New Ideas in India During the Nineteenth Century eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 205 pages of information about New Ideas in India During the Nineteenth Century.

New Ideas in India During the Nineteenth Century eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 205 pages of information about New Ideas in India During the Nineteenth Century.

Similarly in the provision by Government of Caste Hostels for students.  According to the first rule of the Hindu Hostel in connection with the Government College in Calcutta, “none but respectable Hindu students ... shall be admitted,... and such inmates shall observe the rules and usages of Hindu Society.”  In that rule, “respectable” simply means other than low caste.  Now for the reductio ad absurdum.  A certain Bengali gentleman of low caste was some years ago entitled to be addressed as “Honourable,” from the high public office he held, yet by departmental orders the Principal of the Government College would shut the door of the College Hostel in the face of the Honourable’s son.

[Sidenote:  New religious organisations repudiate caste.]

Of the new religious organisations of educated India, three repudiate caste, namely, the Protestant Christian community, the Br[=a]hma Sam[=a]j or Theistic Association, chiefly found in Bengal, and the [=A]rya Sam[=a]j or Vedic Association of the United Provinces and the Punjab.  These forces of new religious feeling are marshalled against caste as a social anomaly and a bar to progress.  Mahomedanism in its day was a powerful force arrayed against caste, but its regenerating power has long ago evaporated, for in many districts of India caste ideas are found flourishing among the Mahomedan converts from Hinduism.  They have carried over the caste ideas from their old to their new religion.[20] The Sikhs in the Punjab also repudiate caste, but they too have forgotten their old reforming mission.  Notwithstanding, we repeat, Northern India owes an immense debt to these two religions, particularly to Mahomedanism.  Let any one who doubts it observe the caste thraldom of Southern India, where Mahomedan rule never established itself.  Irrational as caste is in Northern India, it is tenfold more so in the South, as we have already seen.  A noteworthy assertion of “the rights of men,” or more literally of the rights of women, against caste may be noted in that same caste-bound South India.  In the Native State of Travancore, caste custom had prohibited the women of the lower castes from wearing clothing above the waist.  But about the year 1827, the women who became Christians began to don a loose jacket as the women of higher caste had been in the habit of doing.  Bitter persecution of the Christian women followed, but in 1859 the right of these lower-caste women to wear an upper cloth was legally acknowledged.[21]

But the outstanding evidence of new ideas in regard to caste is furnished by the Hindu revivalists who, under the leading of Mrs. Annie Besant and the Theosophists, have established the Hindu College, Benares, as a buttress of Hinduism.  From the Text-book of Hindu Religion prepared for the College, we learn that these representatives and champions of orthodoxy defend caste only to the extent of the ancient fourfold division of society into brahmans, rulers, merchants

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New Ideas in India During the Nineteenth Century from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.