The path of Aurobindo Ghosh is to me more noble, more inspiring, more lofty, more unselfish, though more thorny. - Jagmohan
The next leading figure of neo-Hinduism whose views, stated or implied, on the issue of Hinduism as a missionary religion must be taken into account is Aurobindo Ghosh (1872–1950). If Tagore's vision was universal, Aurobindo's vision ...
Revelry, Rivalry, and Longing for the Godesses of Bengal: The ... - Page 276 - Rachel Fell McDermott - 2011 - 288 pages - Preview
See Barbara Southard, “The Political Strategy of Aurobindo Ghosh: The Utilization of Hindu Religious Symbolism and the Problem of Political Mobilization in Bengal ,” Modern Asian Studies 14, no. 3 (1980): 353–376. 82....
Revelry, Rivalry, and Longing for the Godesses of Bengal: The ... - Page 349 - Rachel Fell McDermott - 2011 - 288 pages - Preview
“The Political Strategy of Aurobindo Ghosh: The Utilization of Hindu Religious Symbolism and the Problem of Political Mobilization in Bengal .” Modern Asian Studies 14.3 (1980): 353–376. Spitzer, Leo. “Back Through the Future: Nostalgic ...
Encyclopedia of Women in Today's World - Page 690 - Mary Zeiss Stange, Carol K. Oyster, Jane E. Sloan - 2011 - 2016 pages -Preview
Men like Shree Aurobindo Ghosh, Ram Krishna Paramhans became religious leaders, and their wives and women followers established their own identities as spiritual leaders with a sociopolitico-religious influence upon their devotees and ...
Understanding Gandhi: Gandhians in Conversation with Fred J Blum - Page 102 - Usha Thakkar, Jayshree Mehta - 2011 - 572 pages - Preview
K: I am telling you that Christ was concerned with his soul, Aurobindo Ghosh was concerned with his soul. Sri Ramkrishna, our rishis and munis were concerned with their soul. There are many things that were wrong in the world, ...
Nationalizing the Body: The Medical Market, Print and Daktari Medicine - Page 158 - Projit Bihari Mukharji - 2011 - 368 pages - Preview
... and finally, that strand which would by 1908 become the ideological bulwark of the 'revolutionary terrorists'—for a time nominally represented by the meteoric Aurobindo Ghosh, the future spiritual guru Sri Aurobindo. ...
Atlantis and the Cycles of Time: Prophecies, Traditions, and ... - Page 330 - Joscelyn Godwin - 2010 - 448 pages - Preview
During the early years of the twentieth century, he was active in a secret anticolonial movement called Yugantar, meaning “new age” or “transition of an epoch,” along with another future guru, Aurobindo Ghosh. ...
Many revolutionaries, including Aurobindo Ghosh, were arrested by the British immediately after the Kennedy murders. IV. Saunders was assassinated by Bhagat Singh and others as a revenge for the police assault on Bipin Chandra Pal. ...
Indian Identity Narratives and the Politics of Security - Page 23 - Gitika Commuri - 2010 - 336 pages - Preview
But it was Aurobindo Ghosh,101 Swami Dayananda Saraswati102 and Swami Vivekananda who were critical in reinterpreting the Hindu religion, converging on the Vedas and Upanishads as religious texts, highlighting its liberal traditions, ...
Lala Lajpat Rai, Bal Gangadhar Tilak, Bipin Chandra Pal and Aurobindo Ghosh advocated extra-constitutional and extremist methods of mass mobilization and non-cooperation such as Swadeshi and Boycott.21 They did not trust the ...
The Weapon Of The Other: Dalitbahujan Writings And The Remaking Of ... - Page xxx - Ilaiah Kancha - 2010 - 230 pages - Preview
Another set of thinkers and intellectuals around whom the nationalist discourse keeps operating consists of Aurobindo Ghosh, Vivekananda, Bankim Chandra. Of late, Savarkar and Golwalkar have been added to this second list....
Becoming Imperial Citizens: Indians in the Late-Victorian Empire - Page 260 - Sukanya Banerjee - 2010 - 272 pages - Preview
“The Political Strategy of Aurobindo Ghosh: The Utilization of Hindu Religious Symbolism and the Problem of Political Mobilization in Bengal .” Modern Asian Studies 14, no. 3 (1980): 353–76. Spangenburg, Bradford. ...
Bombs were occasionally deployed by the revolutionary groups that began to be formed under leaders such as Aurobindo Ghosh. Attempts were made to assassinate high British officials, and armed robberies were committed to finance ...
This was developed above all in Aurobindo Ghosh's famous articles in Bande Mataram, 9-23 April 1907, later reprinted as ^ Doctrine of Passive Resistance (Pondicherry. 1948), See also Sandhya, 21 November 1906: 'if. ...
He was a famous Bar-at-Law and out of many important cases he pleaded for Sri Aurobindo Ghosh against the British Empire . Once he wrote— ". ... Sri Aurobindo ( Aurovinda Ghosh) (15/08/1872 - 5/12/1950) Sri Aurobindo (Aurovinda Ghosh ...
Terror and the postcolonial - Page 224 - Elleke Boehmer, Stephen Morton - 2009 - 395 pages - Preview
(1995) “The Doctrine of Passive Resistance,” in Sri Aurobindo, Volume One: Bande Mataram: Early Political Writings. ... Sri Aurobindo Ashram. Ghosh, Durba. (2006) “Terrorism in Bengal : Political Violence in the Inter- war Years,” in ...
Non-Western International Relations Theory: Perspectives on and ... - Page 99 - Amitav Acharya, Barry Buzan - 2009 - 242 pages - Preview
Several conceptualizations and critiques of nationalism by Mahatma Gandhi, Jawaharlal Nehru, Rabindranath Tagore, MS Golwalkar, VD Savarkar, Bankim Chandra Chatterjee and Sri Aurobindo Ghosh were at play in the political arena in ...
Science, Spirituality and the Modernization of India - Page 162 - Makarand Paranjape - 2009 - 296 pages - Preview
When he returned to India in 1892 to take up his assignment at Vadodara (then Baroda ) under Maharaja Sayaji Rao, the idealist Arvind Ghosh was already on the path to becoming Sri Aurobindo. He was to delve in the modern scientific ...
Chronologies of modern terrorism - Page 20 - Barry M. Rubin, Judith Colp Rubin - 2008 - 405 pages - Preview
1905 January 22, 1905 February 4, 1905 The Bengali author Aurobindo Ghosh writes Vawani Mandir. In this book, he explains the plans and programs of the Bengali revolutionary terrorist group he hopes to form to fight British rule. ...
The international Eliade - Page 124 - Bryan S. Rennie - 2007 - 318 pages - Preview
Also incorrect is the statement made here that “Sri Aurobindo shut himself away for seventeen years at Pondicherry .” 20. “Let us take an example tiresomely common in the Vedas to which Sri Aurobindo Ghosh draws attention: cattle (go). ...
Challenges to religions and Islam: a study of Muslim movements, ...: Volume 2 - Page 31 - Hamid Naseem Rafiabadi - 2007 - 1482 pages - Full view
... theory of a famous Hindu thinker Aurobindo Ghosh who advocated the doctrine of internalising the Vedas. In a speech he gave at Al Madrassah Al Sultaniyyah in Beirut , he said, "The sciences which we feel in need of is thought of by some people to be technology and ...
The selected writings of Eqbal Ahmad - Page 407 - Eqbal Ahmad, Carollee Bengelsdorf, Margaret Cerullo - 2006 - 637 pages -Preview
Such early nationalists as Aurobindo Ghosh and later Bal Gangadhar Tilak not only employed Hindu religious symbols but also portrayed the Muslim, along with the British, as the Other. Mother India, they claimed, had been the victim of ...
Modes of comparison: theory & practice - Page 310 - Aram A. Yengoyan - 2006 - 480 pages - Preview
Indian thinkers of the stature of Vivekananda, Rabindranath Tagore, andAurobindo Ghosh fashioned both impressive critiques of Western scientific and technological imports and precedents and spirited defenses of Indian epistemologies, ...
Nationalism - Page 99 - Girvin Brian - 2006 - Preview
One of Tilak's lieutenants in the period up to 1910 was the mystic and philosopher Sri Aurobindo Ghosh. His involvement with the nationalist movement was short but intense, and it illustrates both the similarities between Indian ...
Jawaharlal Nehru on Communalism - Page 130 - Nand Lal Gupta - 2006 - 280 pages - Preview
Moreover, as Aurobindo Ghosh has pointed out, every truth, however true in itself, yet, taken apart from others which at once limit and complete it, becomes a snare to bind the intellect and a misleading dogma; for in reality each is ...
The Drought And Other Stories (Bengali) - Page vii - Sarat Chandra Chatterjee - 2006 - 106 pages - Preview
'It is significant,' writes Aurobindo Ghosh [1872-1950] in The Ideal of Human Unity, 'that the one sub-nation in India which from the first refused to undergo this yoke (that of the English language, that is), devoted itself to the ...
Warrior ascetics and Indian empires - Page 263 - William R. Pinch - 2006 - 280 pages - Preview
... battle of 122 see also Mahabharata of Bundelkhand Ghamani, Behrooz 29 gharana 186–187 see akhara ghazi 7 Ghosh, Aurobindo 241–242 Ghosh, Barindra Kumar 241 Ghosh, Gopal Chandra 22 Ghosh, Jamini Mohan 83, 95, 102 Ghoshal, ...
Encyclopaedia Of Social Problems And Social Welfare (Set Of 10 Vols.) - Page 191 - M.U. Qureshi - 2006 - 3318 pages - Preview
The leaders of the militant national movement, Tilak, Aurobindo Ghosh and others, sought to build on a basis of Hindu religion for their agitation and to identify the national awakening with a revival of Hinduism. ...
Political ideas in modern India: thematic explorations - Page 15 - Vrajendra Raj Mehta, Thomas Pantham, Project of History of Indian Science, Philosophy, and Culture - 2006 - 481 pages - Preview
Like Bipin Chandra Pal and Vivekananda, Aurobindo Ghosh too drew upon India 's past glory to build a well-organized anti-British nationalist campaign (Heehs 2000: 42- 67). Disappointed by the stark sterility of the nation, ...
Scientific Bengal: science, technology, medicine, and environment ... - Page 111 - Chittabrata Palit - 2006 - 270 pages - Preview
Hardly anybody has by character and strenuous exertions been a greater inspirer, idealist and epoch- maker in politics than Aurobindo and none a greater philanthropist and educational benefactor than Rashbehari Ghosh.18 Commenting on ...
Visualizing space in Banaras: images, maps, and the practice of ... - Page 186 - Martin Gaenszle, Jörg Gengnagel - 2006 - 358 pages - Preview
Of course, prior to all this, Aurobindo Ghosh had already issued the call around 1905 for the construction of a temple to "Bhawani Bharati. Mother of India" in his pamphlet Bhawani Mandir. He insisted that the temple should be built "in ...
Philosophy Of Education - Page 182 - S.S. Chandra, S.S. Chandra & Rajendra Kumar Sharma - 2006 - 256 pages -Preview
Annie Besant lived and worked in India during the period when Rabindra Nath Tagore, Sri Aurobindo Ghosh and Mahatma Gandhi were carrying on their revolutionary ideas and ideals in the social, educational, religious and political fields. ...
Glimpses of Indian National Movement - Page 64 - Abel M - 2005 - 350 pages - Preview
The remarks made by Sri Aurobindo Ghosh in his article “New Lamps for Old” published in “Indu Prakash”, a Bombay journal, articulated clearly the mood and attitude of these new radical and militant nationalist leaders who came to be ...
Sri Aurobindo - Page 59 - Purnima Majumdar - 2005 - 122 pages - Preview
"Years earlier, when I had seen Aurobindo and the beginning of his gallant youth, I had sung, "O Aurobindo! ... At that time, Ramchandra Mazumdar, Suresh Chakravarty, Biren Ghosh, Vijay Nag, were all present at the office of...
Soul and structure of governance in India - Page 45 - Jagmohan - 2005 - 516 pages - Preview
The path of Aurobindo Ghosh is to me more noble, more inspiring, more lofty, more unselfish, though more thorny. The outbreak of the first world war made the Congress and the government sink their differences. The former believed that...
Make me a man!: masculinity, Hinduism, and nationalism in India - Sikata Banerjee - 2005 - 181 pages - Preview
Extrait de la couverture : "[This book] argues that ideas about manhood play a key role in building and sustaining the modern nation.
Political agenda of education: a study of colonialist and ... - Page 126 - Krishna Kumar - 2005 - 223 pages - Preview
The Bengal National College established by the council had Aurobindo Ghosh as its first principal. Financial contributions came from wealthy landowners, industrialists and academics (NCE 1 956). The NCE proposed a liberal curriculum for ...
India and the Soviet Union, 1917 to 1947 - Page 40 - Nirula - 2005 - 154 pages - Preview
Manmathnath Gupta has rightly remarked: "He (Gandhi) was nearer to Vivekananda and Aurobindo Ghosh than Marx and Lenin". See Manmathnath Gupta: Gandhi and the Revolutionaries, Rao, MD (Ed.): The Mahatma - A Marxist Symposium, New Delhi, ...
The Nineteenth century: edited by P. Mathias, N. Todorov ; ... - Page 141 - P. Mathias, N. Todorov - 2005 - 635 pages - Preview
Nationalism and religion were even sometimes direcdy identified, so that every religious person could be enjoined to serve the cause of national liberation. Nationalism, said Aurobindo Ghosh (1872-1950), was a religion sent by God....
Identity and religion: foundations of anti-Islamism in India - Page 26 - Amalendu Misra - 2004 - 262 pages - Preview
... a source of great friction among those communities who firmly believe in the fundamentals of their religions. The main votaries of this approach were Swami Vivekananda, Aurobindo Ghosh, Pandit Madan Mohan Malaviya and Bal Gangadhar ...
Theosophy: history of a pseudo-religion - Page 281 - René Guénon, Alvin Moore, Jr., Cecil Bethell - 2004 - 335 pages - Preview
The extremist movement had at its head men of strict orthodoxy such as its two principal leaders, Aurobindo Ghosh and Tilak. Mr Ghosh is presently in French India [Pondicherry] and Mr Tilak is in prison. ...
Brahmo Samaj and Indian Civilization - Page 203 - R.K. Pruthi - 2004 - 224 pages - Preview
... like JC Bose and PC Ray, Aurobindo Ghosh and Bepin Chandra Pal, Lord Sinha and CR Das, and Sarojini Naidu and Sarla Devi Chaudhurani, to further the cause of social, educational, and political advancement of India. ...
Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh: national upsurge - Page 100 - M. G. Chitkara - 2004 - 442 pages - Preview
Sri Aurobindo Ghosh spoke of Hindu Rashtra as being the same as Sanatana Dharma that would grow or decline with it. He also stressed that freedom of Bharat would cast a duty upon her children of setting up an ideal society in the light ...
Dancing With Siva: Hinduism's Contemporary Catechism - Page 679 - Satguru Sivaya Subramuniyaswami - 2003 - 1008 pages - Full view
1872-1950 Life of Sri Aurobindo Ghosh, Bengali Indian nationalist and renaissance yoga philosopher. His 3o-volume work discusses the "superman," the Divinely transformed individual soul. Withdraws from the world in 1910 and founds ...
Netaji Subhas confronted the Indian ethos, 1900-1921: Yogi Sri ... - Page 29 - Adwaita P. Ganguly - 2003 - 224 pages - Preview
In fact Aurobindo was given four dates by the Commission for the riding test: (1) 9th August, (2) 20th October (3) 5th ... Our father, Dr KD Ghosh of Khulna, has been unable to provide the three of us with sufficient fund for the most ...
Kashmir: shadow of terrorism - Page 168 - Mamta Rajawat - 2003 - 439 pages - Preview
It is also in consonance with the dream of the great Yogi Aurobindo Ghosh. K. Natwar Singh is justified when he says: "This is in the hands of cosmic master, unseen yet all powerful. ...
Organizing empire: individualism, collective agency, and India - Page 153 - Purnima Bose - 2003 - 278 pages - Preview
Barindra Kumar Ghosh, the younger brother of Aurobindo Ghosh, and Bhupendra Nath Dutt, the brother of Swami Vivekananda, started the political journal Jugantar, from which the later terrorists took their name. ...
Towards Freedom: Documents on the Movement for Independence in ... - Mushirul Hasan, Sabyasachi Bhattacharya, Indian Council of Historical Research - 2008 - 1280 pages - Snippet view
1 Bijay Chandra Chatterjee (1878-1973); became a Barrister in 1905 and took part in the Swadeshi Movement; assisted Aurobindo Ghosh in running Bande Mataram; also associated with Bipin Chandra Pal's New India; attended Surat Congress ...
Sri Aurobindo - A Contemporary Reader - Aurobindo Ghose, Sachidananda Mohanty - 2008 - 235 pages - Snippet view
In the treatment of socio-political issues by Sri Aurobindo, I have minimised my reliance on explanations of the inner ... On 28 March 1963, Sudhir Ghosh, an Indian emissary of Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru, met President Kennedy in ...
Thoughts from the Cosmic Field in the Life of a Thinking Insect [A ... - Page 383 - Haresh Patel - 2009 - 396 pages - Preview
The great Sayajirao Gaekwad the III was the one who gave a job to Aurobindo Ghosh, and brought him to Baroda to help him in his Reign as a benevolent ruler of the then-Baroda state. I am proud to be associated with Sri Vinaysinh,...
Speaking of successful yogis who worked outside India, another great spiritual seeker and philosopher who returned after studying in the west and took upon his spiritual practice in Pondicherry is Sri Aurobindo Ghosh(l 871-1950). ...
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