almost gave up writing poems. Her
younger sister, Jamini Sen, who had a medical degree from the Calcutta University and later
diplomas from England, remained unmarried.43 So were Hemaprabha Bose (Jagadish
Chandra Bose's younger sister) and Lajjabati Bose (Rajnarayan Bose's daughter).
Hemaprabha was an MA and Lajjabati a BA. Lajjabati was known as a poetess as well.
Radharani Lahiri and Surabala Ghosh also seemed to have remained unmarried. In any case,
Radharani was still unmarried in 1891 and Surabala in 1910.44 These women were all highly
educated and members of well known families. The only thing that separated them from the
rest and the educated Bengali women was that they were working women, and this possibly
complicated the matters relating to their matrimony.
3
However, despite the opposition of traditional society towards women's acceptance of
jobs, the above mentioned examples encouraged several hundred educated women of Bengal
to work by the turn of the century. In 1901, there were 1,156 female teachers and 151 female
medical practitioners (with diplomas, licences and certificates) in Bengal.45 The census
reports do not give the details of how many of these women were Europeans. Even supposing
half of these were Europeans, the number of Bengali working women, compared to the earlier
decades, was significantly increasing. However, one thing becomes apparent that women
were, at that time, accepting only such ''respectable'' professions as teaching and practising
medicine.
45. Census of India, 1901, Vol. pt.II (Calcutta: Bengal Secretariat Press, 1902), p.428,431.
46. Supra, pp. 46-47.
4
their husbands. They argued moreover that common men who had no sense of decency or
propriety ridiculed and insulted women they saw at public places. They, therefore, suggested
that these women should not be allowed to go outside their homes until they were properly
educated and had acquired the proper etiquette, and developed their personalities. They
claimed, and rightly so, that Bengali women's dress was extremely inadequate and that it
must be reformed before they could be allowed to break the seclusion. They gave a new
definition of emancipation, according to which breaking the seclusion or economic
independence did not constitute women's emancipation, but actual freedom meant mental and
spiritual development.47 How these women could get the experience of going out and of
conversing with men without going out and conversing with men, they did not explain, nor
did they make it clear how these women could be given some education unless they broke the
seclusion to attend school. Whether a woman who had received some education and
developed her individuality could retain the behaviour of traditional women was another
question they did not answer. But these were the popular attitudes of by far the largest section
of Bengali society.
47. See, for example, B. K. Goswami, 'Unnati O Swadhinata', BBP, Jun.-Jul., 1871, pp. 68-69; "Abala-Bandhab',BBP,
Jun.-Jul., 1871pp. 96-97; 'Naranari', BBP, Feb.-Mar., 1873, pp. 336-38; 'Strijatir Aswabhabik Unnati', BBP, Jun.-Jul., 1873,
pp. 69-72; 'Bangiya Mahilar Khedokti', Nov.-Dec., 1873, pp. 265-66; 'Strishiksha O Striswadhinata', Tattvabodhini Patrika,
Nov.-Dec., 1878, pp. 154-55; Y. 'Stri O Purusher Adhikar Ki Saman?', BBP, Jun.-Jul., 1892, pp. 79-80.
48. Kailasbasini Debi, Hindu Abalakuler Bidyabhyas etc., pp. 11-12.
49. Supra, p. 37.
5
living and prayed to God for their emancipation.50 While giving the probable reasons for
keeping them caged, Sarda Debi argued more of less on the same lines. In her opinion men
regarded women as low as animals. Men, she claimed believed that women would become
unchaste and consequently bring disgrace on their families unless they were kept in cages.
She called this contention baseless and ridiculous and demanded that women should be given
their rightful position in society.51 Rajabala Debi accused men of being responsible for the
deterioration of women's social status.52 Kamini Sen, regarded as the best poetess of Bengal
till now, was unable to conceive that women's position had always been so low. She said
innumerable educated women like Gargi and Lilabati would be produced if women were
restored to their rightful position. She further declared that India would never awaken unless
its women were freed.53
That these women were becoming aware of their subordinate position can be seen in
these writings, but what they understood by freedom or emancipation is not clear. They felt
the agony of being kept in bondage, but failed to define exactly which things they wanted to
be free from and which things they wanted to be free to do. What a woman from Rajshahi
wrote in an article published in 1871 is more specific, whether or not her concept of freedom
was the best is a different question. She wrote:
In the absence of any freedom, the women of our country live as persons bereft of any sensations.......They
always live at the same place and know the same set of people. Consequently they are unable to converse
and communicate with honest and educated people and visit beautiful places. There are places by visiting
which one can benefit both in this world and in the world after and there are people conversing with whom
we can have invaluable instructions, but Bengali women can have none of these. They are deprived of the
excellent things that this world has to offer.....It cannot be considered as a matter of disgrace if women are
allowed to go out with their husbands or other relations. Now they can go neither to the Brahmo Samaj for
attending the services nor to school for receiving education. They are like caged birds who can only toss
about in their small world. Consequently their intellect remains absolutely undeveloped.......Women have
neither any freedom of action nor any freedom of choice. Alas! Men have so unlimited authority over
women, they can do whatever they want to, but women have no rights.54
As can be seen, to the writer of this passage, freedom more or less meant the right to go
outside the four walls of the zenana and the right to converse with other people. To another
women, Mayasundari from Calcutta, freedom meant even less. Aggrieved, she wrote:
Women have no right to see anything at all. The giant Howrah Bridge was constructed some time ago.
Every one who saw it, spoke highly of it. We only heard about it, but could not free ourselves from doubts
about what we heard by witnessing the Bridge itself.55
It was in these circumstances that a section of Bengali women argued in favour of
breaking the seclusion. They pointed out that women in most families were allowed to go to
the Ganges or to the open ponds for bathing and that they returned home in their wet cloths,
thus revealing the forms of their limbs and that they were allowed to talk to their male
servants.56 They were allowed to take part in the shameless rites connected with the bride-
chamber and the functions on the occasions of a girl's attaining her puberty and after being
pregnant.57 However they said, when properly dressed and properly behaved women of
bhadralok families went outside with their husbands or other relations and when they
conversed with close relations like their fathers-in-law or elder brothers of their husbands,
50. Ramasundari Dasi, 'Etaddeshiya Striganer Bidyabhab', BBP, May-Jun., 1868, pp. 39-40.
51. Sarada Debi, 'Bangadeshiya Lokdiger Ki Ki Bishaye Kusanskar Achhe', Bamarachanabali, pp. 9-11.
52. Rajabala Debi, 'Bamarachana', BBP, Feb.-Mar., 1874 p. 395.
53. Kamini Sen, 'Uddipana' (Poem), BBP, Mar.-Apr., 1880, pp. 186-88.
54. A lady from Boalia, 'Bangladesher Mahilaganer Swadhinata Bishay', BBP, May-Jun., 1871, pp.62-64.
55. Srimati Maya Sundari, 'Narijanma Ki Adharma', Banga Mahila, Jul.-Aug., 1875, p. 94.
56. Saudamini (Later Mrs B. L. Gupta), 'Lajja', Bamarachanabali, p. 24.
57. Madhumati Gangopadhyay, 'Abaidha Lajja', Bamarachanabali, pp. 20-21.
6
people became very critical.58 They disapproved of the dress that most Bengali women used
to wear. It consisted only of a fine sari, with no blouse or petticoat underneath. To an
European lady, Fanny Parks, this dress seemed strange and inadequate. She wrote that both
the figure and the colour of the skin would become apparent when one wore a sari, because
nothing else was worn beneath the sari.59 A Bengali man, in 1863, described Bengali women
as naked although wearing a 5 yard long sari.60 The modernized women admitted that their
dress must be reformed, but claimed that they should not be kept closed in the harem on this
ground. (See Appendix 3)
Jnanada Debi and Krisnakamini Dasi, who had been to Bombay, wrote that women in
Western India had considerable freedom and that they could visit any place or converse with
any one without the objections of traditional society. They also mentioned that men there had
a sense of decency and would not stare at women as if the latter were peculiar animals nor
would they insult these women.61 The same attitudes were shared by another woman who had
come to Bengal from a different and supposedly a superior culture–Miss Annette Akroyd.
While attending a meeting addressed by Keshab Sen soon after she had arrived in Calcutta,
she noticed the reaction of the men towards the presence of women at the meeting. A section
was staring at her with apparent desire in their eyes. She was neither astonished nor offended
by this, because this was common to all cultures, she knew. But the vast majority of the
audience looked at her as if she was a peculiar animal. She felt embarrassed at this and was
genuinely offended.62
Some women questioned the validity of the popular belief that breaking seclusion or
talking to men would mean that women would become unchaste. They claimed that it was a
baseless allegation. They pointed out that, despite the fact that European women did not
abide by the custom of female seclusion, not all of them were unchaste.63 Krisnabhabini Das,
who lived for quite a few years in England, moreover, claimed that most Englishwomen
could truly be called chaste. She reasoned:
Those Englishwomen who are chaste can rightly be proud of their chastity, because they remain chaste in
spite of the fact that they mix freely with men. It is doubtful whether those women (of our country) who
have never seen a man's face or mixed with any man can at all be proud of their chastity.64
Krisnabhabini argued in favour of freeing women from the zenana. She said that breaking
female seclusion or allowing women to mix with men would not make them unchaste. She
asked her countrymen to free their women.
Indian men do not allow their women any freedom, because they consider them fickle-minded and
irresponsible. They think that women, for so long locked up in the zenana, will not be able to protect
themselves, it they are now freed from there. They further claim that their women are not properly educated
and, therefore, not fit for any degree of freedom. But everyone has got to learn some day. A child does not
learn how to walk in a sigle day-he falls down many times and his parents must help him time and again.
The condition of our women is exactly like this. Men must sympathetically help them to rise; otherwise,
they will never be able to stand on their own feet. Unless by degrees these women are given some freedom,
how can they learn to restrain themselves and to behave properly?65
She then called Bengali women to rise:
58. Shymasundari, Satitva Narir Ekmatra Bhushan, BBP, Sep.-Oct., 1874, p. 193; Saudamini, 'Lajja', p. 24.
59. F. Parks, Wandering of a Pilgrim in Search of the Picturesque, during four-and-twenty years in the East with
Revelations of Life in Zenana, Vol. I (London: Pelham Richardson, 1850), p.60.
60. R. Chandra, Dekhe Shune Akkel Gurum (Calcutta: publisher not stated, Sangbad 1920, 1863-64), pp. 6-7.
Also see Appendix 3.
61. (J. Debi), 'Amader Bombai Bhraman', BBP, Feb.-Mar., pp. 345-46; Krisnakamini, 'Strilokdiger Sambhram', BBP,
Jul.-Aug., 1873, p.140.
62. A. Akroyd's diary, quoted in W. H. Beveridge, India Called Them, p. 90.
63. A lady from Boalia. 'Bangadesher Mahilaganer Swadhinata Bishay', p.63; Saudamini, 'Lajja', p. 22.
64. Krisnabhabini Das, Englande Banga Mahila (Calcutta: S. P. Sarbadhikari, 1885), p. 152.
65. Ibid., pp. 153-54.
7
Sisters! Come out of your cages by breaking them open,
Or convince your men to unchain you.
Come out and see how happy the women of Germany, France and England are.
There aren't any tears in their eyes!
Look! Men here do not ignore women as good for nothing.
Men do not treat them as their pets and lock them up in the zenana.
How long, sisters, do you want to remain as prisoners?
Alas! You do not know what happens around you either in India or in the world.
You do not do anything other than housework.
If you only once know what freedom tastes like,
You will never want to stay in your prison called zenana and hide your face under a veil.66
In the annual report of the Banga Mahila Samaj, Swarnaprabha Basu (J. C. Basu's sister)
not only supported women's efforts to break seclusion and to converse with men, but she also
observed that women who were previously ill at ease at social gatherings were becoming
more and more comfortable in such situations. She also claimed that these women had
realized that attending such functions was one of the ways to become civilized.67 The
modernized women argued that upliftment of women was synonymous with civilization.68
As years passed, women were becoming more and more conscious of their rights, such as
rights to higher education. They were also asking for rights to choose their husbands, as
discussed in some detail in the next chapter.
However, Bengali women's concept of freedom was quite superficial in that they
questioned their perpetual subordination but regarded the breaking of seclusion as their main
way to freedom. The more important issues, like bearing a large number of children, endless
housework from dawn to midnight, participation in social activities and complete economic
dependence on husband or other male relations, remained unquestioned until recently.
In 1891, a woman suggested that the educated Bengali women could become
economically independent by working as midwives and private tutors or even as physicians.
However, she disapproved of the idea of accepting salaried jobs in offices. Moreover, she did
not consider that economic independence was essential for women's emancipation.69 Sarala
Debi, as already mentioned, took up a paid job in 1895, not so much because she thought she
would establish her right to earn her economic independence as because she was overcome
by a desire to earn. She was soon satisfied and gave up the job after about six months.70 In
1900, Binodini Sen Gupta emphasized the point that women should become economically
less dependent on their male relations. But she too did not think it was a precondition of
women's emancipation. She considered it desirable because, she observed, at the death of
their husbands many women faced severe hardships.71 Generally speaking, Bengali women
of that period failed to appreciate the correlation between economic independence and their
social status, even though several hundred of them were working and there were quite a few
highly educated women among them,-by 1910 there were at least 49 BAs and 8 MAs, apart
from a number of medical graduates.72
Even an enlightened and Westernized woman like Krisnabhanbini Das maintained
contradictory attitudes regarding women's economic roles. In 1891, while comparing Bengali
women with French, Swiss and Irish women, she commented that educated and accomplished
8
as European women were, they were fully capable of helping their men in economic
activities. This, she believed, established the husband-wife relationship in those countries on
a sound understanding and co-operation. In her opinion, the husband-wife relationship in
India was far from desirable. She further maintained that European women could become
their husband's companion in the true sense of the term, because they were able to help their
men in every sphere of life.73 Earlier as well in her book Englande Banga Mahila (1885), she
highly praised Englishwomen because they actively played their economic roles. In another
article, she praised the working women of England and America. She argued that higher
education and economic activities did not at all spoil the womanly qualities of the aforesaid
women. On the contrary, she claimed that these women became even more beautiful because
their beauty was enhanced by education and their ability to help their men in their economic
pursuits.74
From what Krisnabhabini said in all these writings it might appear that she wanted all
educated Bengali women to help their respective husbands in economic activities. But,
surprisingly enough, her attitudes in this respect were quite traditional. In an article,
published in 1892, she clearly denied that every educated Bengali woman must work and
earn. She thus questioned; will any one believe that all highly educated women will go from
one office to another in search of jobs and work there for several hours every day just because
they might be able to earn some money thereby? In fact, she did not consider it desirable, in
any case, for Bengali women. However, she conceded that those women who were poor and
had no male relations to support them, might earn for their families and that would save them
from a lot of dishonour and disgrace.75 Krisnabhabini was a highly Westernized as well as a
very modern woman, if her attitudes towards women's economic activities were so
conservative , the extent of prejudice of the more traditional women can be easily guessed.
However, some development in this regard took place during later decades when women
became more conscious regarding their economic roles. This possibly started with Begum
Rokeya, who , in a number of articles published between 1904 and 1930, argued that
women's independence depended on how much they were economically independent of their
male relations.76
The question of equality, nevertheless , attracted their attention. Although most of them
conceded that man and women were destined to play distinctly different roles, they demanded
that women should not be regarded as men's toys. Mankumari Basu, for example, observed
that Bengali women were expected to act according to the wish of their husbands and had no
right to develop their intellect, taste and religious beliefs independently.77 Nagendrabala
reasoned that God had not intended that women's intellect and spirit should be moulded
strictly in accordance with men's wishes.78 The more ''progressive'' women, however, were
not as apologetic as these. They claimed that women should be treated as equal to men in
every respect and given all rights that men enjoyed.79
It has already been mentioned that with the growing modernization of Bengali women, a
section of educated Bengali men, including some who were previously supporters of
feminism, became, in the 1870s, highly critical of women's modernization in general and
Westernization in particular. This change of attitudes could be noticed among a segment of
9
educated women as well. A number of reasons were put forward by them. Some of them, for
instance, observed that housework and childbearing would be hampered if women were to go
out frequently. They referred to the modernized women as ''manly''. Some complained that
the modernized women were losing the virtues of labouring for love, devotion, hospitality
and self-sacrifice that former women had. Some noticed that women were increasingly
becoming disobedient to their husbands and in-laws.80 That these women were wearing
Western dress, or at least a reformed dress, and shoes and using cosmetics was another
allegation that some women raised.81 Yet another criticism was that the joint family system
was breaking down because of the more demanding nature of the modernized women.82
In fact, a conservative definition of emancipation was evolving among the women of
more traditional families. In their opinion, women's emancipation consisted of mental and
spiritual freedom; besides, it was under their subtle direction that the whole of society was
moving.83 These writers therefore glorified women's traditional roles which were, in their
opinion, very important and declared that whatever glory Bengal had was because women
held a subordinate position to men.84
Despite this conversation in a section of educated Bengali women, one cannot deny the
fact that there had been a significant change of attitudes among women in favour of
emancipation and substantial portion of women had realized by the end of the century what
Mankumari Basu summarized as follows:
Although men are still holding a superior position in society compared to women, it is absolutely
unreasonable that they will abuse or oppress women and that they will enlighten themselves by education,
leaving women behind in the darkness of ignorance. Childbearing, childrearing and housework are duties
that God has given women to perform, but these are not the prime objectives of their lives.85
10
during the last quarter of that century, neither Bengali men nor women considered
childbearing and childrearing as questions related to women's emancipation. On the contrary,
even modernized women like Jnanada Debi glorified these roles of women.87 To some, these
were the two best roles that a virtuous woman could play. The same was true of housework.
During the period under review, it was looked upon as an essential virtue of women.
Catharine Watkin, an Owenite feminist, declared as early as 1843 that women could
never be truly emancipated unless they were freed from the clutches of the institutionalized
religions. She showed how religions had ritualized and perpetuated women's subordination
to men.88 On the contrary, both Bengali men and women were far from being freed from the
clutches of institutionalized religions and women actually prayed to God for their upliftment
and freedom. Bengali women questioned the propriety of seclusion, which had kept them
behind the walls of the zenana and was immediately apparent, but they failed to notice the
economic dependence which had kept both their body and soul in perpetual fetters. It can be
mentioned here that by 1891, more than 200,000 women had entered literate professions in
England, including 146,375 teachers, 53,057 trained nurses and 17859 secretaries and
clerks.89 In 1896, women constituted 70% of the total number of teachers.90 In 1901, Bengal
had only 1,156 women teachers, 749 nurses and 66 clerks, and these included a good number
of Europeans.91
The development of personal liberty as against society and the extended family was not of
their concern either. I have so far come across the writing of only one woman who directly
argued against the joint family system.92 Thus, by freedom, Bengali women understood only
a partial improvement in their degraded social position; emancipation was still inconceivable.
Books on contraception started to be published in England and France as early as 17th century.
87. J. Debi, 'Strishiksha', Bharati, May-Jun., 1881, pp. 264-73.
88. B. Tavior, 'The Women-Power', p. 137.
A bright exception, to my knowkedge, was Rokeya S. Hossein, in an article entitled 'Amader Abanati', Bublished in
Natanur, in 1904, she claimed that religion had ritualized and perpetuated women's subordination. See Editorial notes,
Rokeya Rachanabali, p. 11
89. International Congress on women, Women in Professions, Vol.I (London: T. Fisher Unwin, 1900), pp. 31-32.
90. Royal Commision on Equal Pay 1944-46 Report (London: His Majesty's Stationery Office, 1946), p. 23.
91. Supra, p. 107.; Census of India, 1901, Vol. VIA , pt. II, p. 428, 431, 433.
As years passed by , particularly after the First World War, woman of some families, Brahmos and Christians, took up
salaried jobs more earnestly. Sitanath Tattvabhushan's all six daughters, for instance, accepted teaching positions. See, for
details, Tattvabhushan's Autobiography,pp. 109-10
92. Supra, p. 61.
11
CHAPTER FOUR
The Disputed Image: The Figure of Women in Society
If Bengali women's roles and status were inferior to those of men, their inferiority was
reinforced by tradition and their self-perception. The introduction of female education and the
breaking of the purda faced, as we have seen in the preceding two chapters a great deal of
opposition from traditional society and caused quite a commotion. After half a century of
sincere efforts on the part of the Westernized bhadralok, female education made only a
limited breakthrough and the rigors of the purda were only partially relaxed. In any case, the
impact of female education and of tearing the veil was insignificant outside the small
segment of the modernized Brahmos and the native Christians. However, the overall social
change that Bengal, more particularly Calcutta, experienced during the nineteenth century
had a considerable influence on a bigger circle of bhadralok families and their women.
Consequently, women's roles in these families were modified, their status redefined to an
extent and their life style partially elevated. Women's attitudes towards these developments
underwent an appreciable change as well, bringing about a change in their very self-
perception. Moreover, the joint family system, so dear to the bhadralok started to crumble.
Unlike the introduction of female education and the breaking of the purda, these changes
went on slowly and almost silently, and were inconspicuous for some time, nevertheless their
influence was irreversible.
1. See, A. K. Datta, Dharmaniti (Calcutta; Brahmo Samaj, 1856), p. 69; 'Etaddesher Bibahapaddhati Sambandhe
Bibidha Alochana', Abohd-Bandhu, Aug.-Sep., 1869, p. 99; Tattvabodhini Patrika, Jun.-Jul., 1846, p.298; 'Striswadhinata',
Banga Mahila, Jan.-Feb., 1877, p. 233.
2. Rassasundari Debi, Amar Jiban, p. 29, 52.
12
Total obedience to the mother-in-law was so widely accepted a norm that before the
bridegroom left for the wedding ceremony, it was customery for him to tell his mother that he
was going to bring a 'slave' for her.3 Therefore, if the childwife did anything contray to what
a slave was expected to do, she was scolded and even physically punished . Cases of wives
being terribly oppressed by mother-in-law and sisters-in-law and of wives committing
suicide as a result were quite frequent.4 When the child wife was hit or abused, the young
(mostly teenaged) husband generally concurred with his parents and elder sisters. This was
due partly to his livelihood on the joint family and partly for lack of intimacy with his wife.
The childwife attained her puberty a few years after her marriage. The occasion was
properly celebrated with rituals and she was, for the first time, asked to see and sleep with her
husband.5 It seems that after she established a sexual relationship with her husband, her
position did slightly improve. This was particularly so if her husband considerably
contributed to the income of the joint family, or in other words , had a higher status than a
teenaged dependent son. The sudden elevation of the status of the wife was most probably
because it was at this time that the husband , with a gratified sexual feeling, started to love
and protect her.
The husband-wife relationship in a joint family was, as claimed by a lady, not close
enough.6 They were, we saw in the second chapter, not even allowed to talk or to see each
other during the day.7 Moreover, the parents were unhappy if they found their son deeply in
love with his wife. In such a case, the son was considered ''spoiled'' and henpecked and the
wife a witch.8 This was due to parents' apprehension that their son might ask for more
''rights'' for his wife and even act according to her wishes, both of which would shake the
normal relationships within the family and might even jeopardize the future of the joint
family by splitting it. Because of all these, in the joint families the husband and wife seldom
became companions in the true sense of the term. Relationships with the children were also
less close, because the young parents were unable to take any special care of their own
children or even to pay them a bit more attention as there were other children in the family
and all the children were to be equally treated.
Whether or not winning the love of the husband brought about a significant change of the
wife's status, she certainly attained a higher status when she gave birth to child especially to a
male one. The status of the ''Khokar ma'' or the mother of the son was definitely higher than
that of a childwife.9 The ''Khokar ma'' was subject among others to less strict seclusion and
scrutiny of the mother-in-law. The Hindus at that time attached great value to the birth of the
first son, who was regarded not only as a successor in this world, but the agent of the
deliverance in the after world. Thus the mother of the son was conceded more freedom than
before.
However, until after the death of the mother-in-law, she did not generally become the
mistress. The mistress was inferior in her status only to the master of the family. She had a
great deal of influence upon the other male members and over policy making. The
transformation of the status of the wife into that of the mistress was indeed remarkable.
3. B. M. Sarkar, 'Paribarik Sanskar', Banga Mahila, Vol. I No.10 (Jan.-Feb., 1876), p. 238.
4. See, for example, Shyamasundari Bandyopadhyay, ' Manikyamayir Shochoniya Atma-hatya', BBP, Jul.-Aug., 1874,
pp. 130-31.
5. 'Punarbibaha Bishayak Kathopakathan', BBP, Oct.-Nov., 1865, pp. 134-36.
6. Nistarini Debi, 'Narijibaner Uddeshya', BBP, Jan.-Feb., 1884, p. 320. Also see, 'Paribarik Sukh', BBP, Aug.-Sep.,
1884, pp. 165-66.
7. Supra p. 66.
8. Sarnalata Chaudhuri, 'Bou-Ma', Antahpur, Vol. I (1898) pp. 76-77.
9. M. M. Urquhart, Women of Bengal (London; Y. M. C. A., 1925), p. 33, 40.
13
Rassasundari Debi's instance may again be cited, but as an exception. She became the
mistress unexpectedly at an early age, as her mother-in-law suddenly lost her eyesight. She
also enjoyed a much better status as a childwife. Her father-in-law was dead and her husband
was the only earning member of the family. Moreover, hers was practically an extended
family, if not a nuclear family, as her husband was the only son of the family and all his
sisters were married.10 The extent of the subordination of the young wife can, however, be
discerned in the nineteenth century Bengali literature, including that of Rabindranath Tagore,
suggests that the position of the young wife was very low. A number of short stories of
Tagore such as ''Denapaona'', ''Strir Patra'' and '' Haimanti'' are excellent examples of how
childwives were tortured by their in-laws.
14
Besides, conversion of a good number of English educated young men to Brahmoism also
forced them to live away from their families. The instances of Keshab Chandra Sen,
Rajnarayan Bose. Durgamohan Das, Sibnath Sastri, Bijoy Krisna Goswami, Sasipada Banerji,
Krisna Kumar Mitra, Bipin Chandra Pal, Aghorenath Gupta and others can be mentioned
here. All of them were severely persecuted for having accepted Brahmoism and were obliged
to leave their families. When he accepted Brahmoism and renounced the sacred thread,
Sibnath Sastri was compelled to break off relations with his father, who did not see him
during the next nineteen years.16 Kshetramohan Datta and his educated wife, Kumudini,
were highly influenced by Brahmoism. They refused to worship idols and abide by some
Hindu rites. Kshotramohan's father and other relations were so angry with them that they
were obliged to run away to Calcutta and live there.17 Similar was the case of Bijoy Krisna
Goswami18 Rajnarayan Bose's near relations including his mother and uncle were annoyed
with him because he had accepted Brahmoism. Of course, they did not force him to leave his
ancestral home for this. However, when Rajnarayan helped his two cousins to marry two
teenaged widows, his mother and uncle asked him to leave his ancestral home. He then lived
in Midnapore with his wife and children.19 A decade later, when returned to his village home,
his uncle compelled him to build a new house some distance away from his father's house
and to live in that house. His uncle was afraid that the Boses would be ostracized if he
allowed Rajnarayan to live right in his father's houses.20 Sasipada Banerji faced a more or
less similar situation.21 Yogendranath Bandyopadhayay and Upendranath Das, the former the
editor of Aryadarshan and latter a well-known playwright, were not Brahmos. Nevertheless ,
they were obliged to live away from their families, because they had married widows.22
Moreover, Western education fostered a sense of individuality first among the urbanized
young men and then, with the expansion of female education among women. They started to
think as individuals. Their desire to enhance their personal well-being and their
consciousness regarding their right to self-determination were growing as well. This
phenomenon can be termed as the begining of indiviuality among young men and women of
Bengal, and certainly constituted modernization. These men and women preferred a closer
husband-wife relationship as well as a closer bond with their children in the context of a
nuclear or at least an extended family.23 They regarded the husband and the wife as
companions. They felt that this companionship could really develop in the surroundings of
the nuclear family and began to break away from their joint families. Contemporary
traditional society however, considered young people's increasing preference for the nuclear
family to be selfish behaviour, particularly on the part of the wife.
It is difficult to say exactly when the idea of the nuclear family began to gain popularity,
but it was in the 1860s and 1870s when the young Brahmos, mentioned above, broke away
from their families. Satyendranath Tagore did it, as already said, in 1864, Keshab in 1862,
Kshetramohan around 1861, Sibnath in 1869, Jyotiridranath Tagore in the mid-1870s, Krisna
Kumar and Bipin Pal in the late 1870s. However, it is not known when women were
influenced by the idea of loving in the nuclear family and thus developing closer relationship
15
with their husbands. Jnanadanandini Debi was the first to have written an autobiography
among the Bengali women who lived in a nuclear family. While it became apparent from
Satyendranath Tagore's letter to her that the relationships within the Jorasanko family were
sometimes constrained.24 and from what she wrote that she was perfectly happy in her small
family away from Jorasanko and that she had a relationship with her husband based on
mutual undrstanding and friendship, she did not categorically state that she preferred the
nuclear family, let alone explain why she preferred it. However, they used to live in a
separate house whenever they came to Calcutta during a long leave.
In 1873, Bamabodhini Patrika pointed out that the modern wife did not favour the joint
family and that she wanted to live with her husband and children at the place of his work and
thus become the sole mistress of her own family.25 This growing consciousness shook the
joint family from within. Consequently, even in closely knit and fairly conservative families
such as the Jorasanko Tagores, the relationships within the family became uneasy causing its
slow disintegration. It was not only Satyendranath Tagore having a decent job and an
independent source of income who broke away from the family ; Joytirindranath Tagore did
the same, as already mentoned , in the 1870s and Rabindranath in the 1890s. It is not known
whether Jyotirindranath or his wife , Kadambini Debi, or whether both of them preferred the
nuclear family. It is not known either whether one or both of them were unhappy in their joint
family. However, they started to live away from the Jorasanko home. It was during this
period that Jyotirindranath came to be a strong supporter of women's ''emancipation``. In his
autobiography, he gave his readers to understand how, at that time, his relationship with his
wife became very close. At that stage, he freed his wife from the zenana and even started to
teach her how to ride a horse.26 Riding a horse on the part of a woman may not mean
anything at all now, but a century ago, it was considered absolutely manly and , therefore ,
unacceptable The experience of Rabindranath Tagore's wife, Mrinalini Debi, in that
apparently peaceful family, was far from happy.27 In June , 1898, she wrote to Rabindranath
saying that it was becoming impossible for her to live in the Jorasanko joint family.28 In
reply, Rabindranath wrote a long letter asking her to wait patiently for sometime more. He
also promised in this letter, to bring her and the children to Shilaidah and live there.29 Early
next year she went to Shilaidah, never to come back to Jorasanko. After a couple of years,
when it seemed impossible for Mrinalini Debi to live in the remote village of Shilaidha,
Rabindranath moved to Santiniketan with his family, but did not go to Jorasanko.
By the turn of the century, the difference between the actual behaviour of the modern wife
and the behaviour that the old-fashioned in-laws expected from her had become so great that
relationships in many families were failed with mutual disrespect and hostility, and , as a
result, the modern wife very much disliked the idea of living in a joint family. She thought, as
Bamabodhini Patrika exprssed it, in the following manner:
My husband will get a job; I shall reside at the place of his work ; I shall get rid of the mother-in-law and
sisters-in-law; and surrounded by servants and maidservants, I shall become the mistress of my own
family.30
Although accused of selfishness for maintaining such an ambition, the modern wife
indeed coveted the ideal of the nuclear family or at least of the extended family.
24. S. N. Tagore's letters to Jnanadanandini Debi, Nos, 31, 50, 52 and 72, in Puratani; pp. 90, 109, 112, and 133.
25. 'Nabya Banga Mahila', BBP, Feb.-Mar., p. 363.
26. J.N. Tagore, Jyotirindranather Jibansmriti, p.138.
27. Her experience was possibly reflected in Tagore's story 'Strir Patra' (meaning wife's letter), published in 1914.
28. P.K. Mukhopadhyay, Rabindra Jibani, Vol. I (4th ed.; Calcutta: Visva Bharati, 1971), p. 481.
29. R. N. Tagore's letter to Mrinalini Debi, no.16 (June, 1898) in Chithipatra, Vol.I (3rd ed.; Calcutta: Visva Bharati,
1966), p. 36.
30. 'Strishiksha', BBP , Nov.-Dec., 1892, p.229.
16
Some of the educated women of the period wrote how slowly but surely a section of the
bhadralok started to admire the nuclear and/or the extended family.31 Unlike the Brahmo
wives of the 1860s and 1870s who had the experience of living in nuclear families, some
women of the later time even recorded their own reasons for preferring the nuclear family.
Susamasundari Das of Krisnagar for instance, supported the nuclear family on the grounds
that the environment therein was congenial to female education.32 Sarat Kumari Chaudhurani
termed the joint family old-fashioned and unsuitable for modern times. She said the transport
system was so hazardous in the olden days that people used to make wills before leaving on
pilgrimages. It was therefore impossible to take one's family from the ancestral home to the
place of one's work. But, she added, with the improvement of the communication system in
general and of the railways in particular, the husband, the wife and the children wanted to live
together away from the ancestral home.33 Kumudini Ray also observed the growing
popularity of the nuclear family. Despite the fact that she was a supporter of the joint family,
she conceded that it was the origin of a great deal of feud among the members of the family,
especially among the sister-in-laws.34
The disintegration of the joint family system as well as the overall social changes causes
remarkable deviations from the customary pattern of the wife's behaviour. As a result , her
roles and status as well as her relationships with the other members of the family underwent
an important change. The educated wife was now more aware of her rights and refused to be
completely subordinated. She was less obedient to her in-laws and was ready to do less
housework. In fact, she tended to modify her own roles in the family and , above all,
demanded closer relationship with her husband and the children.
31. Sarat Kumari Chaudhurani, 'Ekal O Ekaler Meye', passim; Mankumari Basu, 'Bigata Shatabarshe Bharat Ramanir
Abastha', BBP, Aug.-Sep., 1895, p. 137.
32. Susamasundari Dasi, 'Antahpure Strishikshar Upay', BBP, Jun.-Jul., 1889, p. 96.
33. Sarat Kumari Chaudhurani, 'Ekal O Ekaler Meye', p. 392.
Sibnath Sastri too claimed that the improvement of the transport system helped the nuclear family to grow . See his
'Narir Karyakshetra, Paribarik O Samajik', Prabasi, Nov.-Dec., 1912, p. 135.
34. Kumudini Ray, 'Hindu Narir Garhastha Dharma', BBP, Dec., 1894-Jan., 1895, pp. 248-85.
35. BBP, Sep.-Oct., 1867, p. 582.
The Sanskrit saying that very briefly but clearly explains the principal object of Hindu marriage is: 'Putrathe kryate
bharya'.
36. Supra, pp 85-87.
37. She wrote a number of articles in which she expressed her appreciation of the feminist movement in England- See,
for example, 'Ingrej Mahilar Shiksha O Swadhinatar Gati', Bharati O Balak, Jul.-Aug., 1890, pp.193-202.
17
husband-wife relationship from an unorthodox angle. Indeed, she went a step further than
most of the contemporary Bengali thinkers when she said that the idea that women were
created for men and that women had no other purpose than to be used and exploited by men
was uncivilized and lowly. She moreover argued that this idea was so strong among rude
people (implicity meaning traditional Bengali men) that they were unable to think that
women were not created for their enjoyment and benefit alone.38 Thus modernized Bengali
women were being increasingly concerned about the whole institution of Hindu marriage
which, they felt, should be totally reformed in the light of secular Western ideals. They were
also concerned about the husband, whose education, family background, exposure to Western
ideas and attitudes towards marriage and the wife were all crucial to their happiness.
Whether or not the husband loved the wife came to be regarded as an important question
among women belonging to both the joint and the nuclear families because, as we will soon
see, the position of the wife in the family depended very much on this. After having lived in
Simla for several years, S. Dasi came back to Calcutta in 1881. She was quite surprised to
notice that young women no longer asked questions such as whteher the in-laws were good
and sympathetic, they talked instead whether the husband was good and whether he loved his
wife. To her astonishment, they even mentioned the names of their respective husbands
which was previously prohibited. From her testimony, it becomes evident that in some
families, in-laws no longer had any real hold on the young wife, rather the husband's
goodness and love determined her status in the family.
S. Dasi further observed that in joint families the relationships between the husbands and
their parents were becoming unhappy as the husbands could neither protest against nor
tolerate the unkind treatment of their wives by their parents, especially mothers.39 While S.
Dasi did not condemn the changing attitudes towards the husband-wife relationship, her
implicit disapproval is not hard to discern. But what she wrote seems to be correct. The editor
of Bamabodhini Patrika, writing more or less at the same time, claimed that the modern
husband considered his wkfe as beautiful and tender as Kalidasa's heroines such as
Shakuntala, and regarded his mother as cruel when the latter asked the wife to do
housework.40 The attitudes expressed by the editor may now seem to be like those of a male
chauvanist, but such attitudes were quite popular at that time and, we will later see, were
even shared by women themselves.
If the wife's position in the family and consequently her happiness depended so much on
her husband's love and sympathy towards her, it was only natural that she would want to have
a husband of her own choice. However, at that time, only the gurdians of the bride and the
bridegroom arranged the marriage without the consent of either the bride or bridegroom. In
most cases, the bride and the bridegroom saw each other for the first time at the wedding
ceremony. However, beginning with Akshay Datta, a number of writers realized that such a
custom must not exist and that it was the root of a great deal of unhappiness in many
families.41 Within a few decades, some educated women also became conscious. They
stressed the need for allowing both men and women to choose their spouses. Nagendrabala
Mustafi, a prominent woman writer of the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, for
example, deplored the fact that marriages were arranged without the consent of the bride and
the bridegroom. She said the gurdians did not even consider whether the bride and the
38. Krisnabhabini Das, 'Strilok O Purush'. Bharati O Balak, Feb.-Mar.,1890, pp. 615-16.
39. S. Dasi, 'Kalikatar Strisamaj', Bharati , Aug.-Oct., 1881, p. 223, 366.
40. BBP, Apr.-May, 1874, p. 13.
41. A. K. Datta, Bidyadarshan, Oct.-Nov., 1842, in SBS, III, 573; Tattvabodhini Patrika, Aug., 1845, p.205;
Dahrmaniti , p.61; K. P. Ghosh, Narijati etc., pp. 228-29; 'Bibaha', BBP, Aug.-Sep., 1867, pp. 581-82; Jnanankur, Apr.-
May, 1874, pp. 261-62; 'Bangiya Hindu Samaj Sanskar', Banga Mahila, Mar.-Apr., 1876, p.279.
18
bridegroom would make a good match. In her opinion, a great deal of misunderstanding and
the absence of love between the wife could be avoided if society would only permit men and
women to find their respective spouses.42 Mustafi came from a traditional Hindu family and
her marriage was arranged by her parents most probably without her consent. Her writings
suggest that she was happy in her marriage life. However, she observed what was quite
prevalent during her time. There was not much originality in what she argued-she was, in
fact, echoing what Akshay Kumar Datta and Kaliprasanna Ghosh had written in their widely
read Dharmaniti and Narijati-Bishayak Prastab.43 Nevertheless, it was remarkable that
traditional women like her were becoming conscious of their rights concerning their marriage
as well as of the husband-wife relationships.
It was due to this growing concern that some of the educated Bengali women during the
last two decades of the nineteenth century started to assert themselves in connection with
their marriage. In 1881, Rajnarayan Bose arranged the marriage of his daughter, Lilabati, with
Krisna Kumar Mitra, a prominent young leader of the Shadaran Brahmo Samaj. However, the
negotiation failed as Rajnarayan Bose deffered from Krisna Kumar about the question how
the wedding was to be performed. As a Sadharan Samajist, Krisna Kumar wanted to marry in
accordance with the provisions of the Native Marriage Act of 1872, which required the
marriage to be registered and considered it a social contract rather than a sacrament. On the
contrary, Rajnarayan, who, as a leader of the Adi Brahmo Samaj, had strongly opposed the
passing of the Act, wanted to marry his daughter according to the rites recommended by the
Adi Samaj. These rites were purely Hindu except that the idolatrous practices had been
discarded. During the earlier decades, Rajnarayan's decision would have been final and the
marriage would have been called off. But as the attitudes of the educated women of Bengal
had undergone a significant change, he gave the whole matter a second thought. He
considered that Lilabati was an adult and decided to ask her about her opinion. Lilabati
wanted to marry Krisna Kumar. Rajnarayan was, therefore, compelled to arrange the
marriage. Despite his unwillingness, and absence from the ceremony, the marriage was
solemnized. While brother represented him at the wedding ceremony, he and his friends such
as Debendranath Tagore met the couple later.44
Chandi Charan, a litterateur and a Brahmo leader, was unable to arrange the marriage of
his eldest daughter, Kamini, until she gave her consent at the age of 30, considered too high
for marriage at that time. Kamini was a brilliant student and one of the first women
graduates. Moreover, her anthology of poems Alo O Chhaya (1889), published at the age of
25, earned her the reputation of the best poetess of Bengal. She is said to have been in love
with someone in the mid-1880s. Either her father did not arrange her marriage with this man
or some other factors compelled the marriage to be postponed. Disappointed and dejected,
Kamini did not marry until 1894. Kedarnath Ray, a civilian, whom she finally decided to
marry, was one of her great admirers. Immediately after the publication of Alo O Chhaya,
Ray wrote a detailed review of it, praising Kamini.45 Kamini's younger sister, Jamini, a
qualified physician, on the other hand , did not marry at all.46
42. Nagendrabala Mustafi, 'Prayojaniya Prarthana', BBP, Sep.-Oct., 1894, pp. 191-92.
43. Both Dharmaniti (1856) and Narijati-Bishayak Prastab (1809) were included among the textbooks for the female
students of the Female Normal School, established by Keshab Sen, and of the Bethune School . It seems Akshay Datta had a
tremendous influence over men such as Debendranath Tagore (see his letters to Rajnarayan Bose in Debendranath
Thakurer Patrabali), Dwarkanath Ganguli ( see B. N. Bandyopadhyay's Dwarkanath Ganguli) and Kaliprasanna Ghosh (
his Narijati etc. testifies to it). It was only natural that women were also influenced by him.
44. Tattvabodhini Patrika, Aug.-Sep., 1881, p. 98; BBP, Jul.-Aug.,1881, pp. 125-28.
Surprisingly enough, Rajnarayan did not mention anything about this in his autobiography.
45. 'Alo O Chhaya Rachayitri', Bharati, May.-Jun., 1910, p. 168.
46. For a short biography of Jamini Sen, see Kamini Ray 'Doctor Kumari Jamini Sen', Bangalaxmi, Apr.-Oct., 1932.
19
Kumudini Khastagir's instance was similar to that of Kamini Sen in that she did not
marry until her early 30s. She passed her BA examination in 1887 , a year after Kamini.
Disregarding the Native (popularly called 'Brahmo') Marriage Act, and causing much
grievance in the Brahmo Samaj, her father, Annanda Charan Khastagir, one of the leaders of
the Brahmo Samaj who fought for the Brahmo Marriage Act, married his eldest daughter,
Saudamini, to highly placed Hindu civilian in 1872.47 Saudamini was known to have
possessed modern ideas regarding marriage,48 but she was I and nobody heard what she had
to say. But by the late 1880s, Kumudini came to respect a different set of values and refused
to marry someone according to her father's choice.
But the most striking example of this class is that of Sarala Debi. She had developed
close friendship first with Loken Palit and then with Manomohan Ghosh. Either she did not
consider that they would make good husnands or she knew very well that because of the
caste distinction (Loken and Manomohan were Kayasthas and she Brahmo) her guardians
would never agree to marry her to any one of them.49 She therefore decided not to marry. Her
grandfather, Debendranath Tagore, had a tremendous influence over his close relations as
well as the members of his own family. He too failed to arrange the marriage of Sarala.
Traditional as he was, he knew that, in the eyes of society, it was a matter of great shame for
girls to remain unmarried. Therefore he suggested that a token marriage, as sometimes
practised by kulin Brahmans, with a sword be arranged, and this would save her from the
social stricture.50 Sarala''s elder sister, Hiranmayi Debi, and her cousin, Indira Debi, were
courting with Phani Bhusan Mukherji and Pramatha Chaudhuri repectively, both of whom
were Brahmans and educated in England. No complications, therefore, arose in their cases
and they were married to men of their choice.51 All these examples do reflect the growing
consciousness of young women regarding their marriage, and hence their relationships with
their repective husbands.
How women's attitudes towards the husband-wife relationship were changing during the
period under review can be seen from the writings of two renowned women writers,–
Mankumari Basu and Sarat Kumari Chaudhurani. Whereas both of them were born more or
less at the same time (Mankumari in 1863, Sarat Kumari in 1861), they came from two
different backgrounds and represented the traditional and the modern values repectively.
Mankumari was born in Jessore in a conservative Hindu family and was married to a man
from another traditional family. The primary education she received in village school could
hardly have liberalized her ideas. Moreover, after she became a widow at the age of only 18
and a half, she became all the more traditional.52 In an article published in 1894, Mankumari
claimed that the old values were undergoing a great change as a result of Westernization. She
deplored that the modern wife considered her husband as her friend and that she had little
revernce for the husband. She said the husband-wife relationship could not become an ideal
Also see, Hemlata Sarkar, 'Swargiya Doctor Kumari Jamini Sen', Prabasi, Mar.-Apr., 1932 pp. 846-48; ' Swargiya
Jamini Sen', Prabasi, Feb.-Mar., 1932, p. 738.
47. 'Shochaniya Ghatar Bibaha', BBP, Oct.-Nov., 1872, pp. 223-24.
48. Ibid., p. 223.
49. Sarala Debi Chaudhurani, Jibaner Jharapata, pp. 96-97, 178.
She did not hide her attitude towards Kasyasthas in her autobiography.-pp. 174-75.
50. Ibid., p. 107
51. Ibid., p. 56.
33 of the letters that Pramatha Chaudhuri and Indira Debi exchanged before their marriage were published in Desh,
LIterary Number, May, 1980, pp. 17-50. One of Indira's letters shows that her parents, Satyendranath Tagore and
Jnanadanandini Debi happily consented to her marriage and that it was not an arranged marriage at all. -Indira's letter to P.
Chauhuri, dated the 15th September, 1898, pp. 24-25.
52. See B. N. Bandyopadhyay, Mankumari Basu ( 2nd ed.; Calcutta, 1962), pp.5-13.
20
one unless the wife's love was fused with deep regard.53 Sarat Kumari, on the contrary,
argued in favour of the husband-wife relationship that was based on equality and mutual love.
In her article on modern women, published in 1891, she thus compared the modern wife with
earlier wife and admittedly gave her verdict in the modern wife's favour:
Whereas the earlier woman had a feeling of awe towards her husband, the modern women has love and
reverence...... (Although she is praised by traditional society in an unqualified manner), the earlier woman
never hesitated to vilify her husband and did not even confide everything to him. She did not become
intimate with her husband until she was quite old. The modern wife regards her husband as a friend. She is
not afraid of him. On the contrary, she is very close and takes good care of him. Indeed the feeling of awe
towards the husband is now-ad-ays absent.54
Sarat Kumari Chaudhurani was brought up from her early childhood far away from
Bengal in the Punjab. Her father, Sashi Bhushan Bose, was a student of Peary Charan Sarkar,
who was so ardent a supporter of femle education. Profoundly influenced by Peary charan,
her father sent her to an English school. The education she received at this school was quite
unorthodox. She was married at the age of only 9, but fortunately for her, to a man who was
highly educated and very liberal in his ideas . Her husband, Akshay Chandra Chaudhuri, an
MA BL and a successful attorney at the Calcutta High Court, earned qite a reputation as a
poet. After the marriage, he employed an Englishwoman for Sarat's education. Akshay and
Sarat Kumari both came to be known as lituerateurs and supporters of women's
modernization. They developed an extraordinarily close husband-wife relationship based on
mutual understanding and friendship.55 Reasons for her chaged outlook can, therefore, be
easily seen. But , in spite of her apparent bias, her observatons on the modern wife and
modern wife's relationship with her husband seem to be fairly accurate and generally
corroborate contemporary sources.
Krisnabhabini Das was another woman whose views of the husband-wife relationship
were also modern. In her book Englande Banga Mahila, she thus compared the husband-wife
relationship prevalent in English society with that of Bengal:
Why does a man marry? Everyone will answer: To get a better half to share equally the hapiness and
sorrows of his life', I have no doubts that a wife in this country does share her husband's happiness and
sorrows and does help him to observe his religious rites as well as to do his work......She even earns for the
whole family in case the husband fails to do so.
When he contemplates doing something , the intelligent and clever husband always consults his wife and
asks for her consent. The wife who is also intelligent does not regard her husband as her master. On the
contrary, she tries her best to make her dear husband happy with her genuine love. Content at home, the
husnband never covet any extramarital love, in short , the English wife is her husband's mainstay.
We become very sad when we realize how unhappy the couples of our country are. Locked up in the zenana
, the wife does not know how her husnand spends his whole day. Nor does the husband know how his wife
spends her time. The wife is always afraid of her husband. Sitting in the beautifully decorated outer house
and smoking his hookha, the husband passes his time by playing cards and gossiping with his friends and
also by going to different places. However, the wife is all the time busy with her house-work in the zenana .
She certainly loves her husband and always does her utmost to make the best food for him and to make him
as happy and comfortable as possible. But the husband does not behave properly with her, nor does she
know how to do so with her husband. Very few persons in our country know how the ideal husband-wife
relationship should be.This is the reason why, despite the fact that Indian women are strictly chaste, the
Indian husband and the wife fail to appreciate the need for mutual happiness and, consequently, prove to be
extremely unhappy.56
In another article, Krisnabhabini claimed that men and women were equal and that for a
perfectly happy relationship it must be based on equality and better understanding.57
53. Mankumari Basu, 'Bigata Shatabarshe Bharat Ramanir Abastha', BBP, Nov., 1894-Sep.,1895, pp. 107-08.
54. Sharat Kumari Chaudhuri, 'Ekal O Ekaler Meye', p. 396.
55. (Swarnakumari Debi), 'Shubha-bibaha-Rachayitri', Bharati, Nov.-Dec., 1909, pp.468-69.
56. Krisnabhabini Das, Englande Banga Mahila, pp. 182-84.
57. Krisnabhabini Das, 'Strilok O Purush' , p.613.
21
How the husband-wife relationship became closer in a small circle of bhadralok within
the span of about half a century can be seen from two contradictory examples-one that of
once again, Rasasundari Debi in the 1830s and 1870s. Rasasundari Debi had at that time , a
number of children. Her mother-in-law was dead and there were no in-laws to be afraid of.
Despite this , she could not conceive of the idea of talking to or seeing her husband during the
day. She was so afraid and ashamed of being seen by her husband that one day when her
husband's horse came in the backyard of the house, she immediately hid lest the horse saw
her. Since the horse was her husband's, she regarded it with a feeling of awe and considered it
to be a matter of great shame to be seen by it.58 In the whole of her autobiography, she
devoted only a small section to her husband, which hardly gives her reader a glimpse of him,
except that he was heavily built and very litigious.59
Jnanadanandini Debi, on the contrary, gave a detailed account of how her husband fell in
love with her and developed a close relationship with her even before she was 12. The letters
her husband wrote to her from London and Bombay do reflect this intimacy. Indeed,
Jnanadanandini's and her husband's concept of the husband-wife relationship was absolutely
Western in nature. Jnanadanandini came from a traditional Hindu family and was born and
brought up in, remote Jessore village. It was certainly her husband who mouled her values.
Both the memories of her husband she recorded in her autobiography and the manner in
which she recorded them show that she and her husband developed a kind of companionship
which was far beyond the scope of the rituulized Hindu marriage of that period. Her life with
her husband in Bombay and her experience abroad reflect the changing atttitudes of the
modernized spouses towards their relationships.60 A generation earlier, the husband-wife
relationship was different in nature, even in the Tagore family itself. Sarada Debi,
Jnanadanandini's mother-in-law, did not leave an autobiography, but the numerous memoirs
written by her daughters, daughters-in-law sons and others who came into contact with the
family do suggest that the relationship between Debendranath and Sarada Debi was quite
traditional, despite Debendranath's reforming zeal, and on the part of Sarada Debi one of awe.
However, the expansion of English education and the spread of English ideas caused the later
change as found in Satyendranath and Jnanadanandini Debi.
As we have already noticed, the new ideas permeated only a small section of the Western
educated bhadralok. The vast majority still clung to traditional values including the ones
regarding the husband-wife relationship and continued to glorify them. A sizeable portion of
the educated women themselves emphasized self-sacrifice and tolerance as the two best
virtues that women could possess.61 In her articles, Hemangini Chaudhuri, for instance
advised women to forget their own happiness for the sake of making others, especially the
husband, happy. 'Even if the husband is angry and rude in his behaviour and shouts at the
wife, the wife should not by any means protest or be disobedient'- she said.62 Giribala was
even more traditional in her attitudes when she gave an imaginary example of how the ideal
wife should behave with her husband. She thus wrote in 1901:
Look! That simple and devoted wife in that house is enduring in silence and good humour the oppression
of her cruel husband . Look! Her drunkard husband is entering her room in an utterly wild fashion. She was
eagerly waiting for him. She is now going to nurse him with great care. She is obviously sorry to see him in
such a state, nevertheless there are no signs of anger and hatred in her face. The heartless husband kicks her,
22
but she considers it as a blessing. She fails to find any fault in his behaviour-her face is radiant with
heavenly light and she is making her womanly qualities immortal by worshipping her husband's feet.63
This single paragraph is enough to show that the kind of selfless devotion and reverence
that the Bengali proverbs such as 'the husband is the supreme teacher' and ' the husband is the
supreme god' reflect seem to have been still deeply rooted among many women even as late
as the beginning of the twentieth century.
23
according to them, were the first and foremost duties of a woman.68 Mankumari Basu, in
spite of her literary persuits, considered housework as the principal duty of a married
woman.69 Despite her active participation in house-work, the modern wife on the contrary,
did not regard housework or childcare as the main objective of their life. A lady from
Khidirpore expressed this opinion as early as 1885.70 While conceding that housework,
childbearing and childcare were the duties particularly of women, another lady, six years
later, denied that they were the most important roles that women were destined to play.
Krisnabhabini Das and Jnanadanandini Debi, both of whom were considerably exposed to the
modern conception of women's roles, stressed the fact that housework, cooking, childcare and
needlework were especially women's jobs,71 but, at the same time, they refused to accept
these as women's principal roles.72 It appears that many of the so-called modernized women
were like Krishnabhabini and Jnanadanandini, who were still midway between tradition and
modernism. They had realized that for the fulfilment of their lives they were to look beyond
the four walls of the zenana, and play important roles there but were unable to deny the
traditional work roles identified with Bengali women. During the half a century that
followed, the behaviour of the most of the educated Bengali women fell under this pattern.
Thus the new set of values regarding women's work roles including housework that
emerged as a result of the overall social change were neither fully traditional nor fully
modern. Nevertheless, they were looked upon as either good or bad by observers placed in
different situations. Bamabodhini Patrika, for example, repeatedly expressed its disapproval
of the growing tendency on the part of the educated wife to rely on servants for her
housework. It also strongly condemned the modern wife's reluctance to breastfeed her baby.
Some of these wives are reported to have considered breastfeeding to be disgraceful and
beggarly.73 However, in highly placed families like the Jorasanko Tagores breastfeeding was
not customary, Sarala Debi claimed in her autobiography that her mother, Swarnakumari
Debi, like the other women in the family, never breastfed any of her children including Sarla
herself. Wet nurses were employed instead.74 Kundamala Debi, a daughter of the renowned
Sanskrit pundit, Madan Mohan Tarkalankar, was born and brought up in rather a consevative
environment. Although educated, she viewed the changing roles of the educated women as
grossly wrong and undesirable. The educated wife, in her opinion, did some of the
housework, but under duress and with utter contempt.75 Kumudini Ray of Jessore claimed
that the modern wife so relied on the servants that even the wife of a low salaried clerk (£2 a
month) was unable to manage her housework without the help of a cook. This she
condemned as unforgiveable behaviour on the part of the educated wife.76 On the contrary,
Swarnakumari Debi and Sarat Kumari Chaudhurani, both of whom were surrounded by a
large number of servants and maidservants were unable to find any fault with having
servants. In fact, Chaudhurani argued in favour of employing servants. She said the pattern of
housework had changed. The husband and the children now went to work and to school at 10
o'clock in the morning and they must have their meal before that time. In earlier days, the
68. Kulabala Debi, 'Strishiksha', Antahpur, Vol.I (1898). p.54; Saralabala Dasi, 'Ramanir Jiban-Brata', Antahpur, Vol. I
(1898), pp. 15-19; Binodini Gosh, BBP, Dec.,1900-Jan.,1901, pp.302-303.
69. Mankumari Basu, 'Bangali Ramanidiger Grihadharma', p. 322.
70. A lady of Khidirpur, 'Nariganer Alpashiksha', BBP, Jan.-Mar., 1885, p.362.
71. 'Bangali Striloker Bartamn Abastha', p. 242.
72. Krisnabhabini Das, 'Striloker Kaj O Kajer Mahatmya', Bharati O Balak, Aug.-Sep., 1891, p.247; Jnanadanandini
Debi, 'Strishiksha', Bharati, Jun.-Jul., 1881. pp. 263-73.
73. 'Santan Raksha', BBP, Jan.-Feb., 1865, pp. 186-88; Shishuder Ahar', BBP, Apr.-May, 1866, pp. 247-48.
74. Sarala Debi, Jibaner Jharapta, p. 1.
75. Kundamala Debi, 'Bidya Shikhile Ki Grihakarma Karite Nai?, BBP, Sep.-Oct., 1870, pp. 176-78.
76. Kumudini Ray of Jessore, 'Hindu Narir Gahastadharma', BBP, Oct.-Nov., 1894, p. 224.
24
male members of family used to have their meals in the afternoon. Therefore, she reasoned, a
cook was essential for the urban family which was in most cases nuclear or extended in
nature.77
Swarnakumari Debi moreover noticed that the modern wife was concerned not only about
the servants of cooks, but about a new set of needs as well, which either unknown to or unfelt
by the earlier women. These included cosmetics, fashionable dress, ornaments and,
interestingly enough, doctors and a growing demand for tidiness and cleanliness.78 It is to be
noticed that she did not comdemn the modern wife for this, rather, it appears, she implicity
approved of it.
Of all the modern wife's needs , the demand for cosmetics was most severely criticized by
old fashioned people including women themselves, Bengali women must have used
cosmetics for centries . It is, therefore, not clear why some women were so critical about it.
Whether or not it was due to the fact that the new cosmetics were Western and very
expensive, traditional women continued to maintain a hostile attitude towards the use of
them. In 1874 , Shyamasundari, a woman writer who had written a number of prize winning
essays, deplored that the modern wife assumed the appearance of a black ''memsaheb''
(European lady) if her husband had the money to buy cosmetics and European clothing . She
accused the modern wife of being her husband's blood sucker.79 Mankumari Basu, too,
mentioned that perfumes, lavender, eau de cologne etc. were a must even for women
belonging to low income families.80 It appears that the Brahmo women were the ones most
influenced by Western life style and their demands for cosmetics were the stongest.81 The
modern husband was also spending more money for ornaments, another article argued.82
Indeed the lower middle class husband seemed to have been under more economic hardship
than before.83 S. K. Chaudhurani, however, attributed this to the rising prices of the
commodities rather than to the modern wife's demands.84
While men and women with conservative values deplored all this in innumerable articles
and in the other forms of writing such as farces, novels and verses, during the last three
decades of the nineteenth century the modern wife almost silently adopted the new values.
During my research, I found only a single woman, S. K. Chaudhurani, who directly supported
the modern wife and justified her changing attitudes towards the work role of women. In one
of her long articles, she argued that women's life style was bound to change with the change
of men's life style. She gave examples of how middle class men themselves had moved
considerably away from the accepted norm of life style identified with the early nineteenth
century bhadrolok. She reasoned that women were being increasingly asked to play new roles
in addition to and/or instead of the old ones. She justified both the need for sevants in urban
families and the growing popularity of the nuclear family. In her opininon, the woman of
earlier decades passed her time by slandering and the modern wife by reading novels and
embroidering designs on carpets. 'Unlike the earlier wife, the modern wife is slightly self-
conscious as well as proud of herself; she does not gossip to others about her own sorrows
and economic hardship, nor does she slander her husband and children.' Chaudhurani further
observed that the modern wife kept her house tidy and clean and was better equipped to look
25
after the members of her small family and guests. She also emphasized the point that the
modern wife had certainly a more refined taste than the earlier women and this she claimed,
was what the modernized husband expected of her. The earlier wife, she added, used her sari
for a towel and had the marks of lime, turmeric and carbon all over her sari and body, and
looked dreadful in her make-up, ornaments and dress. On the contrary, the modern wife was
neat and clean and fashionable in her manners. She thus concluded:
The modern youngman imitates Western style as much as possible and blames his wife for not being
sufficiently Western. The wife is therefore fast becoming ''modern'' as desired by her husband. The old-
fashioned wife wearing a red Kastapere sari, a wide mark of vermilon on the parting line of her hair, a big
red round mark on her forehead, a black coating of mishi on her teeth, a dark paint on her lips, a pair of
bangles, made of shell, around her wrists, a pair of mals around her ankles, and putting up her hair in a bun
will not be acceptable to the modern husband.85
Although Chaudhurani was the only one to have bravely put forward such arguments in
favour of the modern wife, it seems that her claims were true. Even a traditional lady, several
years latter, conceded what Chaudhurani had argued. She said in the male dominated Bengali
society women's life style had always been shaped by men. When men were superstitious,
women were superstitious too; when men were labourious, women were labourious as well.
But the modern wife was , she observed, free from idolatry and other religious superstitions
as well as lax towards housework due to the changed attitudes of her husband. She held the
educated and modernized husband to be solely responsible for the changed outlook of the
modern woman. She thus questioned:
Can the Western educated job-seeking young man who is very sophisticated in his manners and life style,
and recites Byron and Jayadeba be happy if she has to marry an illiterate girl who is superstitious,
quarrelsome and untidy?
She went on to describe in detail the dress, make-up and manners of the orthodox Bengali
woman, and claimed that she would look absurd as the wife of a highly educated and
Westernized young man.86
85. Ibid., pp.389-91, 393, 566 (in the Jan.-Feb., 1892 issue).
86. M. 'Nabya Banga Mahila', BBP , Aug.-Oct., 1903, pp. 179-82.
87. 'Striya Shriyashcha Geheshu Bisheshohsti Kashchan', BBP , Jan.-Feb., 1867, p. 436.
88. 'Strijatir Samajik Unnati', BBP , May-Jun., 1871, pp. 33-35.
26
If the young Bengal of the 1830s called the ancient Hindu law givers as well as the
conservative Hindus selfish and hypocritical in relation to their treatment of women,89 the
same terms are applicable to the later liberal reformers. While these reformers would half
approve of Westernization on the part of men, because possibly they wanted for their women
some education and did away with the purda in order to turn them into ''better'' women and
thus to exploit them further. They had indeed two different standards-one for men and
another for women. This conversatism was rooted in the very nature of the half-hearted
reformism of the nineteenth century, which aimed to update society without disturbing the
social institutious to any significant amount.
As we saw in Chapter 1, Annette Akroyd opened her boarding school named the Hindu
Mahila Bidyalaya in 1873. It was intended for the ''higher education'' of Bengali girls.90 Even
before the school could be started, Bamabodhini Patrika once again raised a loud alarm
saying that its students would most probably put on Western dress and shoes and eat with
knives and forks. Thus, it claimed , some black memsahebs would be produced.91
Bamabodhini Patrika's apprehension so far as the introduction of knives and forks at
Akroyd's School soon came true. Although it did not by any means spoil any of the virtues of
the girls attending the school, it was severly critisized by some conservative people (none of
whom had sent their daughters to this school).92 It can be easily guessed how these people
who regarded eating with knives and forks to be improper would react if women ate tabooed
food like beef and pork. Whether or not the modern woman ate these and drank wine, which
seems quite unlikely, Bamabodhini Patrika, in a sarcastic article, condemned both the people
who were allegedly trying to introduce these to women and the women who were allegedly
having them.93 It appears Bamabodhini Patrika was fighting against its imaginery enemies
who were still to be born.
As the spirit of nationalism increasingly imbued the educated people since the 1870s, they
became all the more critical of Westernization particularly of women. Even such women as
Jnanadanandini Debi, who herself was highly influenced by the West, began to criticize
others for what she said imitating everything Western without considering its merits.
Jnanadanandini was the first to introduce birthday celebrations in Bengal. Now she herself
deplored the young men and women who celebrated their birthdays in Western manner, sent
New Year's greetings, and even tried to make ''April fools'' of others on the first of April, but
did not celebrate such native functions as Bharati-dvitiya and Jamaishasthi. She further
observed that they were not Christians, nevertheless they bought Christmas cakes and ate
them with friends, that they did not eat puffed rice and coconut on the occasion of the
kojagari purnima, as was customery for Bengalis.94 Mankumari Basu argued that
Westernization was a harmful example for women and that it would not advance the cause of
women.95
Despite this kind of alarm among less unorthodox and/or nationalist women, it does not
appear that there was a great deal of Westernization among the educated women of the
period. In fact, their slightly modified and undoubtedly better dress, use of cosmetics ,
improved manners and conversation, and less orthodox eating habits identified them with
Westernization, whether or not these were imported from the West. The women of the
27
Brahmo Samaj of India and of the Sadharan Brahmo Samaj, for example, refused to worship
idols. There was nothing Western about this. Nevertheless, this too was seen as an evidence
of Westernization.96 Some of these women also began to use their surnames at the end of
their names in place of the traditonal Debi or Dasi. This was first introduced in the 1860s by
Rasbehari Basu, a Deputy Magistrate, who used Basu instead of Dasi at the end of his wife's
name- Bhubaneswari.97 Later it was widely accepted by women belonging to the Brahmo
Samaj of India and the Sadharan Brahmo Samaj. During the last two decades of the
nineteenth century the use of the surname as well as the use of titles like Kumari (Miss) and
Srimati (Mrs.) distinguished the Brahmo women from the rest. However, the women of the
Adi Brahmo Samaj continued to use Debi.98 There was nothing wrong in the use of the
surname and the title. In any case, it did not rob women of any of their womanly qualities.
However, it was looked upon as part of Westernization, and therefore condemned.99 A debate
whether it was proper to use surname and title followed and became quite bitter at one
stage.100 In some families such as Durga Mohon Das' children and women were being taught
to converse in English. This too was regarded as undesirable.101
All this made the modernized women 'peculiar' in the eyes of conservative people. Partly
owing to their prejudice against the modern woman, partly owing to their inferiority complex,
illiterate woman kept themselves carefully aloof from the so-called Westernized woman.102
Besides, the latter was considered as devoid of womanly qualities.103 Some saw in them a lot
of tomboyishness and manly qualities. these were condemned in unkind language.104 Sarala
Debi narrated in her autobiography how Sarala Ray ( Durga Mohan Das' daughter and P. K.
Ray's wife) would play tennis with men-relations and friends- who visited their family.105
Sarala Debi was very close to Sarala Ray and her youngest sister, Shaila, and thus did not
condemn Mrs. Ray for playing tennis. But no women of Tagore family including Sarala Debi
herself had done so. She mentioned this fact because it seemed to her so extraordinary.
Indeed, the modern woman's behaviour and her changed roles seemed so unorthodox even to
manly educated men and women that they did not for long accept these or the women who
had adopted them. The prejudice was so strong that ''a graduate of the Calcutta University''
claimed , in an article published in a popular perodical, that it was better to live in hell than
with an educated woman.106
96. See, for example, Ramasundari, 'Kashi-Darshan', BBP, Feb.-Mar., 1864, p. 88; 'Edeshe Strishiksha etc., BBP, Jul.-
Aug., 1865, p. 73, Saudamini Ray , BBP, Dec., 1865-Jan.,1866. p. 180; Sarada Debi, 'Bangadeshiya Lokdiger etc.', BBP,
Oct.-Nov., 1866, p. 384.
97. Brahmo Public Opinion, Vol.I. No. 43 (Jan. 23, 1879).
98. The women belonging to Adi Brahmo Samaj were almost prejudiced aginst the use of surnames by women. This
can be seen from an interesting example. In 1910, an article on Kamini Ray was publsihed in Bharti, edited by
Swarnakumari Debi. In it Kamini was named Kamini Debi, although Kamini herself never wrote her name without her
surname. See 'Alo of Chhaya Rachayitri', Bharati, May-Jun., 1910, p. 163.
99. Anon., Suraloke Banger Parichay, 2 Vols. (Calcutta: Valmiki Press, 1876-77), 11,96.
100. 100 Jnanadanandini Debi 'Samajsanskar O Kusanskaar', pp. 132-33; and Anon., 'Samajsanskar O Kusanskaar'.
Bharati, Aug.-Sep., 1883, pp. 210-16.
101. Sarara Debi Chaudhurani, Jibaner Jharapata, p. 83.
102. -----Debi, 'Ekti Prastab', Bharati, Apr.-May, 1885, p.19.
103. 'Bangali Striloker Bartaman Abastha', p.215; Strijatir Aswabhabik Unnati', BBP, Jun.-Jul., 1873, p.72.
104. Ibid.
105. Sarala Debi Chaudhurani, Jibaner Jharapata, pp.86.
106. ''Contributed by a graduate of the Calcutta University'', (Chandra Shekhar Mukhopadhyay), 'Bidya Bidambana',
Jnanankur, Apr.-May, 1873, p. 190.
28
Limited change in women's roles and status
As the preceding discussion suggests, the joint family was increasingly giving way to the
nuclear and/or extended family, and this had an unmistakable impact on the woman's position
in the family. The wife's roles were modified to an extent as a result of the overall social
change as well. Moreover, her relationship with her husband and in-laws and her behaviour
patterns underwent a signigicant change. Consequently, her image in the eyes of society
ceased to be what it was during earlier decades and even, possibly, during earlier centuries.
Her aspirations and values as well as her self-perception altered cosiderably. This evolution
among the educated women of bhadralok families was gradually influencing a wider
segment of Bengali society which had almost imperciptibly but certainly redefined women's
status and roles.
However, all this change was limited in the sense that it remained confined within a very
small circle, in some cases within a few families. It was also limited in the sense that despite
some degree of awareness among these women regarding their position in the family and
regarding the importance of marriage based on love and mutual understanding , they did not
seriously demand equality with men in every repect, nor did they challenge the inferior
position of wife within the husband-wife relationship. Questions such as how much
housework the wife was supposed to do, how much authority the mother-in-law had over the
daughter-in-law and how much influence the wife had over the decision-making of the family
were repeatedly asked, but the authority and superiority of husband were never challenged.
Moreover, despite the modern wife's increasing involvement in social activities, she remained
fundamentally committed to her domestic roles. As tradition resisted drastic change she had
to adopt a life style that was in between tradition and modernism.
29
CHAPTER FIVE
In Their Masters' Footsteps : The Dependent Nature of Woman's Attitudes
to Social Reform
Whether or not the awakening of Bengal during the nineteenth century could be called a
renaissance, on the one hand, it modernized the Bengali language and literature and on the
other, updated many of Bengal's social institutions in the light of secular humanism. Whereas
the modernization of the Bengali language and liturature went on inconspicuously and
achieved tangible success; the modernization of social institutions aroused many a noisy
debate and achieved only limited success. However, irrespective of the degree of success, this
awakening was the greatest phenomenon of that period and was instrumental in breaking
Bengal away from the Middle ages. If by its colonial rule England robbed Bengal of her
legendary wealth, in its turn it gave her its liberal education and ideas and transformed her
into a modern society.
The same Western ideas that made educated Bengalis conscious of the need to edcate
their women, made them conscious of the need to reform their social institutions. The Sikhs
of North-West India, the Marathis in Western India and the Muslims in North India had
started to reform their respective communities almost a century before the Bengali
Bhadralok. But the nature of their reform and that of the bhadralok's were totally different.
The Sikh, the Maratha and the Muslim reformers aimed to weed out what were thought
innovations from their religious practices and thereby re-establish their religions on strict
puritanic codes as prescribed by scriptures. They also aimed at an increase of interest in
religion. Therefore, their reform was more a religious revival than a social reform. The
bhadralok reforms in Bengal, on the contrary, aimed to modernize their social institutions
with the ideas borrowed from the West. They were concerned less, if at all, about a revival of
religion.
Bengali's social reform dates back to the second decade of the nineteenth century when
Rammohan Roy began to translate, reinterpret and publish carefully selected excerpts from
the ancinet religious literatures such as the Upanishads.1 Whether or not Roy got the idea of
reforming his society by a reinterpretation and revival of ancient Sastras from the European
Renaissance, he did not want to go back to the time of the Upanishads, he rather aimed to go
forward. He did not even hesitate to borrow from Islam and Christianity.2 With the polemic
literature that he published for more than a decade, he proved beyond doubt that suttee was
not sanctioned by ancient scriptures. Moreover, he expressed his opinion against the enforced
1. The first of these translations, Bedanta Grantha, was published in 1815. By 1819, he published 6 more
translations of different Upanishads. Moreover, he published a number of other translations and three books
based on Christian religious literature and one on Islamic literature.
2. How he carefully selected parts from scriptures and reinterprete them has been discussed in detail by S.N. Hay, in his
article 'Western and Indigenous Elements in Modern Indian Thought : The Case of Rammohan Roy' in M.B. Jansen (ed.),
Changing Japanese Attitudes Towards Modernization (Princeton : Princeton Univ. Press, 1965)..
30
celibacy of child-widows and against kulin polygamy.3 That he was also the first to expose
the deplorable condition of Bengali women was discussed in the first chapter.4
Although they lacked Roy's liberalism and "progressive" ideas, Mrityunjay Bidyalankar,
Radhakanta Deb and Bhabani Charan Bandyophayay, who were the leaders of the traditional
Hindus, also became aware of certain aspects of their social institutions which were hard to
abide by. None of them had, for example, accepted suttee in their families. However, being
nationalists, they were not sure if reform of socio-religious institutions with the help of alien
rulers was desirable. After the anti-suttee act was passed in 1829, their legislation, hardened,
and during the next few decades, they became too conservative to support any liberal move to
reform Bengali Hindu society. For obvious reasons, they accepted English education and
employment under the English, and thus partly compromised with tradition, but endeavoured
to keep the age-long customs and practices as far as possible undisturbed. The difference
between Roy's endeavours and those of the latter group was not so much in their nature as in
degree. It was a question of how much they were prepared to accept from the West. Later, in
the 1840s, the Adi Brahmo Samaj of Debendranath Tagore started to reform in Roy's fashion,
but by the 1960s, had become like the nationalists.
However, the Young Bengal of the 1830s had a different ideal regarding social reform.
Highly influenced by the West, they were not satisfied with partial reform or making a
compromise, but advocated the acceptance of Western ideals in their totality. Being
thoroughly unorthodox, some of them declared that if they hated anything from the bottom of
their heart it was Hinduism.5 They also started to disregard openly popular social customs.
Unlike Roy and Deb, they were very much anthorpocentric and therefore paid more attention
to redefining and reorganizing the existing social institutions. They worked for the
introduction of the remarriage of widows and female education and for the abolition of kulin
polygamy,6 not because ancient Sastras so suggested, but because rational and liberal values
so justified. In the later decades, the Young Bengal themselves lost much of their spirit of
defiance and compromised with tradition. Nevertheless, they had introduced a new trend of
reform in Bengal. This was because they were so radical, and so few in number, that they
achieved little or no success.
The cause of reform was appreciably advanced in the 1840s and 1850s by Akshay Kumar
Datta and Ishwar Chandra Bidyasagar. Although both of them were later known as atheists,
Datta and Bidyasagar apparently were closer to tradition than the Young Bengal. They were
both profoundly influenced by the West, but people continued to believe for some time that
they were "true" Hindus. Bidyasagar particularly had a credibility which Datta lacked. That
he was first a brilliant student and then the Principal of the Sanskrit College and that he came
from a traiditonal learned Brahmin family gave Bidyasagar this credibility. Datta and
Bidyasagar made a seemingly impossible synthesis of Roy and the Young Bengal in that they
used both Sastras and Western liberalism while advocating social reform. However, their
methods, especially Bidyasagar's looked so "native" in character that they were in a position
to win a larger segment of the bhadralok to their side. Since traditional Hindus had great
regard for the Sastras, Bidyasagar chose to use Sastras as much as possible to popularize
3. See a news item published in Calcutta Journal, 18 May 1819, reprinted in Selections from the Indian
Journals, Vol. 1 ed. by S. Das (Calcutta : Farma K. L. Mukhopadhay, 1963), p. 159; Raja Rammohan Ray
Pranita Granthabali, pp. 206-07.
4. Supra, p. 23.
5. This was written by Madhab Chandra Malik in a letter published in Bengal Hurkaru, 30 October 1831,
quoted in A.F.S. Ahmed, Social Ideas and Social Change in Bengal, p. 49.
6. See my unpublished Ph.D. thesis 'Hindu Samaj Sanskarsachetanatar Itihas O Bangla Natya Rachanay Tar
Pratiphalan, 1854-1876' (Rajshahi University, Bangladesh, 1977), pp. 22-25, 102.
31
reform. By bringing to light less known or unknown Sastras and reinterpreting the known
ones, he "defeated" the pundits who were against the introduction of widow remarriage and
the abolition of kulin polygamy.7 The rest of the pundits contributed to what he claimed
regarding these two issues. Bidyasagar's profound scholarship was so convincing to common
men that even if they did not marry off their child-widows they admitted that remarriage of
widows had sanctions of Sastras. Moreover, very influential among government offcials,
Bidyasagar had extraordinary organizing ability. Consequently, he was able not only to get
the Widow Remarriage Act passed in 1956, but also to popularize social reform temporarily
in the late 1850s. Ideas of social reform had, in any case, beceme, by this time, a matter of
fashionable lip service among the bhadralok.
That Bengali Hindus, despite all this, did not accept the remarriage of widows and abolish
kulin polygamy was due to their blind adherence to social customs and practices. Uneducated
and unexposed to liberal ideas as they were, this is not surprising of them. In fact,
Bidyasagar's and Datta's ideas were highly Westernized, although this is not apparent.
Therefore their appeal, which was secular in nature, did not last long.
However, the young Brahmos, in the 1860s, took up the cause of reform with almost
religious zeal and this resulted in consisderable success within that small segment. It was
among them that quite a few widows were married, and a number of intercaste marriages
were solemnized.8 Besides these Brahmos, under the leadership of Keshab Chandra Sen, took
steps to free the institution of marriage from rituals and replace its sacramental character by a
civil contract. The first of such marriages was held in December 1866.9 Earlier,
Debendranath Tagore had "prescribed" marriage rites free from Hindu idolartry,10 but the
marriage itself was still sacramental in character. Thus the 1866 marriage was the first step
towards the civil marraige which was finally achieved after a bitter debate among the
Brahmos.
The Civil Marriage Act of 1872, popularly known as the Brahmo Marriage Act, because
of the Brahmo association with it, was passed in early 1872, when the Brahmo Samaj of India
requested the government to legalize those marriages of the Brahmos which were not
solemnized according to the Hindu marriage law. However, the Adi Brahmo Samaj
vehemently opposed it and consequently the name "Brahmo" was dropped from the title of
32
the Act. People who wished to get married according to the provisions of this Act were
required to declare that they were not Hindus, Christians, Muslims or Buddhists.11 This
increased the gap between the Adi Samaj and the Brahmo Samaj of India, since Adi
Samajists refused to declare that they were not Hindus. On the contrary, they claimed that
they were reformed and, therefore, better Hindus than the Hindus themselves. The Act also
alienated the Keshabite Brahmos from the rest of the Hindus, as they now categorically
declared that they were not Hindus. It also hardened the Hindu attitude towards social reform
as a whole. However, irrespective of its political implication, the Act definetely reformed the
institution of Hindu marraige. It fixed the minimum age of the bride at 14 and that of the
bridegroom at 18, required the consent of both the bride and bridegroom, legalized divorce
and abolished polygamy.12
However, the reforming zeal of the "progressive" Brahmos ebbed away in the 1870s as
Keshab Chandra Sen gradually became more concerned with spiritualism and his follwers
such as Ananda Mohan Bose, Durga Mohan Das, Dwarkanath Ganguli and Sibnath Sastri
focused their attention on politics.
One cannot but observe the limited nature of Bengal's social reform. Although it was
known as the social reform movement, it was practically a movement for the elevation of
women. The aim of nineteenth century English social reform in Bengal was very different
from that of Bengal's. Whilst English reformers' primary concern was the elevation of the
industrial proletariat, Bengali reformers aimed to uplift their womenfolk. Because it had not
experienced anything comparable to the Industrial Revolution, Bengal had virtually no
industrial proletariat. Moreover, because of their class character, the organized middle class
bhadralok failed to see the wretched condition of the rural peasantry. However, they became
conscious of the poor condition of their women. Therefore the bhadralok reformers'
proletariat were their women, whom they tried to elevate.13 Thus the social reform movement
in Bengal was limited in its character. That the bhadralok reformer worked for the
introduction of widow remarriage, female ecuation and a "reformed" dress, and for the
abolition of early marraige, polygamy, kulinism and female seclusion was because they were
becoming increasingly conscious of the welfare of women and of the family. They realized
that men and for that matter society as a whole would benefit if their women could be
educated and thereby turned into better mothers and better companions. This was the reason
why the exapansion of female education and the breaking of the purdah went on unhindered,
although from the 1870s onward the bhadralok reformers became fairly hostile towards the
reform of socio-religious institutions.
33
Propagation of National Feeling (1861), established by Rajnarayan Bose made no significant
impact on the educated bhadralok, Nabagopal Mitra's Hindu Mela (1867) undoubtedly
advanced the cause of nationalism. Contemporary Bengali literature and press accounts
indicate that the Hindu Mela did inspire the bhadralok to identify themselves with the newly
emerging concept of the Hindu nation.15 The Jatiya Sabha or the national association, which
was started in 1869, was a joint venture of the one time "progressive" Adi Brahmo Samaj and
the Sanatan Dharma Rakshini Sabha of the traditional Hindus. It definitely contributed to the
growth of nationalism in Bengal. Moreover, National Paper (1865) of Nabagopal Mitra,
Amrita Bazar Patrika (1868) of Shishir Kumar Ghose and Madhyastha (1871) of
Manomohan Basu began to play a role that was undoubtedly political.
Thus the stage for launching a regular political movement was all set, except for a
political organization. This too was achieved in 1876 when Surendranath Banerji established,
with the help of his Brahmo freinds such as Ananda Mohan Bose, Durga Mohan Das and
Dwarkanath Ganguli, the India Association.16 Henceforth the educated urbanized Bengalis
more and more devoted themselves to a political movement which glorified India's past and
tended to defend everything traditional. This was directly opposed to the idea of a Western
influenced reform movement which aimed to criticize and thereby reform the native society
and its institutions. The reform movement therefore gradually gave way to nationalism.
Bengali plays and theatres which were the mainstay of the reform movement were
immediately affected by this change of attitudes of the bhadralok. Whereas many plays
advocating social reform were being written and performed until 1875, the number of such
plays suddenly dropped from 1876. Plays based on mythology, India's past, Hinduism and
patriotism became very popular instead.17 The influence of nationalism was so intense that
Rajnarayan Bose, who once violated so many popular Hindu customs including the taboos
against eating beef and biscuits, and who was the President of Adi Brahmo Samaj, gave, in
1873, a lecture justifying the superiority of Hinduism over Christianity and Islam.18 The
lecture was arranged by the Jatiya Sabha and was presided over by Debandranath Tagore.
Contemporary Bengali press reports indicate that this lecture tremendously influenced the
bhadralok who now had no doubts about the superiority of Hinduism and consequently of the
Hindus, since a well known Brahmo was arguing so.19
The movement for introducing widow remarraige which once stirred the bhadralok so
vigorously came to be regarded, at the stage, not only as an event of the past, but as unclean
and lowly. The same bhadralok who had worked for legalizing widow remarriage opposed,
in 1866, the passing of an act prohibiting kulin polygamy.20 Debendranath Tagore, who, in
34
the early 1860s, strongly supported intercaste marriage among the Brahmos21 and renounced
his sacred thread, fought tooth and nail against the proposed Brahmo marrige Act, during
1869-1872,22 and arranged, in 1873, a colourful ceremony to give the sacred thread to his
youngest two sons, including Rabindranath.23 Indeed from henceforth the bhadralok started
to defend most of the Hindu institutions irrespective of their merits. The Age of Consent Bill
gave rise to a great deal of controversy throughout the country. Whilst the Western educated
elites of other parts of India strongly supported the Bill, the Bengali bhadralok remained
almost silent. In fact, a big segment of the bhadralok opposed the Bill which proposed the
abolition of marriage of girls under12.24 These men, like the earlier nationalists, held that
social institutions should not be reformed with the help of an alien government.25 Instead of
reforming their society, the bhadralok, at this stage, demanded more political rights, more
posts in civil service and elected local governments. Thus the Ilbert Bill (1883) aroused more
enthusiasm in Bengal than the Age of Consent (1890-92).
Apart from the emergence of nationalism, another reason why social reform movement
waned was the success it had achieved. Between 1856 when the remarriage of widows was
legalized and 1911, about five hundred widows were married.26 This number was very small
both in comparison with the total population in Bengal and the number of childwidows. In
1901, there were 1,290 widows under 12 among the Brahmans, Kayasthas and Baidyas. The
total number of widows under 20 among these three castes was 10,891.27 Nevertheless, the
remarriage movement had its impact on the bhadralok. First, it inspired the reform of other
institutions such as kulin polygamy, early marriage and brideprice. Second, despite the fact
that widows were seldom remarried, the position of widows in the family was elevated to an
extent. Most of the educated bhadralok now realized that widows were human beings and
deserved more sympathetic treatment.28 This change becomes evident from an instance that
Sarala Debi narrated in her autobiography. Sarala mentioned the case of the widowed eldest
daughter of Justice Chandramadhab Ghosh. She was a childless young widow of an educated
and highly Westernized family. Nevertheless, she was not married off. However, she was
instead given a sound English education and a very high place in the family, as if she was the
mistress of the family. To Sarala, it seemed that everyone was being guided by her and every
child in the family belonged to her.29 It was in these circumstances that, in the 1880s, writers
close to Hindu tradition such as Akshay Sarkar and Bankim Chandra Chatterji began to
glorify both widowhood and widows.30
The practice of kulin polygamy could not be totally abolished till the end of the nineteenth
century. In 1894, there were persons like Ishwar Chandra Mukerji of Barisal, who had
21. See Debendranath's letters to Rajnarayan Bose, dated 7th Asharh, 1783 (June, 1861) and 13th Magh
1784 (January, 1863), Maharshi Debendranath Thakurer Patrabali, p. 32, 38.
22. For details see Dharmatatta, Sep.-Nov. 1871; Tattvabodhini Patrika, Apr.-Jun., 1872; 'The Brahmo
Samaj and the Native Marriage Act', Calcutta Review, pp. 294-305.
23. See my Ph.D. thesis, p. 236.
24. P. Sinha, Nineteenth Century Bengal, p. 128.
25. Ibid., pp. 128-34.
26. Of these, 72 were married according to the provisions of the Brahmo Marriage Act of 1872, between
1872 and 1892. See Report on the Administration of Bengal for the years 1882-83 and 1892-93 (Calcutta :
Bengal Secretarist Press, 1883, 1893), p. 497, 582.
27. Report on the Census of India, 1901, Vol. VIA, pt. 2, pp. 292-95, 300-01.
28. See my Ph.D. thesis, pp. 52-54.
29. Sarala Debi Chaudhurani, Jibaner Jharapata, pp. 85-86.
30. See, for example, A.C. Sarkar, 'Hindu Bidhabar Abar Bibah Haoa Uchit Kina', in Sabitri (Calcutta :
Sabitri Library, 1886), pp. 178-79.
35
married 107 times, and Kissori Mohan Mukherji of Burdwan, who still had 65 wives.31 But
the number of such cases was very small. As we will later see, even women themselves were
becoming increasingly aware of the problem. Rasbehari Mukherji and Dawrkanath Ganguli,
both of whom were members of polygamous kulin families, took part in the movement for
abolishing kulin polygamy.32
The custom of early marriage too was partially checked, especially among the urban
bhadralok. During the first half of the nineteenth century, girls used to be married at the age
of 8 or 10, but by the end of the century the marriage age in most cases went up by at least
three years.33 Among the Brahmos the age was even higher. The Brahmos belonging to the
Brahmo Samaj of India and Sadharan Brahmo Samaj, in fact, accepted it as a norm to marry
their daughters after the latter had attained puberty.34 The following table indicates that early
marriage was becoming less popular :
TABLE 535
Civil Condition of Boys and Girls under 16; number of married in every 1000
TABLE 636
However, the Name table shows that until 1901, the problem of early marriage was so
intense that in the city of Calcutta, boys and girls under the age of 5 used to be married. The
1901 census further shows that 10 Brahmo boys and 7 girls were married before they were
36
12.37 Even Rabindranath Tagore, who was so "progressive" in his attitudes towards women,
married, in 1901, his second dauthter at the age of only 11 years and a half, because the
proposed bridgroom, Satyendranath Bhattacherji, in Tagore's own language, "agreed to
marry".38 'Possibly Tagore considered Bhattacherji to be a very good bridgroom. Bhattacherji
was a qualified physician and was trying to go to America to study Homoepathic mediciine.
This must have impressed Tagore; besides, he must have considered the fact that a Brahman
bridgroom willing to marry in a Pirali Brahman family was hard to find.39 Despite this kind
of exception, the bhadralok were increasingly disfavouring early marriage. The reform
movement, thus, had achieved some success.
However, the reason for the limits of this was to be found in the limitation of the
bhadralok themselves. These people were, as already mentioned, English educated. But at
that time, English education had hardly spread in area outside Calcutta, except for Dhaka and
few other mofussil towns and, in caste hardly outside the small circle of the Brahmans,
Kayasthas and Baidyas, who constituted only about 5% of the total population in Bengal.
Hence, both English education and the social reform movement were limited to within that
group of the Hindus, who were urbanized, and educated and belonged to the upper caste and
the middle class. Moreover, the communication system, during those days, was extremely
inadequate. Therefore, it took a few decades before the bhadralok reformers' agitation could
permeate a wider segment of Bengali society. Consequently, reformers such as Harish
Chandra Mitra, and Resbehari Mukherji, who came from the mofussil, took part in the
movement during its second stage, when the organized bhadralok themselves had lost most
of their reforming zeal in favour of politics.40
37. Ibid.,
These Brahmo boys and girls must have been of the Adi Brahmo Samaj.
38. P.K. Mukhopadhyay, Rabindra Jibani, Vol. 2 (3rd ed.; Calcutta : Visva Bharati, 1961), pp. 29-30.
39. The Tagores were descendants of an ancestor who is said to have lost his caste, because a Muslim chief,
Pir Ali, ate beef in his presence. Since the number of such "polluted" Brahmans was very small and since other
Brahmans would lose their castes if they married into a Pirali Brahman family, marrying the Pirali daughters was
always a problem. The Tagores who chose most bridegrooms for their daughters from other Brahman families
used to "buy" them with large sums of money. In some cases these men were to be housed in Jarasanko as well.
About how the Tagores became Pirali Brahmans, see P.K. Mukhopadhyay, Rabindra-Jibani, 1, 2-3.
Jnanadanandini Debi narrated in her Smritikatha that the Tagores used to 'buy" sons-in-law. Rabindranath
too paid large sums of money to his sons-in-law. For details see Appendix 1.
40. See my thesis, pp. 438-39.
37
number of writings on social reform was very small, because the movement itself had ebbed
away by the time the women started to publish. Particularly in the last two decades of the
nineteenth century, women virtually did not write on such issues as widow remarriage and
kulin polygamy, although the secular topics like female education, purdah, women's status in
the family and their relationships with in-laws were repeatedly discussed in their writings.
The age of Consent Bill was directly related to women's welfare, because generally
women were the greater victims of early marriage. As the great debate on the issue went on
among men, the government waited for at least a couple of years before enacting the Bill and
the proposed marriage age was lowered to 12. Surprisingly enough, Bengali women kept
absolutely silent all the time. In one of her articles, published in 1984, Mankumari Basu
wrote that the Age of Consent Act was beneficial to women.41 During my research, I did not
find any other article written by women in support of the Bill, although such articulate
women as Krisnabhabini Das, Sarat Kumari Chaudhurani, Jnanadanandini Debi, Swarna
Kumari Debi, Nagendrabala Mustafi and Kamini Sen published many of their writings during
this period. The silence of Krisnabhabini Das, who had written on men's exploitation and
oppression of women's for better social position and higher education, is especially
significant. Krisnabhabini's husband, Professor Debendranath Das, was a liberal man. His
elder brother, Upendranath, was a renowned playwright and producer of the 1870s. Inspired
by Bidyasagar and helped by Sibnath Sastri, Upendranath married a widow in 1869 and thus
incurred the displeasure of his relations including his father, Srinath.42 Srinath was a well-
known advocate at the Calcutta High Court and a personal friend of Bidyasagar. But despite
this liberal atmosphere in the family.43 Krisnabhabini was unable to take any positive stand
on the question of the Age of Consent, because the Bhadralok, by the early 1890s, considered
the reform of socio-religious institutions with the help of the alien rulers undersirable. The
silence of Sarat Kumari, Jnanadanandini and Swarna Kumari was also no less significant.
Indeed, at that time, women were tremendously influenced by men and consequently were
unable to express any views contrary to those of men. Where men's and women's interests
clashed, women were obliged to concede to men.
After the remarriage of widows was legalized, the bhadralok reformers who supported it
expected a favourable response on the part of women, especially of widows. However, they
were hoping against hope, as such a response on the part of women who were very traditional
and devoid of all education would have been unnatural. Disappointed, the editor of Sambad
Bhaskar wrote : 'After the Act was passed, I looked from house to house for widows who
would respond favourably to it, but found none. No widow has, even jokingly, expressed her
desire to get married'.44 The only exception was one Bidya Debi, who said, in a letter
published Sambad Bhaskar in August, 1856, that she was old and therefore did not want to
get married, but hoped that this Act would alleviate the sorrows of hundreds of widows.45 It
is doubtful whether Bidya Debi's letter was genuine, because only a handful of women knew
how to read and write at that time and the standard of their education was, in any case, very
low. It was therefore very extraordinary for any one of them to have written a letter to a
newspaper.
The concept of the remarriage of widows was so opposed to popular attitudes that it was
absolutely exceptional for women or for that matter widows to support it. In 1870, while
41. Mankumri Basu, 'Bigata Shatabarshe Bharat Ramaniganer Abastha', BBP, Jun-Jul., 1895, p. 89.
42. S. Sastri, Atmacharit, pp. 81-86.
The wedding was held in July-August, 1869. See BBP, Sep.-Oct., 1869, p. 117.
43. See my article on Krisnabhabini Das in Jijnasa, Vol. 3, No. 2 (Jul.-Oct., 1982).
44. Sambad Bhaskar, 4 Dec., 1856, in Samayikpatre Banglar Samajchitra, III, 246-47.
45. Ibid., 21 Aug., 1856, III, 483-84.
38
analysing why widows did not want to marry again or, even if they wanted, why they did not
admit it to others, a writer gave the following reasons : 1. widows considered remarriage an
act of great sin; 2. society condemned the idea of remarriage; 3. at the beginning of
widowhood, widows could not foresee the hardships of widowwhood; 4. immediately atter
becoming widows, they received solace, sympathy and care from their relations and they
thought this treatment they would continue; 5. because they knew that possibilities of
marriage were remote, they did not give any thought to it; and 6. they patiently endured
hardships of widowhood at the instance of other widwos.46 Moreover, by the 1860s, when
women began to publish their writings, the movement for widow remarriage was already on
the wane. It was for this reason that women's participation in this movement was so limited.
Nevertheless, the varying attitudes towards widow remarriage found in their writtings are
quite interesting and help one to understand their attitudes towards modernization.
Kailashbasini Debi was influenced by the Brahmos. Both her association with Ananda
Chandra Bedantabagish, an Adi Samajist Priest,47 and her attitudes towards idolatry testify to
this. However, her concern with the Hindu socio-religious institutions and her lack of any
association with Bamabodhini Patrika suggest that she was not as unorthodox as the
"progressive" Keshabite Brahmos. In her book Hindu Mahilar Hinabastha, she expressed her
categorical opinion on Kulinism, polygamy, early marriage, the position of women in the
family and women's relationships with their husbands and in-laws. Possibly because she was
not a widow, she unhesitatingly gave her opinion on widow remarriage as well. She regarded
the hardship of widowhood as unbearable. With surprise and grief, she observed that the
same ancient law-givers who called kindness the best human virtue, unkindly prescribed
enforced celibacy, fasting and other physical hardships for widows including childwidows.
She also observed that despite Bidyasagar's zealous hard work and huge expenditure, the
movement for widow remarriage achieved only negligible success. She expressed her
surprise as to why people did not accept widow remarriage which was approved by Sastras.
In conclusion, she appealed to her countrymen to deliver the poor widows from their intense
hardships.48
Another lady, in 1870, gave a detailed description of how widows were treated unkindly.
Even if she did not positively advocate the remarriage as the solution to the problem of
innumerable young widows, she at least tried to arouse some sympathy towards widows.
Bengalis are traditionally hostile towards the widow. This hostility can be discerned not only
among uneducated lower class people, but among the bhadralok as well. Parents, in-laws and
other relations all the time look for faults on the part of the widow. The mistress of the house
invariably becomes angry if the widow happens to wear good clothes, sleeps on a bed (instead of
on the floor), sits on a good seat, eats good food and laughs with other women of her age. The
widow can live in some honour only if her relations are kind and considerate, otherwise her life
becomes unbearable. I have heard of and seen instances where the brother tried to cut the nose of
the widowed sister, where the parents beat the widowed daughter, and the parents-in-law feed
their daughter-in-law with rice and unhusked rice cooked together.49
However, Sarada Debi of Muzaffarpur, a "progressive" Brahmo lady, directly supported
the cause of widow remarriage, as the Keshabite Brahmo men did. She argued : If a man can
marry after the death of his wife and if this is not regarded as an act of sin, why then a widow
should be blamed if she takes a second husband? Surely, God did not forbid the remarriage of
46. 'Hindu Bidhaba' BBP, Jul.-Aug., 1870, p. 104.
47. In her second book Hindu Abalakuler Bidyabhyas (1865) a testimony by A.C. Bedantabagish was
printed, Bedantabagish said that he knew Kailasbasini for a long time and that both her first and the second
books were written genuinely by her without the assistance of her husband.
48. Kailasbasini Debi, BBP, Mar-Apr., 1871, pp. 366-67.
49. A lady, 'Bamarachana', BBP, Mar-Apr., 1871, pp. 366-67.
39
widows.'50 There was no originality is Sarada Debi's argument. Akshay Kumar Datta.
Bidyasagar and many others had argued in the same lines before. Nor was there any
originality in what Ramsundar,51 and Kshiroda Mitra52 said in their articles, published more
or less at the same time. But these articles were exceptional in the sense that not many
women supported the remarriage of widows.
A lady from Barasat53 and Brajabala Debi54 published two remarkable poems on widow
remarriage. They claimed that widows had to endure a great deal of physical and mental
hardship as social customs and practices prescribed for them were so strict. being unable to
stand them, some widows even went astray. Despite this and despite the fact that the
remarriage of widows was approved by scriptures, the Hindus did not marry their child-
widows, because they abided more by social customs and practices than by sastric codes. In
her poem, Brajabala Debi, therefore, appealed to Bidyasagar, Bankim Chandra Chatteji,
Bhudeb Mukherji, Rajendralal Mitra and other prominent Bengali leaders to introduce the
remarriage of widows. She questioned the Hindus : 'Do you think Hindu widows are in great
agony? Why do you call the Yabanas i.e. the Muslims, butchers, when you yourselves are so
unkind? She went on to term the Hindus more despicable than animals. Although no original
argument can be found in these two poems, they are quite remarkable for their sincerity,
vehemence and even passion.
However, as already mentioned, the spirit of reform lost much of its appeal with the
emergence of nationalism. Therefore, when Brajabala Debi published her poem in 1876,
women immediately protested against what she had argued. In the previous decade, whether
or not many women wrote in favour of widow remarriage, at least none wrote against it. But,
now that people were looking at their tradition with a sense of pride, women, even widows
themselves, considered the remarriage of widows to be a matter of shame and guilt. Kamana
Debi wrote in protest of Brajabala Debi that the enforced celibacy of widows was
praiseworthy and that India could be proud of it. Imitating Brajabala Debi, she appealed to
Bidyasagar, Keshab Chandra Sen, Bhudeb Mukherji etc. not to support the movement for the
remarriage of widows.55 The other women, Kusum Kumini Debi, published her poem two
months later and ridiculed Brajabala.56
During the last two decades of the nineteenth century, women's attitudes towards widow
reform increasingly hardened. It was thought that the alleviation of the sorrows of widows lay
not in their remarriage but in the elevation of their position in the family. Pundita Ramabai
Saraswati was herself a widow. Around 1885, she established a widow-home in order to give
shelter to and educate widows and make them economically independent.57 Sasipada Banerji
established a similar widow-home in Bengal in 1887.58 He got his idea from Ramabai. In the
1860s and 1870s, Sasipada had started to work for widow remarriage with almost religious
zeal. But he saw how his remarried niece was physically assaulted before his own eyes.59 He
realized that society was highly prejudiced against the remarriage of widows. He therefore
50. Sarada Debi, 'Bangadeshe Lokdiger etc., BBP, Nov.-Dec., 1866, p. 402.
51. Ramasundari, 'Edeshe Strishiksha etc.', BBP, Jul.-Aug., 1865, pp. 71-73.
52. Kshiroda Mitra, 'Dushita Deshacharer Nimitta Bilap', p. 341.
53. A lady from Barasat, BBP, May-Jun., 1867, pp. 525-26.
54. Brajabala Debi, 'Ami Ki Unmadini', Banga Mahila, Oct.-Nov., 1876, p. 166-67.
55. Kamana Debi, 'Amito Bidhaba', Banga Mahila, Nov.-Dec., 1876, pp. 186-89.
56. Kusumkamini Debi, 'Ke Likhilo', Banga Mahila, Jan.-Feb., 1877, pp. 235-38.
57. See my unpublsihed Ph.D. thesis, pp. 52-53.
58. 'Mahilashram', BBP, Mar.-Apr., 1888, pp. 371-74.
Also see A.R. Banerji, An Indian Pathfinder : Memoirs of Sevabrata Sasipada Benerji (Reprint; Calcutta :
Sadharan Brahmo Samaj, 1973), pp. 84-85.
59. D. Kopf, The Brahmo Samaj etc., p. 120; A. R. Banerji, pp. 61-62. 82-83.
40
decided to open this widow-home and thus try to elevate the condition of widows. His
widow-home accepted widows who would not marry. However, when these widows were
properly educated, 35 of them got married.60 In the three decades that followed a number of
women such as Krisnabhabini Das (1918), Abala Basu and Jyotirmayi Ganguli (1919) and
Saraju Gupta established quite a few widow-homes.
In fact, with the spread of female education, women became more and more sympathetic
towards widows, although they did not support the remarriage of widows. Mankumari Basu
became a widow when she was only 18 and a half years old. She wrote many articles
advocating better social status for women. Moreover, she claimed that the condition of
Bengali widows was lamentable and emphasized the point that they deserved more sympathy
and kindness.61 But she too remained silent about the desirability of the remarriage of
widows. whether or not this was due to her fear that people might think that she was herself
pleading for her marriage is not clear. However, it is quite evident that women's attitudes
followed the same course as that of men's. Women did not feel the need to antagonize man
even when men were acting against the inerest of women. At least the change of women's
attitudes towards widow remarriage so suggests.
If women were so traditional and different about widow remarriage, there was no
ambivalence and vacillation in their stand on the issues of kulin polygamy and early marriage.
Kulin polygamy was the problem of a very small section of the Brahmans. Nevertheless,
many women, including those who were not Brahmans, wrote against the evils of this
custom. Kailasbasini, a Kayastha, for example, devoted a large section of her book Hindu
Mahilar Hinabastha to Kulinism and its vices. She discussed in some detail how insignificant
and meaningless kulinsim was and how kulinism intensified the problems of child
widowhood, early marriage and marriage between a man and a woman with great difference
of age.62 Kshiroda Mitra, Sarada Debi, Yogindramohini Basu63 and many others argued on
the some lines. It is interesting to note that unlike widow remarriage women's attitudes
towards Kulin polygamy were not divided. However, it is not clear why so many non-
Brahman women criticized the institution of kulinism, when the intracaste character of
bhadralok reformers was so predominant.64 It is quite possible that their awareness of the
evils of polygamy made them so opposed to the polygamous practices of kulins.
If non-Brahman women were so against kulin polygamy, one can guess how kulin
Brahman women themselves became averse to the custom. Their hostility was expressed not
only in their writings, but in other actions as well. In 1870, for instance, a kulin woman,
named Krishamani, brought a legal action against her husband, Laxminarayan Mukherji,
asking for her maintenance, and won it. The Court decreed that Mukherji would pay Rs. 15
per month as her maintenance. As Mukherji was unable to do this due to his poverty, he was
jailed.65 Another kulin woman, Haimabati won such a case in 1876.66 Yet another woman,
Lamitmohini, got a decree of almost a fortune. Among other things she spent a part of her
money by giving a prize to a man who had written a book on the evils of early marriage.67
Such legal actions against husbands may not seem significant now, but these cases were filed
60. L.S. S.O 'Mally, Modern India and the West (Reprint; London : Oxford Uni. Press, 1968), p. 456.
61. Mankumari Basu, 'Bigata Shatabarshae etc.' pp. 327-28.
62. Kaliashasini Debi, Hindu Mahilar Hinabastha, pp. 7-18.
63. Yogindramohini Debi, 'Kaulinya Pratha', BBP, Jun.-Jul., 1871. p. 196. The articles of Kshiroda Mitra
and Sarada Debi have been mentioned before.
64. See my Ph.D. thesis, p. 439-458.
65. BBP. Jun.-Jul., 1870, p. 111.
66. BBP, Sep.-Oct., 1876, p. 120.
67. BBP, Dec., 1891-Jan., 1892, p. 285.
41
when the idea of sueing husband was inconceivable in Bengal.68 In fact, the accepted norm
on the part of the kulin wife was that she would earn some money by spinning throughout the
year and then tempt the husband to visit her at best once a year just for a night.69
A striking case of how female education made kulin girls conscious of the vices of kulin
polygamy was that of Bidhuymukhi of Dhaka. In 1870, her uncles arranged her marriage with
a kulin who had already 12 or 13 wives. Bidhumukhi had received some education. She was
unable to accept this position. She therefore requested her maternal uncles to help her flee
from home. With their help, she ran away to Calcutta where Durga Mohan Das, the Brahmo
leader, offered her shelter. Angry and disappointed, her uncles brought a suit against her
maternal uncles. Bidhumukhi explained her position before the Court and won the case.70 At
the instance of Das and other Brahmos, Bidhumukhi continued her education, most probably
at the Ladies Scholl established by Keshab Chandra Sen. In 1874, she and Rajaninath Ray, a
young Brahmo MA, got married.71 Rajaninath later became the Comptroller of India. He was
the first Indian to hold such a high position.72 Instead of becoming the wife or rather a
concubine of a polygamous kulin, Btdhumukhi thus ridically changed her life.
The bhadralok reformers who were themselves the victims of early marriage became
conscious of its bad effects in the 1850s. The following table shows how early marriage was
popular even among the educated families :
TABLE 7
However, once the bhadralok reformers became convinced that early marriage was a
great social evil, they started a vigorous movement for its abolition. The emergence of
nationalism in the 1870s slowed down the progress of the movement as a section of people
close to tradition revised their opinion. For example, Bankim Chandra Chatterji, during this
period, depicted a female character, Indira, who thus comments : People who say "Marry off
your widows, don't marry your daughters until they are adults, and educate your women like
men" will not understand the true significance of the devotion to one's husband.73 Despite
42
this kind of change of attutudes among a section of the bhadralok, educated women did not
support early marriage. After all, they were the greater victims of early marriage. They had
possibly realized its bad effects too well to write any thing in favour of early marriage.
Once again, Kailasbasini Debi was the one who first expressed her opinion against early
marraige. She claimed that principal reason for the deplorable condition of women and
society was early marriage. The husband-wife relationship, in her opinion, could never be
based on perfect understanding if men and women were married so early. She added that as a
result of early marriage anything ranging from the husband being a debauchee to frequent
quarrels between the husband and the wife might happen. Moreover, she argued, children
born to teenage parents of the parents might also suffer, the mother might even die in
childbirth, and since the young husband had to earn for a big family, he would become
permanently poverty- sricken. She further said that early marriage was mainly responsible for
child wodowhood, because the mortality rate among children was very high. The wife's
relationships with in-laws were far from satisfactory during those days. According to
Kailasbasini, this too was the result of early marriage. In conclusion, she claimed, the
problem of child widowhood and polygamy could never be solved unless early marraige was
abolished.74
Many other women such as Jnanadanandini Debi, Krisnabhabini Debi, Sarada Debi,
Nagendrabala Mustafi and Mankumari Basu attacked the custom of early marriage. However,
they more or less argued on the same lines. As we saw in Table 5, the problem of early
marriage was still of some magnitude at the beginning of the present century. Possibly this
was the reason why so many women repeatedly advocated the abolition of early marriage.
Since its abolition would not offend traditional society in the manner it would the
introduction of widow remarriage, the emergence of nationalism could not halt its progress.
True, most of the bhadralok did not support the Age of Consent Bill, but that was because, as
already mentioned, they held that native socio-religious institutions should not be reformed
with the help of government laws.75 Indeed, with the passing of time, early marriage became
increasingly undersirable both to educated men and women.
74. Kailasbasini Debi, Hindu Mahilar Hinabastha, pp. 34, 37-43, 45.
75. Supra, pp. 173-76, 176-8.
76. R. Strachy, pp. 73-76.
43
rights. Nor did they fight for better marriage laws. In fact, the Hindu Marriage and Family
Law was not passed until 1956, nine years after India became independent although social
reformers, throughout the nineteenth century, had so ardently advocated the reform of the
institution of Hindu marriage in the light of secular humanism. This reflects the lack of
awareness on the part of Bengali women vis-a-vis Englishwomen. During the period under
review, Bengali women were satisfied with what men kindly allowed them to enjoy, or in any
case, they did not contradict male-defined society to get a better status with in it.
44
CONCLUSION
The movement for the "emancipation" of Bengali women was initiated by men.
Therefore, in the true sense, it was not a movement for "liberating" women from the authority
of men. On the contrary, men started the movement as apart of modernizing their own world.
Those men who were imbued with Western ideas became increasingly aware of the
subordinate position of their women as well as of the debased nature of the husband-wife
relationship. They also became conscious that their women were illiterate, devoid of
sophistication and accomplishments, and unable to share the success and glory of their public
life. Apart from this feeling of inadequancy, they were moved by a sense of deep sympathy
when they realized how social customs and practies such as suttee, enforced celibacy and
kulin polygamy oppressed their womenfolk. They felt the need to reform these social
institutions as well as to educate their women and thereby turn them into better wives and
better mothers. In order to make them better companions and to enjoy a more significant
social life, they also began to break the seclusion of their women. Thus, men's attempts to
uplift their women were not meant for women's welfare alone, they were, at the same time,
motivated by men's aspirations for the fulfilment of their own lives.
However, when women received some education and consequently new ideas regarding
their lives and values developed some degree of individuality, and when all this altered their
relationships with their husbands and in-laws as well as their roles and status in the family
and society, men close to tradition began to criticize women and resisted such changes. Even
a section of the Western influenced "progressive" Brahmos who had for so long advocated
women's "emancipation" suddenly expressed their dispproval of unorthodoxy in women.
This sudden change of men's attitudes was caused because men had wanted to reform and
thus modernize their women, but had not foreseen that as a result of this "reform" women
would one day challenge the very authority of men over them. Indeed, men were alarmed by
this development, however small, of a sense of individuality and personality among their
women. The modernized women's relationshps with her husband and in-laws also caused a
great deal of complications within the family, again because the wife's actual behaviour
patterns and roles and others' expectations and conceptions of her behaviour patterns and
roles largely differed. After the bhadralok reformers had educated their women and broken
their seclusion, it was quite unrealistic for them to expect that "emancipated" women would
retain their traditional behaviour patterns and values. Nevertheless, most of the bhadralok so
expected. This, on the one hand, gave rise to a hostility among men to women's "liberation"
as a whole, and on the other, strained the wife's relationships with her husband and other
members of the family.
Consequently, the movement for the upliftment of women suffered a setback and, in
many families, the husband-wife relationship was redefined and underwent a drastic change.
For instance, Lilian Palit, who graduated from the Calcutta University in 1900, divorced her
first husband and took a second husband. This was indeed unique till then in Bengal. Before
this, the husband-wife relationship must have faced many a crisis, and as a result, the wife
either got a good thrashing or was left for good at her parents' house while her husband
married a second time. In some extreme cases, the wife solved the problem by committing
suicide. That the kulin wife would permanently live with her parents and later with her elder
brothers was an accepted norm. However, with some degree of modernization, the wife's
45
attitudinal and value changes were reflected in her behaviour. She was no longer ready
silently to endure the unjust and unequal treatment of her husband. She therefore began to
think of bringing law suits against her husband or even of divorcing him.
Apart from men's "disillusionment," the emergence of nationalism hardened the
bhadralok attitudes towards both modernization and Westernization. The process of
modernization came to be regarded as if it was infused from outside, especially from the
West. As a result, the entire social reform movement, including women's upliftment,
experienced a reversal. Although Satyendranath and Jyotirindranath Tagore, in the 1860s and
1870s, had set up a number of striking, even "rude" examples of how to "unveil" women,
their younger brother, Rabindranath, who was in his youth known as "ultramodern" and
fashionable, did not imitate them. In fact, he compromised with tradition so much that his
wife could become not even half as 'liberated' as Satyendranth's and Jyotirindranath's wives.
Rabindranath also chose not to give his daughters any formal education. Moreover, unlike
Satyendranath (Jyotirindranath was childless), he married his daughters early.
This kind of change of attitudes was perceptible among women as well, particularly
among the women who were politicized. The number of such women was almost negligible,
but the change in them was unmistakable. Like the nationalist men, they, too, began to look
at tradition with respect. For example, Sarala Debi, who once held radical ideas and
undoubtedly developed a personal autonomy, and had refused to marry any one chosen by her
parents and other relations, in 1905, agreed to marry a middle-aged widower, whom she had
not met before the wedding ceremony.1 That this man was from a well-known Punjabi
Brahman family aroused Sarala's admiration so much that she could easily disregard the fact
that this man was a widower. In fact, she pleaded in favour of Indian polygamous practice,
saying : 'All women cannot endure it, but is it a fault if one can? Is it to be condemned if the
whole nation can (endure it)'? Moreover, despite the fact that she was born and brought up in
a strict monotheistic family, she readily agreed to observe the idolatrous rituals which were
customary in her husband's family.2 Although not as extreme as this, similar kinds of
compromising attitudes can be discerned in Jnanadanadini Debi and Krisnabhabini Debi.
Although highly Westernized, Krisnabhabini became quite traditional when she lost her
husband and the only son in 1908.3
However, in spite of the reversal of the liberal movement for the upliftment of women,
the women who were partially emancipated could neither go back into the purdah nor
commit themeselves totally to domestic roles. They were also unable to give up the personal
autonomy, the taste of which they had already enjoyed. As a result of all this, the conflict
between men and these "liberated" women widened and these women became incresingly
conscious of their rights.
The degree of modernization experienced by these women during the late nineteenth and
early twentieth centuries was certainly small in comparison with what women's liberation
means today, but quite significant in comparison with the conditions that earlier existed in the
nineteenth century. That these women received some education, that they were ready to
accept new ideas, that they began to express their opinions, that they developed some degree
of personal autonomy and individuality, that they were concerned about their "progress," that
they believed in "reformed" religious ideas, that their social relations underwent some
changes, that their familial relationships were sometimes marked by such disruptive features
as divorce and tension, that they established a better communication among women, and that
46
they began to participate in social, political and economic activities, undoubtedly shows that
they were exposed to the process of modernization, irrespective of its degree. Although the
nature of modernization was uneven and only certain aspects of life and some individuals
were exposed to it, the process of modernization changed both the self-perception of
educated women as well as their image in the eyes of others. It also made the contradictions
of the bhadralok apparent in that they were ready to accept new ideas and reform their lives
in the light of these ideas, but were quite conservative in relation to their attitudes towards
their family and women.
For women to write anything regarding love, their relationships with their respective
husbands, and their private life was considered, at that time, indecent. Therefore, it is difficult
to say in any detail how the process of modernization affected women's private life in the
context of the family. However, the writings of traditional women who severely criticized the
modernized women suggest that there had been considerable change in this respect. They
began to abhor the dual standard of sex. Thus men's polygamous practices and extramarital
sexual relationships were condemned by these women. They now expected more rights, if not
equality, with their respective husbands. Such passages as the following two could not have
been written earlier by any Bengali woman, and they certainly reflect the overall change that
had permeated among the bhadralok women :
Busy having degrees, educated Bengali men are always in search of their own happiness. The
silent tears of the caged Bengali women fail to attract the attention of these men. They would
possibly have heard us, if we could organize a movement for our emancipation similar to
Englishwomen's movement for suffrage, if we could give up the meekness and weakness
generally associated with women, and if we could express our genuine feeling and raise a hue
and cry.4
We must have the desire to go side by side with men in this world and believe that we are not
slaves. We must be ready to do anything that will make us equal to men. If we can achieve this
equality by independently earning our livelihood, then we must do that... Why shouldn't we earn?
Haven't we hands? Legs? What doesn't we have? Can't we earn our living with the same labour
that we have to expend in our houses.5
At the inital stage of the process of modernization, women prayed for their
"emancipation" to the same men who had kept them in chains. However, by the end of the
nineteenth century, at least some women became more aware of their rights. They therefore
launched, in a modest way, a movement for the upliftment of women. The efforts of
Swarnakumari Debi, Krisnabhabini Debi, Begum Rokeya Sakhwat Hossain and Sarala Debi
to educate women do reflect this growing awareness on their part. Moreover, a few women
such as Begum Rokeya realized that women could never be liberated if they totally depended
for their living on their male relations. Rokeya's difference with the earlier women who
stressed this point is that she did not consider only teaching, practising medicine and such
other "respectable" occupations suitable for women, but, in her opinion, agricultural labour
and business were equally suitable for them. This kind of awareness marked the beginnings
of feminism in Bengal.
If after the World War I, conditions did not favour the rapid expansion of modernization
of women, the 1947-Partition of Bengal which resulted in a large scale exodus of middle
class Hindus from East Pakistan to West Bengal, especially to Calcutta, the increasing
economic hardship faced by the bhardralok in general and these refugees in particular, and
unprecedented expansion of education after the World War II did. The increased economic
hardship on the lower middle class Bangladesh people, relying mainly on salaried jobs,
47
created more or less a similar situation. Indeed a considerable number of Muslim women
went for higher education and also for salaried jobs after the 1971 War of Liberation. It was
due to these kind of changes that the bhadralok, despite their inherent conservatism towards
women's modernization, were compelled to give higher education to their women and allow
them to join the workforce. Consequently, not only was the custom of female seclusion
totally abolished among them, but the status of the working woman was certainly elevated
and her roles were redefined. Moreover, for the first time she became conscious of the size of
her family as well as of the number of children she could afford to have. However, it is
doubtful whether after all this, she was regarded by society as equal to man or even whether
she herself claimed it.
48
APPENDIX ONE
Modernization of Bengali Women and the Tagore Family
Not many people worked for the modernization of Bengali women, especially at the
initial stage in the nineteenth century. If any one family contributed significantly towards the
cause of women, it was the Jorasanko Tagore family. The following discussion shows how a
number of the Tagores, including some women, advanced the movement for the upliftment of
Bengali women. It also throws light on the ideal of "emancipation" they advocated.
Satyendranth
Although his grandfather, the "Prince" Dwarkanath Tagore, realized the need to educate
women,1 and his father, Debendranath, educated all his daughters, Satyendranath was the first
who came to believe whole-heartedly in the modernization of women. He advocated a kind of
"emancipation" of women that was unknown to Bengal possibly even half a century later.
Educated first at the Hindu College in Calcutta and then in London, he took part in the
Civil Service Examination held in 1863-64, and became the first native member of the Indian
Civil Service in late 1864. He took up his position as an Assistant Judge in Ahmedabad (near
Bombay) and served in different capacities until 1897, when he retired.2 Possibly because he
lived mostly outside Bengal, he did not receive the recognition he deserved as a literary figure
and social reformer. He is even less known as one who worked for female "emancipation".
In his reminiscences of his boyhood and youth, Satyendranath thus claimed that he was in
favour of breaking the seclusion of women :
I have supported the cause of women since my boyhood days. Mother used to chide me, saying : 'What! Do
you want to take women out to Garer Math for an airing?' I never approved of the prison-like arrangements
in our zenana. I always considered seclusion a very harmful custom.3
As he grew up, his ideas of women's modernization became even stronger. He described
how, in England, he found men and women freely taking part in social activities and how
charming an influence women had in family life. Moreover, he found many married and
unmarried women who devoted the whole of their time and energy to the welfare of society.
He also noticed how stunted the lives of Bengali women were in comparision with those of
Englishwomen. In his opinion, Bengali women were unable to develop either their mind or
intellect because society was so hostile towards them.4
From what he wrote to his wife, at that time, it becomes clear now he felt for the
downtrodden Bengali women :
I now feel at home in England. However, the customs and practices of our country now make me more sick
than ever before.
He further wrote :
Whatever good fortune, progress, beauty and glory the people of this country have are due to the elevated
position of their women. When will our country have this kind of good fortune? Progress is far away from a
country where women have no freedom and have always to abide by the orders of their husbands and other
1. Supra, p. 24.
2. For details, see B.N. Bandyopadhyay, Satyendranath Tagore etc., pp. 5-16.
3. S.N. Tagore, Amar Balyakatha (2nd ed., Calcutta : Baitanik Prakashani, 1967), p. 5.
4. Ibid.
49
superiors. Women are like flowers of the "garden of life". If they are kept shut for ever in their homes away
from fresh air and light, how can men expect their own welfare?5
A big difference between Satyendranath and most nineteenth century Bengali reformers
was that these reformers would advocate social reform for others while keeping their own
families as close to tradition as possible, but Satyendranath would practise what he preached.
He knew well that charity begins at home. In the same letter, Satyendranath further wrote : "I
wish you to become an example to our women." However, he reminded his wife, "It depends
mainly on how much you are prepared to and can accept change."6
Once he became aware of it, Satyendranath was occupied with the thought of how he
could reform and thereby modernize his wife. The immediate possibility he could think of
was to request his father to send Jnanadanandini Debi, to England where she might, receive a
good education as well as acquire sophistication and accomplishments. How he was looking
forward to her coming to England was reflected in another letter that he wrote to his wife a
couple of months later in January, 1864. In this letter, he expressed his hope that she would
greatly benefit from her visit to England :
Your mind and soul are now dry within the four walls of the zenana, but you will find a completely new
environment when you come to England.7
He reassured Jnanadanadini saying :
I am asking you to come to England with no selfish motives, it is for your own welfare. I want you to
receive education here and thereby improve yourself. I am certain you can improve your mind and soul a
thousand times if you live in English society. By improving yourself you can help other women of our
country, who will find in you an example to follow.8
Satyendranath knew that it was not easy for a Bengali woman to go to England, because
her dress, her eating habits, her language, her manners, her fear and shyness and other such
things would be great obstacles. Therefore he kept on persuading Jnanada in letters, assuring
her that the journey would be safe and her stay in England would be enjoyable. 'Moreover', he
wrote–'you do not know how significantly this visit can help you.'9 Next month, he wrote,
'England will offer you a freedom you never experienced before'.10
It is not known whether Jnanada agreed to go to England. But, traditional in his social
outlook, Debendranath rejected Satyendranath's proposal. Thus Jnananda's visit to England
was called off. Frustrated, Satyendranath wrote to his wife :
I asked father to send you to England. But all my efforts have failed. Father wants me to abide by
the conventions and customs of the zenana, in other words. I kept you caged for ever within the
four walls of the zenana. I don't understand, darling, how can I act according to my father's wish!
I shall never be happy if I keep you caged nor will your body and mind develop thereby. I wonder
why men consider giving education and freedom to women to be the root of great evil. I, on the
contrary, think our backwardness is due to the fact that we keep our women illiterate and do not
give them any liberty. How a society be can really advance if its women are uplifted can be
realized when one comes to England. If you live in England for only two years after having lived
in the zenana for 25 years, you will then realize that two years in England is better than 25 years
in the zenana so far as the development of your mind and intellect is concernd.11
Satyendranath was disappointed and dejected at the setback of his plan. However, he did
not give up his hopes to modernize his wife and thereby make his relationship with her
meaningful. After he returned from England, he took his wife to his place of work in Western
5. S.N. Tagore's letter to Jnandanandini Debi, No. 2 16 Nov., 1863, in Puratani, p. 46.
6. Ibid.
7. S.N. Tagore to J., letter no. 5 18.2.1864, p. 53.
8. Ibid., No. 3, 11.2.1864, pp. 49-50.
9. Ibid., 4, 18.1.1864, p. 51.
10. Ibid., No. 18.2.1864. p. 53.
11. Ibid., No. 8.2.7, 1864, pp. 58-59.
50
India thus away from the ancestral home to the place of work. He reformed her dress and
started to educate her. Later he broke one after another the customs and practices concerning
female seclusion. Many of these incidents which may seem insignificant now, raised a great
deal of noise in contemporary society. That Jnanada rode a carriage on her way back home
from the ship, that she wore unorthodox dress, that she attended a party given by the
Governor-General, that she went to England, and that she took part in private theatrical
performances angered her relations and attracted harsh criticism from others.12 But, as
Satyendranath wanted her to become an "example" to other women, Jnanadanandini went on
violating social practices, particularly those relating to female seclusion. Satyendranath had a
high social position as well as decent independent income, moreover, he lived mostly away
from Bengal. Therefore, he was neither afraid of social criticism nor obliged to abide by the
conventions of the big joint family of the Tagores.
Had Satyendranath aimed only to break female seclusion, his ideal of "emancipation"
would have been very limited in nature, although quite bold. However, he aimed much
further. Although it is obvious that many social reformers at that time became aware of the
inadequate nature of the husband-wife relationship, it is not known exactly how they felt
about this inadequancy, because either they did not write about it or because no such writing
now survives. Fortunately, Satyendranath's letters to his wife show clearly his attitudes
towards the husband-wife relationship-both towards the existing relationship and the one he
thought ideal.
In one of his letters to his wife, he thus depicted the existing married life of Bengalis :
Most peope of our country live a life that is not worth living. They have to be satisfied with the bare
minimum of food. Before they can grow up properly they get married with the "grandeur" they can afford
and as a matter of course they then beget children. When the "child-wife becomes a mother, her life is
fulfilled. This is how most people live and they are contented with this.13
Satyendarnath analysed the reason. He thought this misery was due to the overwhelming
power of social customs and practices and to the inability of individuals to live as individuals.
However, imbued with modern ideas, his ideal of of marraige and of the husband-wife
relationship were different. He wrote to his wife, explaining his point of view :
You were too young to understand the meaning of marriage when you were married to me. You and I could
not marry of our free will, rather our guardians arragned our marraige. Tell me, darling, is this not correct?
Althought I did not tell you anything regarding this, you know my feelings. Until you attain the proper age
and education, and you acquire a sophistication in every respect, we will not enter the husband-wife
relationship. Tell me, don't you approve of this idea? You know how dearly I love! However, I have written
to father saying that I will remain waiting for you as good seeds wait to grow in a well cultivated fertile
piece of land. Your body and soul are still dry ... You did not marry me, rather your father married you off
to me. Don't you think we will be happy only when we enter our relationship of our free will and with
genuine love?14
It was indeed extraordinary for a Bengali to have written like this either to his father or to
his wife. It is doubtful if any one even fifty years later, including his illustrious younger
brother, Rabindranath Tagore, conceived of writing such things to his wife. When compared
to other contemporary reformers, his attitudes towards female "emancipation" seems
distinctly different. Whereas Keshab Chandra Sen, Manomohan Ghosh, W.C. Bonerji,
Durgamohan Das, Annada Charan Khastagir, etc., tried to "emancipate" women from without
by relaxing female seclusion and giving them the rudiments of education, Satyendranath tried
to "emancipate" them from within. He was able not only to give his wife a good education,
but he tried to develop her individuality as well. It was through his invincible efforts that he
51
was able to turn his illiterate and unsophisticated wife into a lady as she later became. The
letter he wrote to her from Bombay between 1866 and 1868 when she was living in Calcutta
shows his great concern about what books she was reading and about whether she was taking
regular lessons from a European lady. A true liberal, he showed no incongruity in his belief
and action. His ideal of female "emancipation" was deeply rooted and he based his
relationship with his wife according to this ideal. Another difference that distinguishes
Satyendranath from other contemporary reformers is his desire to acquaint Bengalis with the
Western ideal of female emancipation. His desire to do so was reflected in his translation of
J.S. Mill's book Subjection of Women.15
If Satyendranath showed his remarkable zeal for female emancipation by modernizing his
wife and by developing her into an individual, Jananda showed equal readiness to accept new
ideas and change accordingly. Jnanda was married to Satyendranath at the age of seven. At
that time she was illiterate. However, as Debendranath had by then realized the need to
educate the female members of his family, Englishwomen and Baisnabis were engaged to
teach all the daughters and daughters-in-law of his family. Jnanada thus started to receive
some education. Satyendranath came back from England in late 1864. at that time she knew a
few words in English. But in several years' time she not only learnt both Bengali and English
well, but read a great deal to become an accomplished lady. She also learnt Marathi and
Gujrati. Besides, when she went to France, she learned a bit of French.16
Her first article in the form of a letter was published in Bamabodhini Patrika in 1871.17
She later published in such standard magazines as Bharati.18 She even edited the monthly
Balaka in 1885-86.
If her articles on female education and scoial reform now seem to some extent traditional,
during those days they did not lack in modernism. In her life style and attitudes, she was as
modern as any other enlightened Bengali woman of the 1880s and 1890s. That she did not
favour indiscriminate Westernization was because politicized Bengalis as a whole were
becoming nationalist and anti-west in their attitudes. That she advocated only a limited
emancipation of women and that she maintained that women's principal roles were those of
childcare, housekeeping and cooking19 was because the consicousness of Bengali women at
that time had not reached the stage of feminism.
Jnanada Debi ably helped her husband. Without her cooperation, Satyendranth's efforts to
break her seclusion and set an example of female emancipation would have failed. She took
part in theatrical performances and proved to be an excellent actress.20 That she took on the
role of an organizer of women's activities was laudable. She also designed more appropriate
dress for Bengali women of that period. She introduced blouses and petticoats among
Bengali women. When social reformers in the early 1870s were still discussing and designing
a model dress for Bengali women, Jnanada Debi offered through the Bamabodhini Patrika to
give advice regarding the 'reformed dress' and send photographs of it to any woman who
would write to her. Jnanada Debi also innovated the present style of wearing the sari. This
may not seem to be a great reform now, but when one considers that the dress of Bengali
15. B.N. Bandyopadhyay has given to understand that this translation was published before 1868
(Sayendranath Tagore etc., p. 28), but it is doubtful whether it was published at all. Subjection of Women was
not published until 1868.
16. Supra, pp. 83-84.
17. 'Banga Mahila Paricchad' BBP, Oct.-Nov., 1871. However, her name was not mentioned.
18. The first article she published in the Bharati was in 1881.
19. For details, see her article 'Strishiksha', Bharati, Jun.-Jul., 1881.
20. A.N. Tagore, Gharoa (Reprint; Calcutta : Visva Bharati, 1944), pp. 67-68.
52
women in the nineteenth century was not at all suitable for outdoors or for formal occasions,
Jnanada Debi's contribution can be said to be significant.21
Debendranath was quite conservative in his social attitudes and had great influence over
the members of his family. Therefore the customs of the zenana were more or less rigorously
observed at the Tagore house. Nevertheless, Satyendranath was able to introduce some
reforms in female education and seclusion in their family. At least in the 1870s, the female
members of their family were subject to less stringent rules of seclusion. Actually,
Satyendranth had a moderating influence upon some of his younger relations.
Jyotirindranath Tagore, one of his younger brothers, was intially unfavourable towards
female emancipation and started his career as a playwright by writing a farce named Kinchit
Jalayog in which he ridiculed both the advocates of female emancipation and emancipated
women. Young Jyotirindranath, being the Secretary of the Adi Samj, voilently attacked
Keshab Chandra Sen's Brahmo Samaj of India in this farce. Keshab was given the name
Patitapaban Sen and was disparaged for his policies of women's emancipation. Neither was
the portrayal of the characters of the emancipated heroine and her husband purely literary.
Jyotirindranath certainly wanted to leave a moral for his readers–emancipation of women is
bad.22
But Jyotirindranth soon changed at the instances of his elder brother. He has himself
related how Satyendranath had a liberalizing influence upon him.23 This is why inspite of its
popularity, Jyotirindranath did not reprint the farce a second time. Moreover, in a few years'
time, he was so opposed to the rules of seclusion that he started taking his wife out of doors.
He and his wife would even go round the crowded streets of Calcutta on horseback. The
people around would naturally stare at them in utter astonishment.24
It should, however, be mentioned here that inspite of his apparent radical behaviour, he
never genuinely became as liberal as his elder brother, Satyendranath. Although he would go
round the streets of Calcutta with his wife, he never tried to "emancipate" her from within.
Therefore she was not able to be free in the true sense of the term. Like Purnachandra, the
hero of the farce, Jyotirindranath too, as claimed by some authors including Kazi A. Wadud,
had an extramarital love affair. The heroine, Bidhumukhi, only threatend to divorce her
husband, but Jyotirindranath's wife, Kadambari Debi, had to commit suicide to get rid of her
husband.25 In fact, the women of that period were so dependent upon men in every respect
that it was extremely difficult, if not impossible, for them to be emancipated. Giving women
a bit of education and subjecting them to less rigorous rules of seclusion were becoming
fashions of the day, especially among the educated urban people. Jyotirindranath was no
exception.
Hemendranath, another younger brother of Satyendranath was also considerably
influenced by Satyendranath. The latter used to live away from the ancestral home and it was
Hemendranath who was responsible for the proper education of the female children of the
Tagore family. He carefully designed a course for the children and the illiterate adults.
According to his plan they were taught not only to read and write, but they were given lessons
53
in music and dancing.26 Most of the Calcutta Girls' Schools of that time used to teach needle
work, but music and dancing were still out of their syllabus.
Rabindranath
Of all the members of the Tagore family, Rabindranath's contribution to the
modernization of women was the most significant. He imbibed his liberal ideas not only from
his brother, Satyendranath, but he was also greatly influenced by English society. The letters
that he wrote from England during his first visit in 1878-79 when he was in his teens and the
diary he kept during his second visit in 1890 reveal his admiration for English society as well
as for the emancipation of women in that society. In one of the above mentioned letters which
was published in Bharati, he thus expressed his opinion in favour of women's emancipation :
For men and women to get together and enjoy amusements is only natural. Aren't women human beings?
Hasn't God created them as a part of society? To regard such social gatherings of men and women as
against social norms or as a matter of great sin is not only unnatural, but uncivil as well...We only show our
disrespect to God, when we treat women who constitute half of our society as animals and consider this a
divine command ... We can easily realize, when we come to England, how much of our happiness and
progress we sacrifice by keeping our women "exiled" from our "world"... What is the first thing that most
surprises the Indians who come to this country? It is of course the contribution of women to the progress
and happiness of English society. The Indians who were previously against women's emancipation must
have completely revised their views on it, after having lived in England for some time.27
Even if these observations are a bit precocious, there is no ambiguity about what he
wanted to convey in the above passage. This reminds the reader of the letters that
Satyendranath wrote to his wife from England. At that stage, he was most certainly
influenced by the position of women as well as by the man-woman relationship in English
society. Rabindranath's relations, including his father, were apparently alarmed when they
found the eighteen year old "Rabi" writing such letters. In fact, his father soon called him
back from England.28
Although he later ceased to be so "radical", he continued to write in favour of women's
modernization. In his writings, he, on the one hand, portrayed the degradation and dishonour
of Bengali women and thus tried to arouse the sympathy of his readers, and on the other,
expressed his ideal of women's emancipation.
The women in his early fiction are certainly traditional. They are depicted as oppressed by
cruel social customs. They silently obey their superiors and put up with all the dishonour that
may befall them. In his earlier writings, one can find narrated the deplorable condition of
childwidows,29 the repression of the joint family,30 the practice of polygamy,31 and the evil
consequence of early marriage.32 Women are even subject to physical sufferings.33
Unlettered and without any accoplishment, these women have not developed their
personalties. Pictures of rigorous seclusion are also quite common in his fiction. Some of his
heroines are not even allowed to meet their husbands during the day, or converse with near
26. For details see his son, Kshitindranath's work Arya Ramanir etc., passim. His daughter, Prathibha Debi,
was one of the most accomplished ladies of that time. See Chitra Deb, pp. 88-92, 94-100.
27. 'Europeyatri Kono Bangiya Yubaker Patra', Bharati, Nov.-Dec., 1879, p. 507.
28. P.K. Mukhopadhyay, Rabindra Jibani, p. 95.
29. Characters like Mohini ('Karuna', 1877-78), Kusum ('Ghater Katha', 1884), Sonamani (A'tithi', 1895),
Damini and Nanibala (Chaturanga, 1914), Kusum ('Tyag', 1892) and Shailabala (Prajapatir Nirbandha, 1901).
30. Short stories like 'Denapaona' (1891), 'Tyag' (1892), 'Aparichita' and 'Strir Patra' (1914).
31. For example, the short story 'Madyabartini' (1893).
32. Apart from the child-widows mentioned in footnote 31, Kumu ('Dristidan', 1899), Shashimukhi (Gora,
1910), the heroine of the short story 'Kankal' (1891), etc., are also married during their childhood.
33. Nirupama of 'Denapaona' does not even get proper medical treatment when she becomes ill and dies
uncared.
54
relations. A reader of Tagore cannot but be critical of the social customs that oppressed
Bengali women.
However, in his later writings, one can find the other side of the picture. Here, Tagore has
described the emergence of the first modernized Bengali women. In personality and attitudes
towards life and the world his later heroines are indeed quite different. The settings are also
different. Although within the context of a family, these women are mature enough to be able
to think for themselves. These heroines for the first time come out of the kitchen and
bedroom to the parlour where they argue with men and exchange ideas. They are individuals
who reflect a set of modern values. They look at society from a standpoint which was against
traditional social values.
The widows such as Binodini, Damini, Nanibala, Manjulika and Sohini,34 are different
from earlier widows such as Mohini, Shaila, Kadambini and Sonamani.35 The later widows
are not strictly traditional, nor are the child wives in big joint families, Nirupama and
Brindaban's wife silently bear all the oppressions they are subject to as wives in joint families
and at the end are compelled to accept death.36 It is not even known whether they felt this
oppression or not. Kusum, Haimanti and Binu37 are also victims of the joint family system.
But Mrinal of the short story 'Strir Patra' is an exception. An unhappy member of a big joint
family where the development of her personality is every moment ignored, she refuses to put
up with this oppression. After 15 years of married life, she leaves her home and husband and
finds herself under the blue sky where she can breathe with the freedom she has desired so
long.38 Rabindranath has condemned the tyranny of the joint family in a number of his stories
and poems, but what makes 'Strir Patra' different is that in this story Mrinal has developed her
individuality and finally revolts against the social values so dearly preserved by the Bengali
middle class.
One may question how Tagore came to write such a bold story. He was always
courageous, but in his later life, especially after he received the Nobel Prize in 1913, he
became even more so. It was at this stage that he ventured to experiment with colloquial
Bengali and new rhymes as well as social themes. Actually, in a brief span of two or three
years after Sabujpatra was published, he wrote the short stories, 'Strir Patra', Haimanti' and
'Aparichita', the novels Chaturanga and Ghare Baire and the Balaka poems.
Rabindranath himself was a member of a very big joint family and, as a highly sensitive
individual, must have felt this oppression on its members. The position of women in such a
family is still worse. It has already been discussed how his wife was forced to leave the
Jorasanko house of the Tagores and live first in Shilaidah and then in Santiniketan.39 While
writing this story 'Strir Patra', Tagore certainly remembered the oppression that his dead wife
had to endure and perhaps as a revenge wanted to attack at once his own family and Bengali
society.
The response of his later heroines to female seclusion is also very bold. Some actually
rejected all rules of seclusion. They are aggressive young women who freely mix with their
friends and even talk about sexual matters. One can here mention the names of such women
34. Binodini (Chokher Bali, 1903), Damini and Nanibala (Chaturanga, 1914), Manjulika ('Manjulika',
Palataka, 1918) and Sohini ('Laboratory', 1940).
35. Kadambini ('Jibita O Mrita', 1982).
36. Brindaban's wife ('Sampatti Samarpan', 1981).
37. Binu ('Phanki', Plataka, 1918).
38. S.N. Ray, 'Variations on the theme of individuality : Hinduism, the Bengal Renaissance and
Rabindranath Tagore', The Visva Bharati Quarterly, Vol. 41, Nos. 1-4 (May, 1975-Apr., 1976), p. 208.
39. Supra, p. 136.
55
as Bilbha, Ketaki, Suriti, Sohini and Nila.40 One can also recall how Ela kisses and embraces
Atin and how, immediately before she is to be killed she, on a sudden impulse, uncovers her
breasts before him.41 Her behaviour was most certainly unorthodox in the context of the then
Bengali society Sohini and Nila are also no less unorthodox. Rabindranath, however, created
all these characters during the last decade of his life. In fact, in the second quarter of the
present century, urbanization in Bengal started to bring about some changes in the life style
of Bengali women. Throughout his life Rabindranath pictured his contemporary society quite
accurately. In the last decade of his life, in some instances he perhaps became even "ultra"
modern.
In his personal life, he was a victim of early marriage. As a dashing young man of 23, he
was compelled to marry a girl of 11 who had neither education nor accomplishments. His
relations tried to educate her. They even changed her old fashioned name. She learnt Bengali
and Sanskrit and a bit of English. On one occasion she is said to have taken part in a
theatrical performance.42 Not withstanding all this, Rabindranath did not find in her the
companion he might have expected. He had previously known such accomplished ladies as
Ana Turkhur of Bombay,43 not to mention the names of Jnanadanandini Debi, Kadambari
Debi, Indira Debi, Sarala Debi and Pratibha Debi of their family. Whether because he was
completely dependent upon the income of his father or because he had not developed his
personality, Rabindranath had to accept the marriage. He also apparently accepted the social
norm of girls being married off in their childhood. This is why most of his earlier heroines
are married during their childhood or adolescence. Such women are naturally uneducated and
ignorant of premarital love. One of his heroines, Sucharita of the novel Gora (1910) is
educated and accomplished. She is even involved in a premirital love affair. Moreover, she
has fully developed her personality and talks like a mature person. But Tagore describes her
as only 17 or 18. What is all the more striking is that she was described as 14 or 15 when the
novel was appearing in the monthly, Prabasi.45 Lalita of the same novel too seems quite
mature, though she is said to be only 13 or 14.
But as years passed by, with Rabindranath's changed outlook, the marriage age of his
heroines became higher. The following table can give an idea of this :
TABLE 8
40. Bibha ('Rbibar', 1939), Ketaki (Shesher Kabita, 1929), Suriti ('Pragati Samhar', 1941), Sohini and Nila
('Laboratory', 1940).
41. Char Adhyay, 1934.
42. Chitra Deb, Thakur Barir Andar Mahal, p. 78.
43. Daughter of Atmarang Pandurang, Ana was a highly Westernized young lady. Before sending young
Rabindranath to Englachita', Kumudini from Yogayog (1927-28), and Nandini from Raktakarabi (1924).
48. 'Badnam', 1941.
49. M. Roy, Bangali Women (Chicago : Chicago University Press, 1975), p. 48
50. 'Gaurab, Swadhinata O Aparatantra', Jnanankur, Apr.-May, 1874, p. 2
0-265.
51. D. P. Raychaudhuri, 'Striswadhinat
56
1899 Kumu 'Dristidan' 8
1899 Hemangini 'Dristidan' 15 Kulin
1903 Kurani 'Malyadan' 16 Immature growth
1903-05 Hemnalini Naukadubi 17/18 Brahmo
1907-10 Sucharita Gora 17/18 Brahmo
1907-10 Lalita Gora 13/14 Brahmo
1914 Haimanti 'Haimanti' 17 Brought up outside Bengal
1914 Kalyani 'Aparichita' 16 Brought up outside Bengal
1918 Dipali 'Patrapatri' 25 Offspring of intercaste marriage
1927-28 Kumudini Yogayog 19
1928-29 Labanya Shesher Kabita 20s Highly Westernized
1932-33 Urmimala Dui Bon 20s
1934 Sarala Malancha 30
1934 Ela Char Adhyay 29
', Sopan, Vol. 1 (Calcutta, 1979), p. 115; 'Strishiksha', Somprakash, 30 Shraban 1289 (Aug., 1882 is SBS,
IV, 576-77; S. Ra
, 'Loksankhya', Nabyabharat, Feb.-Mar., 1884, p. 470.
52. R. N. Tagore, Creative Unity (London achita', Kumudini from Yogayog (1927-28), and Nandini from
Raktakarabi (1924).
57
(Char Adhyay) have university degrees. Urmimala really advocates that sort of education
which helps one to acquire individuality and a development of character. This is why all of
the heroines of his later fiction, irrespective of the level of their formal education, have a
sharp individuality and a developed character. They have definite views on life and the world.
Some of them for example Saudamini48 and Ela, are even highly politicized. Sohini's
consciousness regarding science is also remarkable in the context of Bengali society as it then
was.
As years passed by, Rabindranath's educated heroines also became more and more
secular. The earlier ones whether Hindu or Brahmo, are quite loyal to their institutionalized
religion. But it was first in the novel Gora that his otherwise very religious heroines like
Anandamayi, Sucharita and Lalita transcend the boundaries of institutionalised religion. His
later heroines are almost unconcerned with religion. These changed attitudes towards religion
definitely constituted modernism.
Rabindranath has also depicted a new development in man-woman relationships. In
Bengali literature, it was first in his writings that a man and a woman can be friends without
being married or otherwise related, and thus work together and respect each other.49 His
pictures of extramarital and premarital romatic love are also the first in Bengali literature.
Finally, the later heroines are shown as members of nuclear families and thus capable of
developing their personal autonomy further than could the earlier ones.
But Rabindranath's portrayal of women's modernization is still not ideal. Basically, his
women are inferior to men. In their social outlook, they are still, in the most part, traditional
because they are not subject to the growing economic pressure of that period. Although
almost all the women in his later fiction live in towns, the impact of urban living on their life
style, except in the areas of purdah and education, is almost negligible. Possibly, he has also
a definite dislike, if not hatred, for unorthodox dress, makeup and Westernized life styles.
Tagore undoubtedly worked for the modernization and upliftment of women, but he
overlooked or possibly even hated the idea of educated women taking up jobs. Not one of his
heroines is a working girl. One cannot deny the fact that for complete emancipation of
women, economic independence is essential. As early as the 1870s, the editor of Jnanakur,
wrote that a wife would not be subject to all that humiliation and dishonour including
thrashing if she did not have to depend on her husband for her living.50 In the 1880s, there
was more support for this view.51 But Rabindranath could not accept or welcome this view
even in the 1930s, although he was aware of the fact that man has a sense of superiority
which the power of the purse confers upon him and that he has from time immemorial
dominated women by 'the powers of muscle and of money.'52 To him, woman's search for
'her freedom of livelihood' and struggle 'against man's monopoly of business' are not
important.53 Instead of advocating "emancipation" of woman from her present subservience,
he idealizes 'womanliness' which according to him meant love and self-sacrifice. He therefore
glorifies the example of 'Sita who had no other reward for her life of sacrifice than the sacred
majesty of sorrow.'54
58
There are contradictions in his personal life as well. He himself did not follow everything
he wrote. Though very much against early marriage in his later writings, he married off all his
children early. His eldest daughter, Madhurilata, was married when she was 14 years 8
months old; the second daughter, Renuka, when 10 years 8 months, and the third, Mira, when
14 years 6 months. His son, Rathindranath, was married when he was only 21 year 2 months
old. Rabindranath himself was married when he was 22 years 9 months old. One can here
compare him with Satyendranath and find that the latter had much less of contradictions.
Satyendranath's only daughter, Indira Debi, was married when she attained the age of 26,
to a man she had been courting for some time. Rabindranath did not allow his daughters to
choose their husbands. He married his eldest daughter, Madhurilata, to Sarat Kumar
Chakrabarti, who was more than double the age of his daughter, and only several years junior
to Tagore himself.55 He married his second daughter, Renuka, to Satyendranath Bhattacherji,
who was at least two and a half times older than she was. As a matter of explanation, he
wrote to one of his friends why he married Renuka so early, saying 'This man, a doctor, said,
"I am willing to marry", and I readily agreed.'56 It is not known whether he at all consulted his
daughters regarding their marriage. Indeed, Tagore was traditional in his outlook when he
arranged these marriages. He even paid dowry money to all the three sons-in-law, besides
sending them abroad for higher education at his expense.57
Further, he did not give any formal education to his duaghters. Although his wife,
Mrinalini, was sent to Loretto School, it is doubtful whether he tried to educate his wife
properly as his elder brother, Satyendranath's did. Satyendranath's daughter, Indira, graduated
from the Calcutta University in 1982 with first class honours in French.
But in spite of these limitations, Tagore was able to influence his contemporary Bengali
society more than any one else, possibly because he was so great a literateur. In his later
writings, one can find a large number of modernized ladies such as Labanya, Ela, Sarala,
Urmimala, Suriti, Achira, Bibha, Sohini and Nila.58 These characters are not unrealistic in the
sense that Tagore found such educated and accomplished ladies in the urban Bengal in the
second quarter of this century. The Bengali women of today are all the more modern. The
nineteenth century days of seclusion and dishonour now appear to be almost incredible.
But the change was not achieved in a single day or by a single person. Great efforts by
innumerable social reformers have elevated Bengali women to their present position. The
Tagore family played a significant role is this movement for the modernization of women.
Through their powerful writings, Satyendranath, Jyotirindranath and Rabindanath Tagore
imbued Bengali society with the ideas of female upliftment. The ideas of womanhood and of
romantic love as portrayed by Rabindranath in his fiction, plays and poems profoundly
influenced educated Bengali society.
The Tagores also set up many striking examples of women's "emancipation" by violating
the traditional social values. Although initially these were like rude shocks, they acted as
55. Sarat Kumar Chakrabarti was the third son of the renowned poet, Biharilal Chakrabarti. He got first
class honours in two subjects in 1884, first class in his MA examination in 1895 and passed BL the next year.
He was apparently very good as a son-in-law in the eyes of Tagore. His eagerness to "get" Sarat as his son-in-
law can be seen in his letters written to Priyanath Sen, who was negotiating the marriage, as well as in the ones
written to Sarat himself. (Some of these letters were published in the Literary Number of Desh [May, 1980, pp.
9-16.]). At one stage, Sarat and his relations agreed to the terms offered by the Tagores. However, they
demanded 20,000 rupees (£2,000) as dowry money. Tagore was ready to pay 10,000. After several months of
anxious negotiations the marriage was finally solemnized.
56. Tagore's letter to J.C. Bose, quoted in Rabindra-Jibani, Ii, 29-30.
57. Sarat went to England and returned as a Barrister. Satyendranath Bhattacherji went to America for a
degree of homoeopathy. The third son-in-law went to America and returned with a degree in Agriculture.
58. Urmimala from Dui Bon and Achira from "Shesh Katha' (1940)
59
examples and more and more people followed them. Some female members of the Tagore
family such as Jnanadanandini Debi, Swarnakumari Debi, Sarala Debi, Indira Debi,
Kadambari Debi and Pratibha Debi also set a standard of revolt which Bengali women were
able to follow, at first diffidently, but later confidently.
60
APPENDIX TWO
Bamabodhini Patrika, 1863-1923
By the 1850s, the bhadralok reformers had realized the need to educate their women.
However, since very few were able to ignore the social customs relating female seclusion, the
Bethune Girls' School attracted only a handful students. Even those girls who attended this
school hardly learnt anything, because they could attend the school only for a brief period of
2-3 years before they were married. Therefore, the rformers felt the necessity of intrioducing
a programme of home-education as well as of publishing a journal that would help girls to
learn different things. Pearychand Mitra started his monthly magazine Masik Patrika in 1854.
In the introduction, he announced that the magazine was quite remarkable in that a number of
Pearychand's popular works were published in it. But it continued for only about four years
and it was of too high a standard for the very small number of "educated" women.
Keshab Chandra Sen, who joined the Brahmo Samaj in 1859, was initially radical in his
social ideas. He began his reform activities with religious zeal and soon attracted a band of
young men. They ardently supported the cause of widow remarriage and wanted to rationalize
the whole institution of Hindu Marriage and thereby remove some of the burden on Bengali
women. In 1861, they started an association named Sangat Sabha. The members of his
association considered social reform an integral part of their Brahmo ideal.
Some members of this association were especially enthusiastic about female education.
They realized that they would not be able to educate, let alone modernize or "emancipate"
Bengali women by simply establishing girls' schools. Therefore, in 1863, they started another
association named the Bamabodhini Sabha. This association had a number of objectives. It
was to publish Bambodhini Patrika, a monthly magazine for women, and other books and
pamphlets to replace the dearth of reading materials particularly suitable for Bengali women.1
The periodical was so planned that it would educate its readers in subjects such as Bengali,
History, Geography, Elementary Science, Hygiene, Astronomy, Childcare, Housekeeping,
and Religion, The elaborate discussions on social problems were attempts to free women
from superstitions and even traditional values. The Bamabodhini Sabha was also to organize
a correspondence course for girls through the magazine. The course was named Antahpur
Shiksha or zenana education. The Magazine was finally started in August, 1863, with Umesh
Chandra Datta as its editor and Basanta Kumar Datta and Kshetramohan Datta as its two
assistant editors.
The editor and main contributor, Umesh Chandra Datta, was a young man of 23. Having
lost his father at an early age and having lived away from his relations, he developed a sort
of personal autonomy. Though he prosecuted his studies under extreme penury, he proved to
be a very good student. In 1859, he passed the Entrance Examination from the Calcutta
University and stood second among the successful candidates.2 During this period, he was
attracted by Keshab Chandra Sen and was tremendously influenced by his radical social
ideas. He joined Keshab's Sangat Sabha and within a couple of years organised the
Bamabodhini Sabha. Indeed, it was with a sense of dedication that he started the
Bamabodhini Patrika. He also had an advantage over many of his friends as he was free from
61
family obligations3 and had some knowledge of science. He had attended the Calcutta
Medical College for a year and a half.4
Bamabohnini Patrika, as already mentioned, was well planned. It covered interesting
fields and was written in an easily understandable language and consequently became very
popular. The first issue of one thousand copies was soon exhausted–actually it had to be
reprinted.5 It remained popular throughout its long life of 60 years. No other Bengali
periodical of the nineteenth century except Tattvabodhini Patrika continued for so long. It
had 500 to 600 regular subscribers, many of whom were women. It is rather surprising that
almost half of the subscribers were from outside Calcutta.6 Though in the main, it was a
periodical of the Brahmos and by the Brahmos, a good number of its subscribers were
Hindus, some were even Christians and Muslims. The religious liberalism it showed was
really remarkable compared to other contemporary periodicals. Even its religious articles
attacked no institutionalised religion. In this respect, it was different from the Tattvabodhini
Patrika. Tattvabodhini Patrika was mainly devoted to religion, but Bamabodhini was
devoted to social questions in general and to the modernization of women in particular. This
is why it attracted a wider reading public.
Bamabodhini was ideally suited to those women who wanted to be educated without
going to school. The correspondence course that it opened helped a good number of women,
mostly married, to educate themselves. Indeed, these women got a better education than the
girls attending schools where they were taught only reading, writing and arithmetic and that
too for 3-4 years only. Bamabodhini tried to impart to its female readers a more extensive and
fulfilling education. It can be guessed from the books suggested for them to read and the
essays they wrote that the women who followed this course attained quite a high standard.
The most significant contribution of this periodical was that it encouraged a change in the
self-perception of Bengali women. Evidence of this can be found in the pages of the
Bamabodhini itself. Some of its readers felt encouraged enough to write in it. In many of
these writings, mostly essays, the authors have clearly expressed their views on life and the
world. This was possibly the first indication of Bengali women staring to think for
themselves and developing their personalities. In some of these essays, they boldly attacked
the social customs, including seclusion, which so rigorously bound them from all sides. The
first few women's associations established during the 1860s and 1870s were formed by its
readers. Through the biographies of celebrated foreign and native ladies that were published
in it, examples were, set for its female readers to follow. In short, Bamabodhini played a very
important role in the emergence of the first modernized Bengali women. The concept of ideal
womanhood and marriage that it constantly advocated gradually became popular. Even its
male readers became more and more sympathetic towards the womenfolk.
Bamabodhini's contribution to other aspects of the social reform movement was no less
significant. It greatly favoured widow remarriage, civil marriage and inter-caste marriage. It
was very much opposed to early marriage, kulinism, polygamy, bride-price and dowry. In
fact, it fought against all irrational social customs and superstitions then prevailing in the
Hindu society. By publishing regular news and innumerable articles, it enhanced the cause or
social reform in Bengal.
However, Bamabodhini had its limitations as well. Of the 54 main contributors whose
names were mentioned in its silver jubilee issue in 1887 almost all were Brahmos,
3. He married at the age of 27 which might be considered too high for that time. This too was because he was free from
the obligations of the joint family.
4. Y. C. Bagal, Umeshchandra Datta etc., pp. 9-10
5. BBP. Mar.-Apr., 1871, p. 89.
6. BBP, Aug-Sep., 1871, pp. 167-68.
62
particularly belonging to the Brahmo Samaj of India and the Sadharan Samaj. Of these
contributors, not one was either a Muslim or a Christian. Most of them were again middle
class urban people. Thus the opinion expressed in its pages, cannot represent the rural or the
Muslim part of Bengali society.
The political views expressed by its writers were very much like the ones of the early
Congressmen known as the moderates. They maintained that British rule in India was
established as providence wished it. It was not until the anti-partition movement in 1905 that
Bamabodhini became nationalist in its attitudes and started critising the Government.
However, while it became nationalist, it became almost anti-Muslim as well. In spite of its
liberal religious outlook, Bamabodhini like all other Bengali periodicals of the late nineteenth
century, disparaged, at places quite incorrectly, the Muslim rule while depicting magnified
image of the Hindu past.
Bamabodhini, though devoted to women's emancipation, was somewhat conservative in
its attitudes towards seclusion, unorthodox dress, female employment and Westernization. Its
attitude towards seclusion became clear when in 1872, the members of the Brahmo Samaj of
India stood divided on the question of whether its female members should sit among the male
members or behind a curtain during the weekly services. Keshab wanted the female members
to sit behind the curtain while Sibnath Sastri, Durgamohan Das, Dwarkanath Ganguli,
Annada Charan Khastagir, Rakhal Chandra Ray and other belonging to "female liberation
faction" opposed it, Umesh Chandra sided with Keshab and for several years pushed the
conservative argument. He believed that the breaking of seclusion was not a part of women's
emancipaiton; on the country, it meant women's wilfulness.
During these years, he wrote a number of essays which, to some extent, upheld seclusion.
He criticised the only other woman's periodical, Abala-Bandhab, for being radical.7 He even
ridiculed the modernized Bengali women who were slightly unorthodox in their life style.8
This naturally antagonised many of his friends who were also his main contributors.
Immediately before the schism of the Brahmo Samaj of India in 1878, he lost the sympathy
of both the factions–the Keshabites and the Constitutionalists. Consequently, the publication
of Bamabodhini stopped. However, Umesh Chandra joined the newly formed Sadharan
Brahmo Samaj, along with his close friends such as Sibnath Sastri, and became its assistant
secretary. With the patronage of the Sadhaan Brahmo Samaj, the periodical reappeared.9 This
time the outlook was once again progressive.
By the end of the nineteenth century a number of periodicals were published for Bengali
women including Antahpur (1893)-?), which was edited and fully contributed to by women
themselves. But Bamabodhini is unique in the sense that it was the first Bengali periodical
fully devoted to the cause of women. This was also the first periodical in which women
started publishing their writings. Actually, it is one of the invaluable sources in identifying
early Bengali women's literary efforts. Soon after its publication Bamabodhini was able to
establish a relationship with its female readers. They not only became its regular subscribers,
but also started sending letters and articles for publication. Form the fourth issue women's
writings began to appear in it and from the second year it had a regular section entitled
Bamarachana of women's writings.
At first women contributors of the Bamabodhini were diffident and the quality of the
writing was also rather poor. But as years passed by they started writing on a wide variety of
63
subjects and whether or not influenced by male values unhesitatingly expressed their opinion
on the social questions. This section of women's writings soon became so popular that some
other contemporary periodicals like the Abodh Bandhu, Abala-Bandhab and Banga Mahila
opened such sections and under the same title. It indeed encouraged Bengali women to start a
literary career. Some of the women like Kamini Sen, Mankumari Basu and Radharani Lahiri
who first made their debut in the Bamabodhini earned a considerable reputation as literateurs.
Of the 54 main contributors of the first twenty-five years as many as 16 were women.
The renaissance historians of Bengal have written about nineteenth century social reform
movement. Although this movement in the most part was concerned with elevating the
condition of women, the aforesaid historians have given little or no account of how Bengal
women themselves reacted to this movement which aimed at their emancipation.
Consequently, the history of nineteenth century social reform movement in Bengal has been
partially and superficially depicted. A fuller and truer history can be reconstructed only when
Bengali women's reaction to the movement for their emancipation can be traced and studied.
How, if at all, this emancipation movement influenced the womenfolk can be found out only
when women's attitudes are analysed. For such a study Bamabodhini can serve as an
invaluable source.
In the pages of the Bamabodhini we can find women's attitudes are ayalysed. For such a
study Bamabodhini can serve as a invaluable source.
In the pages of the Bamabodhini we can find women's reaction to different aspects of the
social reform movement, like widow remarriage, polygamy., early marriage, kulinism,
female education, seclusion and intemperance. It is interesting to note that their attitudes
widely differed from one another. For example, married women, unmarried girls, widows,
urban and rural women, conservative Hindu women and progressive Brahmo ladies reacted
quite differently towards the widow remarriage issue. Women's writings published in other
contemporary periodicals like Banga Mahila, Paricharika, Abodh Bandhu, Dasi and
Antahpur, can also be compared with the writings published in Bamabodhini.
Bamabodhini continued for 60 years. 44 of which it was under the editorial direction of
the same person.10 This offers a singular opportunity of looking at how in the face of new
social and political developments like the emergence of nationalism, Bengali attitudes
towards the social reform movement underwent a metamorphosis and how the government
itself took a different shape.
Bamabodhini is really a unique social document. Without using it the social history of
nineteenth century Bengal, particularly feminist history, cannot be adequately reconstructed.
10. Umeshchandra Datta edited Bamabodhini during the years 1863 to 1907. After his death in June, 1907, it was
published for another 16 years. During this period, it was edited by different persons including some of his relations. For
details, see B. N. Bandyopadhyay, Bangla Smayik-Patra, Vol. 1.pp 192-93.
64
APPENDIX THREE
Bengali Women's Dress
The dress of the Bengali women before they were exposed to modernization seems to
have been very simple–it consisted of only a five yard long sari and nothing else. Fanny
Parks' book on her Indian travels, published in 1850, suggests that saris could be very
expensive, some having golden borders. Nevertheless, it was only a sari that a Bengali
woman would wear. Fanny Parks especially mentioned that 'no other attire is worn beneath
the sari'.1 Jnanadanandini Debi's description corroborates this. She wrote that it was during
the winter that women put on a wrapper on the top of the usual sari.2 Wearing any other piece
of clothing or a pair of shoes was absolutely forbidden.
How prejudiced people were against women's wearing any other articles, such as shoes,
can be seen in Ishwar Gupta's poem quoted in Chapter 1. While describing how female
education and modernization would destroy all womanly qualities that Bengali women had,
he predicted that the "future" "modernized" "manly" woman might drive her own carriage,
smoke cigars and wear boots3 . If Gupta wrote this with a bias and in order to ridicule and
disparage the modern Bengali women, it was true that Bengali women, at that time were not
at all expected to drive a carriage, to smoke or to put on shoes. In early 1864, when
Satyendranath Tagore was persuading his wife to go to England to join in him there, he
sympathetically asked her : Will you find it very uncomfortable to wear socks and shoes?"4
Unlike Gupta, he had no prejudice against women's wearing shoes; therefore, what he wrote
clearly shows that popular opinion was against women's wearing shoes and that women of
such aristocratic families as those of the Tagores did not wear shoes. In 1867, Bamabodhini
Patrika wrote that a maidservant mistakenly thought a European lady to be a man, because
the latter was wearing a pair of shoes and tailored garment.5
That Bengali women's dress was inadequate or indecent has been mentioned by many
contemporary writers – both men and women. Concurring this Satyendranath wrote to his
wife in 1863 saying that the dress Bengali women put on was such that it was as if they did
not wear anything at all.6 He did not give reasons why he thought so. However, Fanny Parks
described in some detail what sort of dress Bengali women put on and what she thought of it.
The texture of the sari, in her opinion, was very thin, so thin that it was rather transparent,
almost useless as a veil.. the form of the limbs and the tint of the skin is traced through it.'
Therefore, she wrote : 'On beholding their attire, I was no longer surprised that no other men
than their husbands were permitted to enter the zenana."7 What Rajkumar Chandra wrote in
1863 verifies Fanny Parks' observation. Chandra, moreover, gave a description of how these
women looked in wet saris when they took a bath :
The cloth they put on is almost transparent. Especially when they get up from the pond after having a bath,
it becomes difficult at first to see whether they have anything on at all. However, the men who have money
65
do not consider this. They always buy the most expensive and the finest saris for their women and feel
gratified thereby.8
In 1868, Bamabodhini Patrika claimed that for all practical purposes, Bengali women
remained naked in their long strip of sari and that such dress was not adequate to be worn in
public.9 In another article, it said that men who did not allow their women to go from one
place to another in an open palanquin and considered it a matter of shame for women to
travel by train, did not object to women's wearing fine saris or to their bathing in the open. It
further said that those women who were too shy to see or to talk to their fathers, fathers-in-
law and brothers-in-law, did not regard it as improper to put on such saris or take a bath in
the pond in the midst of men.10
That the dress of Bengali women must be "reformed" was felt by the same set of men
who were trying to introduce female education and to uncage women from the zenana. It
seemed to them impossible to allow women to go out or to mix with men unless they
adequately and decently dressed. A news item published in Bamabodhini Patrika in 1864
shows that the members of the Sangat Sabha, established by Keshab Chandra Sen, discussed
the need to "reform" the dress of Bengali women, although they did not suggest any particular
change.11 However, in November that year, as he was planning to take his wife to Bombay,
Satyendranath Tagore confronted the problem of what dress he might get of his wife,
Jnanadanandini, to put on. Whether or not she should put on Western dress bothered him a
great deal. Finally, he asked a French dressmaker in Calcutta to design for her an "oriental"
dress. This dress was prepared accordingly, but it was, in Jnanada's language, so complicated
that she was unable to put it on, so that each time she wanted to wear it her husband had to
help her.12 Thus this dress, decent though complicated, was indeed an innovation in Bengal.
In Bombay, Jnanada lived in Parsi family for a few months. This family was so
Westernized at that stage that it had two daughters who had their education in England. It was
in this family that Jnanada learnt Western manners and etiquette and gradually acquired some
sophistication. She gave up wearing her "peculiar" dress while with this family and began to
wear her sari in Parsi style, with the difference that she threw the end over her left shoulder
instead of her right shoulder, She also started to wear a petticoat underneath.13 perhaps she
adopted the blouse from these Parsi girls as well. Moreover, she had started to wear a pair of
shoes since she left Calcutta. Jnanada thus set an example of a possible standard dress for
women of bhadralok families. If later women did not accept everyring that she adopted, they
at least accepted the style in which she put on her sari.14
Needless to say that this dress did not become popular immediately. However, in March,
1865, a 13 year old girl, Fajlaxmi Moitreya (later Sen), put on a "reformed" dress while
attending the annual prize giving ceremony of the Bethuee School. Bamabodhini Patrika
does not mention what constituted her dress, but says that it attracted the attention of the
Governor-General and that he expressed his satisfaction at seeing a Bengali girl in such a
dress.15 More women were to follow these two examples. By April 1866, a dressmaker
named Basu and Company inserted an advertisement in Bamabodhini Patrika saying that it
8. R. K. Chandra, Dekhe Shune Akkel Gurum (Calcutta : n. p., 1863), pp. 6-7.
9. 'Suxma Bastra', BBP, Oct.-Nov., 1868, pp. 124-26
10. 'Strilokdiger Snan Pranali,' BBP, Jul.-Aigust., 1869, p. 72.
11. BBP, Dec., 1864-Jan., 1865, p. 143.
12. Jnanadanandini Debi, 'Smritikatha' in Puratani, p. 29.
13. Ibid., pp. 29-31.
14. It is said that Keshab Sen's daughter, Sucharu Debi, modified the style introduced by Jnanada and the current style
of wearing sari is based on Sucharu Debi's – C. Deb, Thakur Barir Andar Mahal, p. 30.
15. BBP. Apr.-May, p. 18.
66
was ready to make and supply a newly designed dress for Bengali women and that this dress
would be suitable for "progressive" and civilized society.
This advertisement may suggest that the "reformed" dress was fast becoming popular, but
that was not the case. Only a handful of Westernized Bengali men had the couage to allow
their women to wear this dress. Most educated men were still unable to make up their minds
whether they should accept the European dress totally or to accept certain articles from the
West and thus "reform" traditional Bengali dress. Manomohan Ghosh solved the problem by
accepting European dress for his wife. Swarnalata (and a few other men did the same). She
started to wear long gowns instead of saris.16 Wearing skirts which would show a part of her
legs and blouses which would unveil the upper chest was considered out of the question.
However, unlike Ghosh, most men were orthodox. Even if they accepted European dress for
themselves, they only accepted certain articles of Western dress for their women.
A controversy went on for some time during the early 1870s over how Bengali woman's
dress could be "reformed", keeping the Bengali characteristics in tact. Bamahitaishini Sabha,
established by Keshab Chandra Sen, discussed the problem in a meeting in 1871. Many
members of this association were in favour of adopting European dress for Bengali women,
but thought it too expensive for poor Bengalis. The different kinds of dress put on by women
of Bombay and North Western India, by Muslim women of Northern India and by Chinese
women were considered to be quite good. But they expressed their fear that if any of these
was adopted, this might rob Bengali women of their Bengali looks.17 They stressed the point
that Bengali women's dress should be such as would immediately distinguish them from
other women, Rajlaxmi Sen, who attended the meeting, claimed that quite a few women were
wearing blouses, jackets and shoes and that these should certainly be accepted as standard
articles of dress. However, she mentioned, some prostitutes were also wearing these articles
of dress. Therefore, she suggested that women of bhadralok families should wear a wrapper
in addition to all these articles to distinguish them from prostitutes.18
Bamabodhini Patrika praised the fact that women were becoming conscious of the need
to "reform" their dress. It suggested that women could wear either pajamas, a blouse and a
sari or a long blouse and a sari when at home, and extra wrapper and pair of shoes when
going out. Moreover, it mentioned that those who did not like to wear shoes might leave them
out.19
In a letter published in the periodical, Jnanadanandini claimed that the dress the women
of their family, i.e. the Tagore Family had adopted was at once beautiful and suitable for both
summer and winter. One could easily move in this dress. Bengalis, Europeans, the Parises,
the Jews and Maharastris, whoever saw this dress, praised it. She claimed that although this
dress was partly similar to English, partly to Bengali and partly to Muslim dress, it was not
the imitation of a particular style. She said it was not very different from the dress many
women of bhadralok families now wore. she further said that women of their family put on
shoes, socks, a bodice, a blouse, a petticoat and a sari. Moreover, they wore a wrapper when
they went out, She said that it was difficult to describe how a woman would look in such a
dress. However, she volunteered to send a set of this dress or a photograph of this if any
woman would write to her. She contradicted the editor of Bamabodhini Patrika, saying that
wearing shoes was essential.20
67
A photograph of students of the Hindu Mahila Bidyalaya, taken around 1874, shows that
all the girls were in some kind of "reformed" dress.21 Bamabodhini Patrika and traditional
people were hostile towards these girls' life style, eating habits and the unorthodox behaviour;
however, they were not hostile to their 'reformed' dress, at least no newspaper report
condemned them for their dress. This shows that popular public opinion was in favour of a
'reform' and even ready to accept certain articles from the West.
Once there was a common agreement of opinion among the bhadralok that women's dress
should be 'reformed', women began to wear all kinds of dress. Since there was no consensus
on what style should be followed, women followed different styles and even combinations of
apparently dissimilar styles. In 1881, S. Dasi came back to Calcutta after a few years to see
that young women were wearing widely different dresses and that no two dresses were alike.
They were, in her opinion, a hotchpotch European and native styles. These women looked so
different that it was hard to comprehend that they were all Bengalis. S. Dasi further claimed
that the women she had seen a few years ago without a blouse, were then wearing one. The
middle-aged women, she observed, still clung to rather traditional dress, with minimum
modification, whilst the older women were hostile towards the "reformed" dress. They even
slandered young women for wearing unorthodox dress.22
Since modernization permeated different segments of Bengali society unevenly and at
different times, the so-called "reformed" dress too was adopted by women with different
backgrounds at different stages. Even as late as 1901, some women of traditional bhadralok
families were unable to adopt fully the "reformed" dress. An article published in
Bamabodhini Patrika thus described the difference between the dress of modernized Brahmo
women and traditional Hindu women :
The tidiness and beauty of the dress of the Brahmo women cannot be found in that of the Hindu women.
The latter is always embarrassed with her sari and wrapper which she can hardly keep in their proper place.
Moreover, she cannot give up her veil. To walk to do so. People naturally laugh at her.23
This shows that women close to tradition did not wear shoes even at the beginning of this
century.
It is interesting to note that whilst many Bengali men totally accepted Western dress.
women never did. This is true even now, in the 1980s. A handful of 'ultra'- modern young
women, particularly students, may wear pants and long skirts, but after their marriage, they
go back to their traditional sari. This reflects men's conservative and jealous attitudes towards
their women. They still do not allow women to wear such dress as will leave a part of legs
and upper chest exposed. If women wear articles of dress tight enough to make the shape of
breasts clearly visible, they have to cover their breasts with an extra piece of thin cloth called
orna or with the sari. However, with the passing of time, women are increasingly becoming
unorthodox in their dress.
68
APPENDIX FOUR
A list of Members of the Sakhi Samiti, 1891
69
Pramilasundari Dasi Bhabatarini Debi
Niradkali Basu Saurabhsundari Debi
Radharani Mitra Hemlata Debi
Mrinalini Sarkar Sharat Kumari Debi
Miss Kamini Sen Shibsundari Mitra
Miss Hemlata Bhattacheri Nistarini Basu
(Sibnath Sastri's daughter) Gopalmani Ghose
Kusum Kumari Datt Mrs Umacharan Das
Sarojini Mitra Subharanya Sinha
Kamalkamini Mitra Kadambini Basu
Kadambini Mitra Uttamkumari Debi
Shikharbasini Mitra Ramasundari Ghose
Kamini Mitra Malinprabha Ghose
Bhabatarini Ghose Saratkumari Chaudhurani
Thakamani Sarkar (Mrs. A. K. Chaudhuri)
Bipinbala Sarkar Basanta Kumari Dasi
Surasundari Debi Bhubanmohini Dasi
Mrs. L.C. Mitra Dr. Jamini Sen (Kamini Sen's
Haraballabha Dey younger sister)
Lalitmani Basu Tinkari Debi
Achala Basu Bidhumukhi Ray Chaudhuri
Banamala Pal Premtarangini Dasi
Swarnalata Malik Mokshadamohini Kar
Kamalmani Rudra Dr. Bidhumukhi Basu
Nrityakali Debi Sureshwari Ghose
Jadatmohini Debi Sharatmohini Ghose
Bidumukhi Mitra Manorama Dasi
Upendrabala Sarkar Hemlata Ray
Ambika Deb Hemanta Kumari Debi
Sarojkumari Debi Kshiradmohini Debi
Nabinkali Basu Kshetramoni Ghose
Narayandasi Ghose Phulkumari Debi
Mrs Basu Kshetramani Debi
Manomohini Ghose Mrs K. C. Banerji
Prasannatara Basu Mrs. P.N. Ghose
Sudakshina Sen Chandimani Dasi
Haridasi Debi Binoda Bandyopadhyay
Jnanadasundari Debi Sushila Chakrabarti
Sukeshi Debi Basanta Kumari Sarkar
Basanta Kumari Debi Annapurna Debi
Golapkamini Ghose Nawab Fayazunnessa Chaudhuri
Hemangini Gupta
Chamatkarmohini Mitra Pratibha Debi
Shrishmohini Debi (Swarnakumar's niece)
Miss Kamudini Khastagir
70
APPENDIX FIVE
List of Bengali Women Graduates, 1883-1910
BAs
Kadambini Basu 1883 Brahmo
Kamini Sen 1886 Brahmo
Priyatama Datta 1886 Christian
Kumudini Khastagir 1887 Brahmo
Suprabha Gupta 1889
Lila Sinha 1890 Christian
Sarala Ghoshal 1890 Brahmo
Shorat Chakrabarti 1890
Jibanbala Datta 1891 Brahmo
Indira Tagore 1892 Brahmo
Priyambada Bagchi 1892 Brahmo
Ellen Chandra 1893 Christian
Shashibala Banerji 1893 Brahmo?
Surabala Ghosh 1893
Saralabala Rakshit 1894
Premkusum Sen 1896 Brahmo
Sarala Sen 1897
Sisir Kumari Bagchi 1898 Brahmo
Snehalata Majumdar 1899
Lilian Palit 1900 T.N. Palit's daughter
Santa Sarkar 1901
Saralabala Mitra 1901
Kumudini Mitra 1903 Brahmo
Prabhabati Ray 1903
Mabel Singh 1905 Christian ?
Basanti Mitra 1906 Brahmo
Hiranmayi Sen 1906
Kamala Basu 1906
Charubala Mandal 1907
Surabala Sinha 1907
71
Rama Bhattacharya 1908
Banalata De 1908
Bangabala Mukherji 1908
Jyotirmayi Ganguli 1909 Brahmo
Nirbharpriya Ghosh 1908
Rosabelle Singh 1908 Christian
Violet Hridaymohini Mitra 1908 Christian
Sobhanabala Rakshit 1909
Bibha Ray 1910
Jyotirmayi Datta 1910
Marie Banerji 1910
Sisirkumari Guha 1910
Laura Suniti Ghosh 1910 Christian
MBs
Bidhumukhi Basu 1890 Christian
Violet Mary Mitter 1890 Christian
Rachel Cohen 1897 Christian
LMS
Jamini Sen 1876 Brahmo
* Kadambini Ganguli appeared at the MB examination in 1889, but could not pass, (Many
believe that she was failed.) However, she was given a licence to practise. Later she got
medical degrees from England. She was a Brahmo.
72
APPENDIX SIX
A Select List of Women Writers, 1863-1905
73
SELECT BIBLIOGRAPHY
A. Unpublished Government Document
Widow Remarriage Papers, National Archives, New Delhi.
C. Periodicals
Abodh-Bandhu, 1868-69.
Bandhab, 1874-75.
Bangadarshan, 1874.
Banga Mahila, 1875-76.
Bharat Suhrid, 1876.
Bharatbarsha, 1929, 1943
Bharati, 1881-84, 1886, 1908-16. 1919.
Bharati O Balak, 1890-93.
Bibidhartha Sangraha, 1854-55, 1860.
Brahmo Public Opinion, 1879-1883.
Calcutta Review, 1851, 1872, 1902
Hitasadhak, 1868.
Jnanankur, 1873-76.
Madhyastha, 1872-73, 1875-76.
Nabya Bharat, 1884-94.
Prabasi, 1910-15, 1918, 1919, 1923, 1931, 1933.
Pradip, 1900-05.
Sahitya, 1890-92.
Samadarshi, 1875.
Tamoluk Patrika, 1874.
Tattvabodhini Patrika, 1843-83.
74
Selections from Periodicals
Samayikpatre Banglar Samajchitra, 4 Vols. ed. by B. Ghosh. Calcutta ; Bikshan, Grantham,
1963-68.
Sangbadpatre Sekaler Katha, 2 Vols. ed. by B. N. Bandyopadhyay. 4th ed. Calcutta : Bangiya
Sahitya Parishad, 1971-77.
Selections from the Indian Journals, 2 Vols. ed. by S. Ray. Calcutta : Firma K. L.
Mukhopadhay, 1963.
D. Women's Writings
A Brahmo lady. 'Bamabodhini O Bamagan', BBP., Oct., Nov., 1869.
A Hindu lady. 'Balyabibaher Phal', BBP, Jan.,-Feb., 1810.
A Hindu Widow. 'Baidhabya Jibaner Chitra'. Antahpur, Vol. 5 (1903)
A lady (boalia). 'Bangadesher Mahilaganer Swadhinata Bishay,' BBP, May-Jun., 1871.
A lady (Khidirpur). 'Nariganer Alpa Shiksha', BBP, Jan.-Mar., 1886.
A lady (----- Debi). 'Ekti Prastab', Bharati, Apr.-May, 1885.
A lady (---- Chattopadhyay), 'Bamarachana', BBP, Mar.-Apr., 1867.
Amalshashi Basu. 'Bidhabar Dukkha', BBP, Sep.-Oct., 1897.
Anon. 'Bamarachana', BBP, May,-Jun., 1867.
-----. Bangakaminir Khed', BBP, Dec., 1875-Jan., 1876.
-----. Bibidha Prasanga', Antahpur, Vol. 3, No. 6 (1900)
-----. Kulin Bahubibaha', BBP, Dec., 1971-Jan., 1872.
-----. Lajja', BBP, Nov.,-Dec., 1865.
-----. Paribarik Sukh', BBP, Apr.-May, 1891.
-----. 'Samaj Sanskar O Kusanskar', Bharati, Aug.-Sep., 1883.
-----. 'Striloker Prakrita Swadhinata', Banga Mahila, Jun.,-Jul., 1875.
-----. 'Strishiksha', BBP, Oct.-May., 1872.
Anujanandini Ray, 'Mahilaganer Bidya Shikshar Sahit Dharma Shikshar Abashyakata, Oct.-
Nov., 1883.
Bamarachanabali, Vol. 1. Calcutta : Bamabodhini Sabha, 1872.
Basanta Kumari Basu. 'Strishiksha O Tahar Bartaman Abastha', Antahpur, Vol. 2 (1899).
Basanta Kumari Ray Chaudhuri. Yoshidvijnan. Barisal, 1875. Binodini Ghosh.
'Bamarachana', BBP, Dec., 1900-Jan., 1901.
Binodini Sen Gupta. 'Bibahita Jiban', BBP, Dec., 1900-Jan. 1901.
Binodini Sen Gupta. 'Bibahita Jiban', BBP, Jan.-Mar., 1901.
---- 'Ramanir, Karya Kshetra', BBP, Apr.-May, 1900.
Brajabala Debi. 'Ami ki Unmadini' (Poem), Banga Mahila, Oct.-Nov., 1876.
Giribala Debi. 'Sadhvi', Antahpur. Vol. 4, No. 8 (Aug.-Sep., 1901).
Hemangini Chaudhuri. 'Striloker Kartabya', Antahpur, Vol. 2, (1899).
Hemanta Kumari Chaudhuri. 'Banga Mahilar Grantha Pracher', Antahpur, Vol. 2 (1899).
-----. Bideshe Bangadesi O Bangiya Nari', Antahpur, Vol. 4, No. 1 (Jan. Feb., 1901).
-----. Mahilar Paricchad', Antahpur, Vol. 4, No. 6 (Jun.-Jul., 1901).
-----. Unabingsha O Bingsha Shatabdi', Antahpur, Mar.-Apr., 1901.
Hemanta Kumari Sen Gupta. 'Sekaler Ramani', BBP, Oct.- Nov., 1871.
Jnanadanandini Debi, 'Banga Mahilar Paricchad', BBP, Oct.-Nov., 1871
-----. Amader Bombai Bhraman', BBP, Feb.-Mar., 1873.
-----. Samajsanskar O Kusanskar', Bharati, Jun.-Jul., 1883.
-----. Strishiksha', Bharati, Jun.-Jul. 1881.
Kadambini Debi, ' Sahadharmini' Antahpur, Vol. 1 (1898)
Kailasbasini Debi. Hindu Mahilar Hinabastha. Calcutta : Gupta Press, 1863.
75
----- Hindu Abalakuler Bidyabhyas O Tahar Samunnati. Calcutta : Gupta Press 1865
-----. Sabhyata O Samajsanskar', Abodh-Bandhu, May-Jun., 1868.
Kamana Debi. 'Amito Bidhaba' (poem), Banga Mahila, Nov.-Dec., 1876.
Kamini Sen, Uddipana', BBP, Mar. Apr. (1880).
-----. Some Thoughts on the Education of Our Women. Calcutta, 1819.
Krisna Kamini (of Ranaghat). Strilokdiger Sambhram, BBP, Jul.-Aug., 1873.
Krisnabhabini Das. Ingrej Mahilar Shiksha O Swadhinatar Gati', Bharati O Balak, 1890.
-----. Samaj O Samaj-sanskar', Bharati O Balak, Dec., 1890- Jan.- 1891.
-----. Sangsare Narir Khamata', BBP, Feb.- Apr., 1891.
-----. 'Strilok O Purush', Bharati O Balak, Feb.-Mar., 1890.
-----. 'Striloker Kaj O Kajer Mahatmya', Bharati O Balak, Aug.-Sep., 1891.
Kshiroda Mitra, 'Dushita Deshacharer Nimitta Bilap', BBP, Aug.-Sep., 1866.
Kulabala Debi, 'Hindu Ramanir Bidyashiksha O Paradhinata', BBP, Apr.-May, 1892.
-----. 'Ramani Charitra O Alankar', Antahpur, Vol. 3, No. 10 (1900).
-----. 'Strishiksha', Antahpur, Vol. 1 (1898).
Kumudini Ray (of Jessore), 'Hindu Narir Garhasthya Dharma', BBP, Oct.-Nov., 1864.
Kundamala Debi (of Billagram), 'Bidya Shikhile Ki Griha Karma Karite Nai?', BBP, Sep.-
Oct., 1870.
Kusummala Datta, 'Strijatir Abanati', Vol. 3, No. 2 (1900).
Labanyaprabha Basu, Griher Katha, 2nd ed. Calcutta, 1908.
Laxmimani Debi, 'Paradhinata Ki Kasta', BBP, Nov.-Dec., 1868.
'Nabya Banga-Mahila', BBP. Aug.-Oct., 1903.
Madhumati Gangopadhyay, 'Bamaganer Rachana', BBP, Nov.-Dec., 1864.
(Mankumari Basu), 'Bangali Striloker Bartaman Abstha', BBP, Nov.-Dec., 1891.
-----. 'Bigata Shatabarshe Bharat Ramaniganer Abastha', BBP, Nov.-Dec., 1894.
Manomohini Dasi (from Simulia), 'Saralata Strjatir Bhusan', BBP, Aug.-Sep., 1873.
Mayasundari, 'Narijanma Ki Adharma', Banga Mahila, Jul.-Aug., 1875.
Mohanmati Debi from (Mahiti Rajbari), 'Adarsha Ramani', Antahpur, Vol. 3 (1900).
Mrinmayi Sen. 'Bharat Mahilar Shiksha', Antahpur, Vol. 5 (1902).
Muktakeshi Debi, 'Ramanir Garhasthya', Antahpur, Nov.-Dec., 1901.
Negandrabala Mustafi, 'Abarodhe Hinabastha', BBP, Apr.-May, 1895.
-----. Garhasthya Jibane Narijatir Kartabya', BBP, Dec., 1903-Feb., 1904.
-----. 'Prahrita Stri', BBP, Dec., 1897-Jan., 1898.
-----. 'Prayojaniya Prarthana', BBP, Sep.-Oct., 1894.
-----. 'Sangit Bidya Striloker Pakshe Abashyak', BBP, Aug.-Sep., 1894.
Nagendrabala, 'Strishiksha Bishaye Ardha Shikshita Hindu Mahiladiger Matamat', Antahpur,
Vol. 4, No. 8 (Aug.-Sep., 1901).
Nistarini Debi (Kanpur), 'Narijibaner Uddeshya', BBP, Dec., 1883-Jan., 1884.
-----. Prachin O Adhunik Strishikshar Prabhed', BBP, Jul.-Aug., 1884.
Nistarini Debi (Kumarhatta), 'Bidyar Saman Bandhu Nai', BBP, Jan.-Feb., 1872.
Prasannamayi Debi, 'Uccha Shiksha', Antahpur, Vol. 5, No. 6, (1903).
-----. 'Sekaler Katha', Antahpur, Vol. 4, No. 5 (May-Jun., 1901).
Priyambada Debi, 'Strishiksha', Antahpur, Vol. 4, No. 5 (May-Jun., 1901).
Probodhini Ghosh, 'Banga Mahiladiger Arthakari Shilpacharcha, Antahpur, Vol. 4, No. 1
(Jan.-Feb., 1901).
Randharani Lahiri, 'Striloker Abashya Shikshaniya Ki?', BBP, May-Jun., 1875.
Rajbala Debi, "Bamarachana, BBP, Feb.-Apr., 1874.
Ramasundari, 'Edeshe Strishiksha Samyak Prachalita Hoile etc.', BBP, Jul.-Aug., 1865.
-----. 'Kashi Darshan', BBP, Feb.-Mar., 1864.
76
-----. 'Shilpa Karma', BBP, Aug.-Sep., 1865.
Reba Ray, 'Matri O Shashuri Bhakti', BBP, Aug.-Sep., 1891.
Rokeya Sakhawat Hossain, Matichur, 2 Vols. in Rokeya Rachanabali ed. by A. Qadir Dacca :
Bangla Academy' 1973, First pub. 1905-12.
Sarada Debi (Of Muzaffarpur) 'Bangadeshiya Lokdiger Ki Ki Bishaye Kusanskar Achhe',
BBP, Oct.-Nov., 1866.
Sarajkumari Debi, 'Bidyasagar', Antahpur, Vol. 4, No. 8 (1904).
Sharalabala Dasi, 'Ramanir Bratha', Antahpur, Vol. 1, No. 8 (1898).
-----. 'Ramanir Jiban-Brata', Antahpur, Vol. 1, No. 1 (Jan.-Feb., 1898).
Saralabala Sarker, 'Mayer Jati', Antahpur, Vol. 2 (1899).
-----. 'Bangabala', Antahpur, Vol. 2 (1899).
Saudamini Debi (Bakergang), 'Bamarachana', BBP, May-Jun., 1865.
-----. BBP, DEc., 1865-Jan, 1866.
Sh-----. 'Kalikatar Strisamaj', Bharati, Aug.-Sep., 1881, Oct.-Nov., 1881.
Shailaja Kumari Debi, 'Edeshe Strishiksha Samyak Prachalita Halie Ki Ki Upakar Hate
Pare?', BBP, Jul.-Aug., 1865.
Sarat Kumri Chaudhurani, 'Ekal O Ekaler Meye', Bharati O Balak, Sep.-Nov., 1891.
Shyamasundari, 'Satitva Narir Ekmatra Bhushan', BBP, Sep.-Oct., 1874.
Shyamasundari Bandyopadhya, 'Manikyamayir Shochaniya Atmahatya', BBP, Jul.-Aug.,
1874.
Suktara Datta, 'Madalasa Ba Adarsha Janani', Antahpur, Vol. 2 (1899).
Sumati Majumdar (Kalna), 'Bartaman Bharat-Narir Durdasha', BBP, Jun.-Aug., 1884.
Susamasundari Dasi, (Krisnagar), Antahpur 'Strishiksher Upay', BBP, Jun.-Jul., 1889.
Sushila Basu, 'Strijatir Kartabya', Antahpur Vol. 2 (1899).
Sushilabala Sinha, 'Sumatar Jnatabya Kayekti Katha', BBP, Aug.-Oct., 1903.
Swarnakumari Debi, 'Sakhi Samiti', Bharati O Balak, Dec., 1891-Jan., 1892.
Swarnalata Chaudhuri, 'Bau-Ma', Antahpur, Vol. 1 (1898).
Swarnaprabha Basu, 'Bangla Mahila Samajer Barshik Report', BBP, Jan.-Feb., 1880.
Taherannessa, 'Bamarachana', BBP, Feb.-Mar., 1865.
Upendramohini, 'Bamarachana', BBP, Feb.-Mar., 1865.
Upendramohini, 'Bamarachana', BBP, Apr.-May, 1865.
Yogamaya Goswami, 'Stripurusher Kirup Sambandha', BBP, Aug.-Sep., 1866.
Yogindramohini Basu (Konnagar), 'Kaulinya Pratha', BBP, Sep.-Oct., 1871.
E. Periodical Articles
Abodh-Bandhu
'Etaddesher Bibaha Paddhati Sambandhe Bibidha Alochana', Aug.-Sep., 1869.
Aryadarshan
'Rangalaye Barangana', Aug.-Sep., 1877.
Bamabodhini Patrika
'Abagunthan', Jan.-FEb., 1867.
'Abala-Bandhab', Jun.-Jul., 1871.
'Abarodh Prathar Utpatti', Jul.-Aug., 1891.
'Abhinary', FEb.-Mar., 1867.
'Alankar `Paridhan', Jun.-Jul., 1865.
'Amadiger Narijatir Abastha', Jul.-Aug., 1874.
'Antahpure Strishiksha', Dec.,-1865-Jan., 1866.
77
'Bamabodhinir Tritiya Sambatsarik Janmosab', Aug.-Sep., 1866.
'Bamahitaishini Sabhar Sambatsarik Utsab', Apr.-May, 1872.
'Bamakulonnati Bibhag', Apr.-May, 1873.
'Bangadeshe Strishiksha', Apr.-May, 1903.
'Bangiya Mahila Khedokti', Nov.-Dc., 1873.
'Bangiya Yubatidiger Dharmabhab', Nov.-Dec., 1873.
'Banga Mahial-Manasik', Oct.-Dec., 1899.
'Banganganaganer Sammansuchak Upadhi', Sep.-Oct., 1873.
'Banga Samaj O Sansarer Unnatite Strishiksha O Striswadhinata', Jun.-Jul., 1881.
'Barbar Stri O Swami Grahan', Jun.-Jul., 1814.
'Bharater Dukhini Bidhaba Strilokdiger Jibikalabher Kata Prakar Upay Haite Pare',
Feb.-Mar., 1891.
'Bibaha Byay', Apr.-May, 1903.
'Brahmikagan Kartrik Miss Mary Carpentere Abhyarthana', De., 1866.
D. 'Bangiya Hindu Mahila Paricchad', Oct.-Nov.,m 1901.
'Edeshe Bamaganer Bahirbhraman', Sep.-Oct., 1871.
'Ekjatitva', Apr.-May, 1898.
Ghosh, H.N. 'Hindu Samajer Bartaman Abastha', Aug.-Sep., 1894.
Gupta, A.L. 'Shikshita Mahilar Dayitva', Apr.-May. 1903.
'Ingreji Shiksha O Jatibhed', Apr.-May, 1899.
'Lajja', Nov.-Dec., 1865.
'Meyecheler Ato Anadar Keno?', Jan.-Feb., 1864.
'Meyer Adar', Sep.-Oct., 1895.
'Miss Akroyd', Jan,-Feb., 1873.
'Nabya Banga Mahila', Feb,-mar., 1873.
.-----', Sep.-Oct., 19874.
'Naranari', Feb.-Mar., 1873.
'Naridiger Komalata', Oct.-Nov., 1871.
'Patrottar', Apr.-Aug., 1900
'Samay', Oct.-Nov., 1864.
'Santan Raksha', Feb.-Mar., 1866.
'-----', Nov.-Dec., 1866.
Sarkar, J. 'Edeshiya Bamaganer bahirbhraman', Sep.-Oct., 1871.
'Saundarya', Apr.-May, 1868.
'Shikshayitri Bidyalayer Paritoshik', May.-Jun., 1875.
'Shikshayitri Bidyalayer Sambatsarik Paritoshik Bitaran', Mar.-Apr., 1872.
'Shishuder Ahar', Apr.-May, 1866.
'Shishudiger Paricchad', Mar.-Apr., 1865.
'Stri O Purushjatir Sambandha', Apr.-May, 1874.
'Stri O Swamir Paraspar Sambandha', Sep.-Oct., 1864.
'Stribidyalayer Abashyakata', Dec., 1864-Jan., 1865.
'Striddiger Kartabya', Jan.-Feb., 1866.
'Strijatir Aswabhabik Unnati', May-Jun., 1873.
'Strilokdiger Bibahajogya Bayokram', Jun.-Jul., 1871.
'Strilokdiger Bidyashikshar Abashyakata', Aug.-Sep., 1863.
'Striloker Prakrita Swadhinata', Jul.-Aug., 1872.
'Strishikha', Nov.-Oct., 1892.
'Strishiksha Sambandhe Dui Ek Katha', Nov.-Dec., 1887.
'Strishikshaker Prayojan', Oct.-Nov., 1864.
78
'Strishikshar Abastha', Jul.-Aug., 1867.
'Strishikshar Phalaphal', Dec., 1875-Jun., 1876.
'Strishikshay Utsaha Dan., Jan.-Feb., 1876.
'Striya Shriashcha Geheshu Bishesthhsti Kashchan', Jan.-Feb,m 1867.
'Swamir Upar Strir Prabhab', Feb.-Mar., 1870.
'Swargiya Bidyasagarer Smaranartha Mahila Sabha', Aug.-Sep., 1867.
'Unnati', Jul.-Aug., 1964.
Y ........ 'Stri O Purusher Adhikar Ki Saman', Jun.-Jul., 1892.
Bandhab
'Bibi Ar Bau', Nov.-Dec., 1874.
'Sushikshitar Bhram', Sep.-Nov., 1875.
Bangadarshan
'Prachina O Nabina', Apr.-May, 1874.
Banga Mahila
Sarkar, B.M. 'Bangiya Hindu Samaj Sanskar', Jul.-Aug., 1875.
----- 'Bangiya Mahila', May-Jun., 1876.
----- 'Bartaman Samaj', Dec., 1876-Jan., 1877.
----- 'Bishvabidyalaye Strilokdiger Pariksha', Mar.-Arp. 1877.
----- 'Paribarik Sanskar', Jan.-Feb., 1876.
----- 'Strishiksha', Aug.-Sep., 1875.
Bengal Magazine
A Hindustani, 'Civilization Confined to One Sex', Vol. IV (June, 1876).
'A Hindu Family', Vols. VII-VIII (1979-80).
'The Influence of Women in Hindu Society', Vol. VIII (1879).
'The Women's Right Questioned', Vol. IX (Jan., 1880).
Bharatbarsha
Bandyopadhyay, B.N. 'Strishikshay Pandit Ishwarchandra Bidyasagar', Jan.-Feb., 1929.
Ghose, J.C. 'Bishvabidyalaye Strishikshar Pattan', Nov.-Dec., 1943.
Bharat Suhrid
'Amader Abhab', Jul-Aug., 1876.
'Samajtattva : Bibaha', Jun.-Jul., Aug.-Dec., 1876.
'Shiksha O Dharmabishayak Swecchachar', Jun.-Jul., 1876.
'Strishiksha', Nov.-Dec., 1876.
Bharati
Indira Debi. 'Bartaman Strishiksha Bichar', Jul.-Aug., 1912.
Sarala Debi. 'Bharat Stri-Mahamandal', Mar.-Apr., 1918.
'Shata Bachharer Sakhi Samiti', Sep.-Oct., 1908.
Bibidhartha Sangraha
'Kritabidya Yubakganer Sansarik Kasta O Maner Asukh', 1860.
79
'Banga Mahila Bidyalaya', 25 Dec., 1879.
'Equality of Sexes', 15 Jan., 1880.
'Female Education', 30 Jan., 1879.
'Perosnal Recollections of Women's Education', 4 Sep., 1879.
'What We Have Done for Our Women', 28 Aug., 1879.
Jnanankur
'Adhunatan O Puratan Banger Sadharan Abastha', Dec., 1874-Jan.-1875.
'Bangiya Bibaha', Sep.-Oct. 1874.
'Gaurab, Swadhinata O Aparatantra', Apr.-May, 1874.
(Mukhoopadhyay, C.S.). 'Bidya Bidambana', Apr.-May, 1873.
'Strishiksha', Jul.-Aug. 1876.
Hitasadhak
Sarkar, P.C. 'Amader Prachin O Adhunik Sabhyata', Mar.-Apr. 1868.
-----, 'Asur Bibaha : Kanyapan', Feb.-Mar., 1868.
-----, 'Bibidha Bishayini Chinta', Jul.-Aug., 1868.
-----, 'Samajik Shasan., Feb.-Mar., 1868.
Madhyastha
Basu, M.M. 'Chukti Ba Mukti Bibaha', Feb.-Mar., 1875.
-----, 'Pranayrog', 20 Shraban 1279 (B.S.) (Aug., 1872).
-----, 'Bengal Theatrer Abhinay', 14 Bhadra 1283 (B.S.) (Aug., 1876).
Nabyabharat
Basu. I.C. 'Strishikshar Bibaran', Feb.-Mar., 1893 & Dec., 1893-Jan., 1894.
Basu, Y. Nabajiban O Bidhababibaha', Jun.-Jul., 1885.
Chattopadhyay, B.C. 'Nabya Banga', May.-Jun., 1886.
Gangopadhyay, D.N. 'Bidhaba Bibaha', Mar.-Apr., 1889.
-----, 'Hindu Dharmer Andolan O Sanskar', Oct.-Nov., 1891.
Mazoomdar, P.C. 'Sanskaraker Priti', Jul.-Aug., 1885.
Mitra, B.C. 'Paschatya Shiksha O Hindu Dharma', Oct.-Nov., 1885.
Nandi, S.N. 'Balya Bibaha', Jun.-Jul., Jul.-Aug., 1886.
-----, ' Swadhinata O Swacchachar', Feb.-Mar., 1887.
Ray, S. 'Samaj Samanvay', May-Jun., 1884.
Raychaudhuri, D.P. 'Sawmi O Stri', Sep.-Oct., 1886.
Sastri, S. 'Shastra O Deshachar', Aug.-Sep., 1891.
-----, 'Shastra, Deschachar O Dharma', Aug.-Sep., 1891.
Prabasi
Krisnabhanini Das, 'Jalandar Kanya Bidyalay', Apr.-May, 1913.
'Narishiksha Samiti', Apr.-May, 1921.
Sastri, S. 'Mahatma Bethune O Bangdeshe Strishiksha', Aug.-Sep., 1904.
-----, 'Narir Karyakshetra : Paribarik O Samajik', Nov.-Dec., 1912.
Samadarshi
Chakrabarti, Y.N. 'Bangiya O Sarbabhaunik Brahmo', May-Jun., 1875.
Chattopadhyay, N.N. 'Jnan O Dharma', Sep.-Oct., 1875.
80
Tamoluk Patrika
Banga Mahilaganer Bartaman Abastha', Vol. 1, 1281 B.S., (1874-75).
Tattvabodhini Patrika
'Bahubibaha', Aug.-Sep., 1856.
'Bahubibaha', Apr.-May, 1866.
'Bartaman Kal Alpabidya O Laghuchittatar Kal', Jun.-Jul., 1876.
Datta, A.K. 'Bartaman Byabahar', Aug.-Sep., 1849.
-----, 'Bidhaba Bibaha', AMar.-Apr., 1855.
-----, 'Kalikatar Durabastha', 1 Shraban 1786 (Shakabada) (Jul., 1846).
'Hindu Dharmer Sahit Brahmo Dharmer Sambandha', Aug.-Sep., 1867.
'Hindu Samaj Sanskar', Nov.-Dec., 1873.
'Nirishwar Bibaha', Dec., 1876-Jan., 1877.
'Prakrita Strishiksha', Mar.-Apr., 1881.
'Samaj Sanskar', Oct.-Nov., 1876.
'Samaj Sanskar', Dec., 1875-Jan., 1876.
'Samajer Pattan Bhumi', Dec., 1874-Jan., 1875.
'Samajik Andolan', May-Jun., 1894.
'Samajik Unnati O Paribartan', Jun-Jul., 1872.
'Shikshita Sampradayer Asha O Duhkher Katha', May-Jun., 1890.
'Strijatir Adhikar O Striswadhinata', Jul.,-Aug., 1872.
'Strishiksha O Manu', Jul.-Aug., 1881.
'Strishiksha O Striobidyalaye Strinibas', Feb.-Mar.m 1881.
'Strishiksha O Striswadhinata', Nov.-Dec., 1878.
G. Publsihed Letters
Letters of Debendranath Tagore to Rajnarayan Bose : Maharshi Debendranth Thakurer
Patrabali ed. by P. Sastri, Calcutta, 1909.
Letters of Indira Tagore to Pramatha Chaudhuri and of P. Chaudhuri to Indira Tagore in
Desh, Literary Issue, May 1980.
Letters of Madhurilata :" Madhurilatar Chithi ed. by P. Chattopadhyay, Calcutta : Ananda
Publishers, 1977.
Letters of R.N. Tagore to Mrinalini Debi : Chithipatra, Vol. 1, 3rd ed. Calcutta : Visva
Bharati, 1966.
Letters of Rabindranath Tagore to Priyanath Sen and Sarat Kumar Chakrabarti in Desh,
Literary number, 1980.
Letters of Satyendranath Tagore to Jnanadanandini Debi in Puratani ed. by Indira Debi,
Calcutta : Indian Associated Publishing, 1957.
81
----- Dwarakanath Gangopadhyay, end ed. Calcutta : Bangiy Sahitya Parishat, 1962.
----- Girindramohini Dasi, 2nd ed. Calcutta : Bangiya Sahitya Parishat, 1962.
----- Ishwarchandra Bidyasagar. 2nd ed. Calcutta : Bangiya Sahitya Parishat, 1955.
----- Jyotirindranath Thakur etc. 2nd ed. Calcutta : Bangiya Sahitya Parishat.
----- Kamini Ray, 2nd ed. Calcutta : Bangiya Sahitya Parishat, 1964.
----- Mankumari Basu. 2nd ed. Clacutta : Bangiya Sahitya Parishat, 1962.
----- Satyendranath Thakur etc. 2nd ed. Calcutta : Bangiya Sahitya Parishat, 1960.
Banerji, Sir A.R. An Indian Pathfinder : Memories of Sebabrata Sasipada Banerji, 2nd ed.
Calcutta : Sadharan Brahmo Samaj, 1973.
Basu, P. Maharani Sucharu Debir Jiban-Kahini, Calcutta : Author, 1962.
Basu, R. Rajnarayan Basur Atmacharit Calcutta : Kuntaline Press, 1909.
Beveridge, W.H. India Called Them. London : George Allen & Unwin, 1947.
Bhattacharya, R. S. Bamacharit, Calcuta : Kabyaprakash Press, 1865.
Chakrabarti, A.C. Naricharitra Arthat Deshiya O Bidshiya Katipay Gunabati Kaminir Jiban-
Britanta. Mymensingh : Bijnapani Press, 1866.
Chakrabarti, D. Sasipada Banerji : A Study in the Nature of the First Contact of the Bengal
Bhadralok with Working Class of Bengal Calcutta : Centre for Studies in Social
Sciences, 1975.
Chakrabarti, D.N.'Taru Datta', Bharati, Oct.-Nov., 1910.
Chaudhuri, N.C. Autobiography of an Unknown Indian, 6th Jaico Impression, Bombay :
Jaico, 1976.
Collet, S.D. The Life and Letters of Raja Rammohan Roy, 3rd ed. Calcutta : Sadharan
Brahmo Samaj, 1962.
Das, A. Life and Letters of Toru Dutt. Oxford : Oxford University Press, 1921.
'Doctor Shrimati Kadambini Ganguli', Prabasi, Nov.-Dec., 1923.
Gangapadhyay, D.N. Jibanalekhya, 2nd ed. Calcutta : n.p., 1879 (First publsihed in 1876).
Ghosh, M.N. Karmabir Kishorichand Mitra, Calcutta : Adi Brahmo Samaj, 1927.
----- 'Umeshchandra' (W.C. Bonnerji), Bharatbarsha, Jun.-Dec., 1943.
Ghosh, N.K. Pryaricharan Sarkar, Calcutta : Sahitya Sebak Samiti, 1902.
Goswami, B.K. Brahmo Samajer Bartaman Abastha O Amar Jiban Brahmo Samajer
Parikshita Ghatana, Calcutta : Sadharan Brahmo Samaj, 1882.
Gupta, A.L. 'Bhakta Prakash Chandra', Prabasi, May-Jun., 1912.
Hemlata Debi, 'Swargiya Krisnabhabini Das', Prabasi, Mar.-Apr., 1919.
----- 'Narijagate Krisnabhabinir Sthan', Prabasi, May-Jun., 1919.
Hemlata Sarkar, 'Swargiya Doctor Kumari Jamini Sen', Prabasi, Mar.-Apr., 1932.
Indira Debi, 'Jnanadanandini Debi', Prabasi, Feb.-Mar., 1942.
'Jamini Sen', Prabasi, Feb.-Mar., 1932.
Jananadanandini Debi, 'Smritikatha', in Puratani ed. by Indira Debi. Calcutta : Indian
Associated publsihing, 1857.
Joardar, H&S Begum Rokeya : The Emancipator, Dacca : N.K. Sangstha, 1980.
'Kamini Ray', Prabasi, Nov.-Dec., 1933.
Kamini Ray, 'Docotr Kumari Jamini Sen', Banglaxmi, Apr.-Oct., 1932.
Kling, B.B, Partner in Empire : Dwakanath Tagore and the Age of Enterpirse in Eastern
India, Berkeley : Univ. of Calfornia Press, 1979.
'Krishnabhabini Das', Bharati, Nov.-Dec., 1922.
Kumudini Charit, Calcutta, 1867, (Varendra Research Museum Library, copy lacks
publication details).
'Kumudini Jiban', BBP, Apr.-May, 1868
'Kumudini Mitra, Mary Carpenter, Calcutta, 1906.
82
Laxmimani Charit, Dacca : Girish Press, 1879.
'Mankumari Basu', Prabasi, Feb.-Mar., 1946.
Mazoomdar, P.C. The Life and Teachings of Keshub Chander Sen, Calcutta : Baptist Mission
Press, 1887.
Mitra, G.K. Mahilabali, Calcutta : Mudiani Mitra Press, 1867.
Mitra, K.K. Krisnakumar Mitrer Atmacharit, Calcutta : B. Chakrabarti, 1937.
Mukhopadhyay, K.S. Kumudini Upakhyan. Calcutta, 1872.
(The Varendra Research Museum Library, copy lacks publication details).
Mukhopadhyay, P.K. Rabindrajibani, Vol. 1, 4th ed. Calcutta : Visva Bharati, 1971.
-----, Rabindra Jibani, Vol. 2, 3rd ed. Calcutta : Visva Bhatari, 1961.
Mukherji, N.A. Bengal Zamindar : Jaykrisna Mukherji of Uttarpara and His Times, Calcutta
: Firma K.L. Mukhopadhyay, 1974.
Nethercot, A.H. The First Five Lives of Annie Besant, Chicago : Univ. of Chicago Press.
1960.
'Nistarini Debi', BBP, May-Jun., 1884.
Pal, B.C. Memories of My Life and Times, Vol. 1, Calcutta : Modern Book Agency, 1932.
Punnalata Chakrabarti, Chhelebelar Dinguli, 2nd ed. calcutta : New Script, 1975.
Resasundari Debi, Amar-Jiban, 2nd ed. Calcutta : S.L. Sarkar, 1898, (First published in
1875).
Ray, G.G. Acharya Keshab Chandra, 3 Vols. 2nd ed. Calcutta : Brahmo samaj, 1938.
Ray, K.C. Atmajiban-Charit, New ed. Calcutta : Indian Associated publishing, 1956.
Ray. M.N. Akshary Kumar Datter Jiban-Brittanta, Calcutta : Sanskrit Press, 1884.
Ray, R,C. Jiban-Bindu, Calcutta, 1879.
Ray, S. Jyotirindranath, Calcutta, Jijnasa, 1963.
'Renu Rachayitri' priyambada Debi', Bharati, Apr.-May., 1910.
Rudra, S. Kadambari Debi, Calcutta : Asha Prakashani, n.d. Rule, P. The Purshit of Progress,
Calcutta ; Editions Indian, 1977.
Sanyal, R.G. A General Biography of Bengal Celebrities both Living and Dead, Reprint,
Calcutta ; Rddhi, 1976. (First published in 1889).
Sarala Debi Chaudhurani, 'Hiranmayi Debi', Bharati, Feb.-Mar., 1926.
----- , Jibaner Jharapata, Calcutta, Sahitya Samsad, 1958.
Sarala Ray Birth Centenary Volume, Calcutta : Sarala Ray Birth Centenary Committee, 1961.
Sastri, S. Atmacharit, 1st Signet ed. Calcutta : Signet Press, 1952.
----- , Ramtanu Lahiri O Tatkalin Banga Samaj, Calcutta : S.K. Lahiri, 1904.
Saudamini Sinha, Naricharit, Calcutta : Kabyaprakash Press, 1865.
Sen. G.C. Brahmamayi Charit, Calcutta : n.p. 1903.
Sen. P.R. 'Swargiya Kamini Ray', Prabasi, Nov.-Dec., 1993.
Shaista S. Ikramullah, Begum, From Prabasi to Parliament, London : The Crescent Press,
1963.
'Shubhabibaha Rachayitri ; Saratkumari Chaudhurani', Bharati, Nov.-Dec., 1909.
Shudha Mazumdar, A Pattern of Life : The Memories of an Indian Woman, Delhi : Monohar,
1977.
Tagore, A. Gharoa, Abanindra Rachanabali, Vol. 1, Calcutta : Prakash Bhaban, 1973.
Tagore, J. Jyotirindranather Jibansmriti, Calcutta : Shishir Publishing, 1920.
Tagore, S.N. Amar Balyakatha, 2nd ed. Calcutta : Tagore Research Institute, 1967.
Tattvabhusan, S.N. Autobiography, Calcutta : Brahmo Mission Press, n,d.
83
Aime-Martin, The Education of Mothers of Families or, The Civilization of the Human Race
by Women, London : Whittaker & Co., 1842.
Altekar, A.S. The Position of Women in Hindu Civilization, 2nd ed. Delhi : Banarsidass,
1956.
Anon, Suraloke Banger Itibritta, Calcutta : Moitri, 1968.
-----, Jatiya Andolane Banga Nari, Calcutta : Visva Bharati, 1954.
Bandyopadhyay, B.N. Bangiya Natyashalar Itihas, 4th ed. Calcutta : Bangiya Sahitya
Parishat, 1961.
-----, Banga Sahitya Nari, Calcutta : Visva Bharati, 1951.
----- , Bangla Samayikpatra, Vol. 2, 2nd ed. Calcutta ; Bangiya Sahitya Parishat, 1952.
----- , Samayikpatra Sampadane Banga Nari, Calcutta : Visva Bharati, 1951.
Bandyopadhyay, I.N. Panchu Thakur, 2 Vols. Calcutta : Bangabasi Press, 1884.
Barr, P. The Memsahibs, London : Secker Warburg, 1976.
Basu, M.M. Hindu Achar Byabahar, Vol. 1, Calcutta : Madhyastha Prress, 1873.
Basu, R.N. Eka I Ar Sekal, Calcutta : Balmiki Press, 1875.
----- . Hindi Dharmer Shresthata, Calcutta : Balmiki Press, 1873.
Baumer, R.V.M. (ed.), Aspects of Bengali History and Society, Hawaii : The Univ. Press of
Hawaii, 1974.
Bethune College Centenary Volume, ed. by K. Nag and L. Ghosh, Calcutta : Govt. of West
Bengal, 1951.
Bidyasagar, I.C. Bidyasagar Rachanabali, Vol, 4, ed. by D.K. Basu, Calcutta ; M.B. House,
1969.
Broyelle, C. Women's Liberation in China, Atlantic Highlands : Humanities Press, 1977.
Bullough, V.L. The Subordinate Sex, Urbana ; Univ. of Illinois Press, 1973.
Cadbury, E., etc. Women's Work and Wages, London : T. Fisher Unwin, 1909.
Calcutta University, Hundred Years of the University of Calcutta, Calcutta, 1957.
Carpenter, M. Six Months in India, 2 Vols. London : Green & Co., 1868.
Chakrabarty, U. Conditions of Bengali Women Around the Second Half of the Nineteenth
Century, Calcutta : Author, 1963.
Chandra, R. Dekhe Shune Akkel Gurum, Calcutta : Author, 1863.
Chattopadhyay, B.C. Bankim Rachanabali, Vol. 1, 5th ed. Calcutta : Sahitya Samsad, 1968.
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Collet, S.D. The Brahmo Year Book, 1876. London : Williams and Norgate, 1876.
Craine, R.I. (ed.), Transition in South Asia, Problems of Modernization, Dukin Univ., 1970.
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Datta Gupta, B. Sociology of India, Calcutta : Centre for Sociological Research, 1972.
de Souza, A. Women in Contemporary India, Delhi : Manohar, 1975.
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1977.
Gangopadhyay, P.C. Banglar Nari Jagaran, Calcutta : Sadharan Brahmo Samaj, 1946.
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Ghose, L. The Modern History of the Indian Chiefs, Rajas, Zamindars, etc., pt. 2. Calcutta :
Presidency Press, 1881.
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Gupta, A.B. Women in Hindu Society, New Delhi : Jyotsna Prakashan, 1976.
Gupta, I. Kabita Sangraha, Vol. 1, ed. by B.C. Chattopadhyay, Calcutta : G.C.
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84
International Congress on Women. Women in Profession, Vol. 1. London : T. Fisher Unwin,
1900.
Jain, D. (ed.), Indian Women, New Delhi : Govt. of India, 1975.
Jansen, M.B. (ed.). Changing Japanese Attitudes Towards Modernization, Princeton : Univ.
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Kerr, J. Domestic Life, Character and Customs of the Natives of India, London : W.H. Allen
& Co., 1865.
Kopf, D. British Orientalism and the Bengal Renaissance, Berkeley : Univ. of California
Press, 1969.
------, The Brahmo Samaj and the Shaping of Modern Indian Mind, Princeton : Univ. Press.
1979.
Liard, M.A. Missonaries and Education in Bengal, London : Oxford U. Press, 1972.
Lipshitz, S. (ed.), Tearing the Veil, London : Routledge & K. Paul, 1978.
Majumdar, B.B. Heroines of Tagore, Calcutta : Farma K.L. Mukhopadhyaya, 1968.
Manusamhita tr, and ed. by B.C. Shiromani, Calcutta : Arunoday Ghosh, 1866.
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1820.
Misra, B.B. The Indian Middle Classes, London : Oxford U. Press, 1961.
Mitra, P.C. Adhyatmika, Calcutta : I.C. Basu & Co., 1880.
------, Etaddeshiya Strilokder Purbabastha in Pearychand Rachanabali, ed. by M.
Maniruzzaman, Dacca : Kathakali, 1968.
------, Ramaranjika, Calcutta : D'Rozario, 1860.
Murshid, G. 'Orthihyer Sange Aposh', Jijnasa, Vol. 1, No. 3, Oct.-Nov., 1980.
------, 'Krisnabhabini Das : Bangadeshe Narimukti Andolaner Pathikrit, Jijnasa, Vol. 3, No. 2
Jul.-Oct., 1982.
------, Rabindrabishve Purbabange Purbabange Rabindranath, Dacca ; Bangla Academy,
1981.
------, 'Taherannessa ; Pratham Muslim Gadya Lekhika', Bangla Academy Gabeshana
Patrika, Magh-Asharh, 1383-1384 91977).
Narishiksha, Vol. 2, Calcutta : Bamabodhini Sabha, 1868.
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in the East with Revelations of Life in Zenana. Vol. 1, London : Pelham Richardson,
1850.
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Philips, H.A.D. Our Administration in India with Special Reference to the Work and Duties
of a District Officer in Bengal, London : W. Thacker & Co., 1886.
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