community
directory
books
authors
images
encyclopedia

Rabindranath Tagore

Rabindranath Tagore (May 6, 1861 - August 7, 1941) also called Robi Thakur or Gurudeb was an Indian poet, philosopher and nationalist who was conferred with the Nobel Prize for literature in 1913.

Rabindranath.png

Born as the son of Debendranath Tagore, the leader of one of two Brahmo Samaj splinter groups into a Hindu family in Kolkata, his last name, in Bengali, is a transcribed version of the Hindi word Thakur, literally meaning The Lord. This establishes his family as Brahmin. Tagore was known as a poet rather than as a formal philosopher, but these two arts are seldom differentiated in traditional Indian culture, just as in France, for example, philosophy seems closely tied to drama. An implicit philosophy can be seen in Tagore's poetry. The main literary device by means of which Tagore communicated his religio-philosophical views was that of bridal mysticism. This entails seeing oneself as the bride of God, with a complete submission to and adoration of the divine bridegroom.

In India, especially in Bengal, Rabindranath Tagore has transcended, as often happens in the Indian paradigm, the simple position of a writer-philosopher. Since great thinkers, who are often religious in their purview, are seen as gurus and close to Bhagavan (God) by Hindus, Rabindranath Tagore is especially revered. Hindus believe that by listening to the words of such wise and enlightened men, people are brought closer to Bhagavan. For this reason, he is affectionately known as Gurudeb (or Gurudev in Hindi), which means, literally, Teacher-God.

His spiritual journey was guided by the Upanishads, the traditional Hindu spiritual scriptures to which he had the opportunity of early exposure, being part of an upper-crust Brahmin family. The Upanishads, derived in turn from the Vedas, speak of the immanent Brahman, the supreme reality which differs from Western religious conceptions of 'God' in that it is an all-suffusing force that transcends personality and any sort of description. The Hindu idea is that all things in the cosmos, even the famous Hindu deities, are only temporal manifestations of Brahman. The Hindu trinity being Existence, Consciousness and Bliss Satchidananda, Rabindranath Tagore wrote in a universalist strain about man's relation to Brahman and the experiences that lead to establishing ultimate identity with Brahman, the goal of Hinduism. The material world is regarded as Brahman's manifestation by Upanishadic philosophy.

Among his literay oeuvre is included, though poetry takes the centrestage, novels, essays, short stories, travelogues, drama, and no less notably, over 2000 songs (belonging to a genre known as Rabindrasangeet) which many Bengalis perceive as cultural treasures. The Rabindrasangeets, which most frequently deal with love and spirituality are immensely popular with speakers of the language.

While his prose often dealt with social questions, political ideas, educational ideals, and his vision of the universal brotherhood of man, Tagore's poetry and songs, apart from its deep spiritual and devotional streak, often expressed simply a celebration of nature and life. Life's multifarious variety was ever a source of Ohoituki Ananda, pleasure without outward reason, for him. No less noteworthy are his outputs on love, which recurs as a major motif throughout his literature, and on patriotism.

The importance of Tagore as a figure in literary history is perhaps aptly illustrated by the fact that two countries, (India and Bangladesh), adopted as national anthems songs authored by him. He won the Nobel Prize in literature in 1913, the first non-westerner to receive this honour, for his English translation of his powerful work Gitanjali. W.B.Yeats, and Wilfred Owen, two of the greatest poets of the 20th century, were greatly moved by this work, and it is said that it was under Yeats's encouragement that he agreed for its translation to English, which he did himself.

Tagore was also instrumental in the early stages of the nationalistic movement in India, though he disassociated himself from some of what he observed as "the later ungainly manifestations". He was the first to reject the knighthood given by the British crown, in protest against the Jallianwala Massacre in Punjab where an unarmed gathering of civilians was fired upon on the orders of the British oficer, killing 350 men, women and children in 1919.

Prominent among the other contributions of Tagore is the university Visva-Bharati, incorporating the vidyalaya (school) instituted by him enshrining his educational ideals. The rigid discipline and claustrophobic environments in various schools he attended in his boyhood left a bitter taste in his mouth. He saw the educational system introduced by the British as "artificial", with total emphasis on unquestioning obedience, mechanical book-learning, little interaction with nature and usually in subjects with little touch with the life of the country around him, and consequently he felt this was stifling to the sensitiveness of the Indian youth. He sometimes referred to himself in slightly mock-serious tones to his lack of formal education. He does appear to have spent a couple of years intermittently at various schools, mainly following his guardians' wishes, but his education was overwhelmingly seen in his family library of books, which was varied and deep, in accordance with the nature of his intellectually-imposing father.

This realisation led him to establish his school, called a Brahmacharyashram(centre for Brahmacharya), at Santiniketan in the Birbhum district of West Bengal, where his father had left a landed estate in his possession. The word Brahmacharya, though commonly understood as a synonym for celibacy alone, was used in ancient India to name the first of four stages, also called ashrama, of life, usually spent in the pursuit of knowledge-gathering in a natural and pure setting under the tutelage of a spiritually realised person called the Guru or the Acharya. This was naturally assumed, since the child was learning and striving to be pure for the reception of knowledge, which is considered sacred to the Hindus, to encompass a detachment from the avenues of life that involved sex or career pursuit.

Tagore tried to recapture to the extent possible in modern times this system of learning among idyllic surroundings. Over time, the school grew into a university with over 30 departments today. Since 1951, the university is administered by the Government of India as a Central University. Illustrious almuni of Santiniketan include Amartya Sen, the winner of the 1998 The Bank of Sweden Prize in Economic Sciences in Memory of Alfred Nobel.

Tagore was keenly sensitive to the world movements of his time and expressed his pain and despair over wars eloquently. His yearning for world peace was however not of a political nature; he desired it to be based on a true realization of the universal identity of mankind and indeed, of the whole of the entire sentient world.

His international travels in the quest of funds for his university led him to many countries and sharpened his understanding of various national and civilizational charactersistics. His comparative treatment of the East and the West ranks among the finest examples this genre of world literature, perhaps pioneering it. His essays contributed to repudiate racially coloured views such as those of Rudyard Kipling without overtly attempting to do so.

External links

Referenced By

1861 | 1913 | 1913 in literature | 1941 | 1941 in literature | 6 May | 6th May | 7 August | 7th August | AddALL | Alexander Zemlinsky | Alexander von Zemlinsky | Amar Sonar Bangla | August 7 | August 7th | Aurobindo | Bangla | Bangladeshi music | Bengali | Bengali language | Blanaid Salkeld | Bollywood/Singers/Male/Hemant Kumar | Calcutta | Calcutta, India | Contemporary Hindu Movements | Devika Rani | Famous Unitarian Universalists | Hemant Kumar | India's Independence Movement | Indian independence movement | Jana-Gana-Mana | Jana Gana Mana | Jawaharlal Nehru | Jawalharlal Nehru | Jose Rizal | José Rizal | Kolkata | Kolkata, India | Kolkota | List of Hindus | List of Indians | List of Unitarian Universalists | List of famous Indians | List of notable poets | List of people by name: Ta | List of people by name: Ta-Tb | List of people by name: Tb | List of people from West Bengal | List of people who have declined a British honour | List of poets | Listing of noted Hindus | Ludwig Josef Johann Wittgenstein | Ludwig Wittgenstein | Mani Rathnam | Mani Ratnam | May 6 | May 6th | Music of Bangladesh | Nehru | NobelPrize/LiteraturE | Nobel Prize/Literature | Nobel Prize for Literature | Nobel Prize in Literature | P.C. Mahalanobis | Paramahansa Yogananda | Prasanta Chandra Mahalanobis | Romain Rolland | Shri Aurobindo | Sri Aurobindo | Thou Art the Ruler of the Minds of All People | West Bengal | Wittgenstein
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Rabindranath Tagore".

If you know facts or have questions about this author post them here.



Your E-mail Address or Pen name (optional):
Comments:

 

Posted by mitscom@aol.com August 24th, 2003
The story "Kabuliwala" was based on te character of his youngest daughter.
Posted by neha27goel@hotmail.com September 2nd, 2003
iin the story kabuliwalah...rabindranath has potrayed himself as the kabuliwalah
Posted by mithilm007@yahoo.co.in October 28th, 2003
plz tell me the publisher of gitanjali
Posted by diepkitty@yahoo.com December 29th, 2003
Dear sirs, T would like to find the material about R.Tagore in the West (in France,in Russia...).do you have something about this? sincerely yours
Posted by sunny143123@hotmail.com May 20th, 2004
could you please mail the story Kabulliwallah to me...because i am very curious to read it..i will really appreciate it. thankyou

Simran Kandola

Posted by Anonymous May 26th, 2004
I'm working on a paper on vioence against women (physical and psychological) in Tagore's short stories. If anyone has any sugestions in this connection, I would really appreciate it. thanks - Mou
Posted by mrcn@bgl.vsnl.net.in June 3rd, 2004
What is the present status of copyright of Tagore's literature? If one wishes to translate some of his poems into other indian language and publish the same what should he do?
Posted by sushil_ssk4u@yahoo.co.in June 27th, 2004
please can anyone mail me the story-----------KABULIWALA i am dyin to read it after seein the reviews
Posted by sebanbaby2000@yahoo.com June 30th, 2004
please add some pictures of tagore
Posted by Apu February 27th, 2005
i love tagore, he is the best, i love him so much

he is my hero

Posted by kcalin@comcast.net April 21st, 2005
I am looking for a quote by Rabindranath Tagore. I think it started out: 'If of thy mortal gifts thou art bereft......" and ended with "hyacinths to feed thy soul." Can anyone help me find the entire quote? Thank you!
Posted by ADAASSR June 29th, 2005
Should includes photographs.
Posted by nick_kane979@yahoo.com September 22nd, 2005
saale haraami . agar aaj ke baad rabindra nath tagore ki biography kisi ne bhi net pe di to uski maa choddo bahen choddun,uske baap ko dalla or biwi ko randi or uske ghar ko kottha bana dunga........ samaj mein nahi aai to mere id pe email kar diyo.. id- nick_kane979@yahoo.com
Posted by Anonymous October 29th, 2005
yahoo does not show the correct information or images
Posted by diya_birdie@yahoo.co.in January 30th, 2006
i was looking forward to read the story of kabulliwallah. could you please mail the story to me...because i am very curious to read it..i will really appreciate it. thankyou
Posted by sharatsindhwani@yahoo.com April 22nd, 2006
We are lucky to a soul like Gurudeb to have been on earth and that too in India by God's will. I wish to celebrate his birthday on 6th may 2006 at Dehra Dun and to invite fellow Bengali's and other citizens of Dehra Dun to come together and think of Gurudeb's message. Can you help me reach some of Gurudeb's contemporaries alive and who work for his ideals so that we could join this fraternity and invite them to this function? Sharat Sindhwani
Posted by rachitgoel123@gmail.com June 13th, 2006
good resource, remarkable and a referensive site for education. i am in Selaqui world school, dehradun, india. WEBSITE: www.selaqui.org
Posted by umangtodi@yahoo.co.in June 20th, 2006
he is a great author
Posted by Anonymous February 28th, 2007
he was a very inspirational writer poet or reformist
Posted by puteri- salju October 1st, 2007
no short story with the title saved by rabindranath tagore? i need to do my assignment of saved..help me
Posted by didad_mrs @yahoo.com March 19th, 2008
what page could i surf in order to find short story entitled saved written by Rabindranath Tagore??? HELP ME.............
Posted by h6644@yahoo.com June 12th, 2008
please give me all biography in hindi

line

 

Email:
Password:
Register

Knowledgerush Search

 

Google
  Web knowledgerush

Search the works of Rabindranath Tagore

Search Help


Search for images of Rabindranath Tagore


Books by Rabindranath Tagore

Chitra, a Play in One Act
[Text][Paginated Text]

The Crescent Moon
[Text][Paginated Text]

Fruit-Gathering
[Text][Paginated Text]

The Fugitive
[Text][Paginated Text]

The Gardener
[Text][Paginated Text]

Gitanjali
[Text][Paginated Text]

Glimpses of Bengal
[Text][Paginated Text]

The Home and the World
[Text][Paginated Text]

The King of the Dark Chamber
[Text][Paginated Text]

The Post Office
[Text][Paginated Text]

Sadhana
[Text][Paginated Text]

Songs of Kabir
[Text][Paginated Text]

Stray Birds
[Text][Paginated Text]



 

Contact UsPrivacy Statement & Terms of Use

 
Copyright © 1999-2003 Knowledgerush.com. All rights reserved.