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Bal Gangadhar Tilak

Bal Gangadhar Tilak (pronunciation ; born Keshav Gangadhar Tilak[3][4] (pronunciation: [keʃəʋ ɡəŋɡaːd̪ʱəɾ ʈiɭək]); 23 July 1856 – 1 August 1920), endeared as Lokmanya (IAST: Lokmānya), was an Indian nationalist, teacher, and an independence activist. He was one third of the Lal Bal Pal triumvirate.[5] Tilak was the first leader of the Indian independence movement. The British colonial authorities called him "The father of the Indian unrest". He was also conferred with the title of "Lokmanya", which means "accepted by the people as their leader".[6] Mahatma Gandhi called him "The Maker of Modern India".[7]

Bal Gangadhar Tilak
Born
Keshav Gangadhar Tilak

(1856-07-23)23 July 1856
Died1 August 1920(1920-08-01) (aged 64)
Bombay, Bombay Presidency, British India
(present-day Mumbai, Maharashtra, India)
Occupation(s)Author, politician, freedom fighter
Political partyIndian National Congress
MovementIndian Independence movement
SpouseSatyabhamabai Tilak
Children3[2]

Tilak was one of the first and strongest advocates of Swaraj ('self-rule') and a strong radical in Indian consciousness. He is known for his quote in Marathi: "Swaraj is my birthright and I shall have it!". He formed a close alliance with many Indian National Congress leaders including Bipin Chandra Pal, Lala Lajpat Rai, Aurobindo Ghose, V. O. Chidambaram Pillai and Muhammad Ali Jinnah.

Early life

 
Tilak's birthplace

Keshav Gangadhar Tilak was born on 23 July 1856 in an Marathi Hindu Chitpavan Brahmin family in Ratnagiri, the headquarters of the Ratnagiri district of present-day Maharashtra (then Bombay Presidency).[1] His ancestral village was Chikhali. His father, Gangadhar Tilak was a school teacher and a Sanskrit scholar who died when Tilak was sixteen. In 1871, Tilak was married to Tapibai (Née Bal) when he was sixteen, a few months before his father's death. After marriage, her name was changed to Satyabhamabai. He obtained his Bachelor of Arts in first class in Mathematics from Deccan College of Pune in 1877. He left his M.A. course of study midway to join the L.L.B course instead, and in 1879 he obtained his L.L.B degree from Government Law College.[8] After graduating, Tilak started teaching mathematics at a private school in Pune. Later, due to ideological differences with the colleagues in the new school, he withdrew and became a journalist. Tilak actively participated in public affairs. He stated: "Religion and practical life are not different. The real spirit is to make the country your family instead of working only for your own. The step beyond is to serve humanity and the next step is to serve God."[9]

Inspired by Vishnushastri Chiplunkar, he co-founded the New English school for secondary education in 1880 with a few of his college friends, including Gopal Ganesh Agarkar, Mahadev Ballal Namjoshi and Vishnushastri Chiplunkar. Their goal was to improve the quality of education for India's youth. The success of the school led them to set up the Deccan Education Society in 1884 to create a new system of education that taught young Indians nationalist ideas through an emphasis on Indian culture.[10] The Society established the Fergusson College in 1885 for post-secondary studies. Tilak taught mathematics at Fergusson College. In 1890, Tilak left the Deccan Education Society for more openly political work.[11] He began a mass movement towards independence by an emphasis on a religious and cultural revival.[12]

Political career

Tilak had a long political career agitating for Indian autonomy from British colonial rule. Before Gandhi, he was the most widely known Indian political leader. Unlike his fellow Maharashtrian contemporary, Gokhale, Tilak was considered a radical Nationalist but a Social conservative. He was imprisoned on a number of occasions that included a long stint at Mandalay. At one stage in his political life he was called "the father of Indian unrest" by British author Sir Valentine Chirol.[13]

Indian National Congress

Tilak joined the Indian National Congress in 1890.[14] He opposed its moderate attitude, especially towards the fight for self-government. He was one of the most-eminent radicals at the time.[15] In fact, it was the Swadeshi movement of 1905–1907 that resulted in the split within the Indian National Congress into the Moderates and the Extremists.[11]

During late 1896, a bubonic plague spread from Bombay to Pune, and by January 1897, it reached epidemic proportions. The British Indian Army was brought in to deal with the emergency and strict measures were employed to curb the plague, including the allowance of forced entry into private houses, the examination of the house's occupants, evacuation to hospitals and quarantine camps, removing and destroying personal possessions, and preventing patients from entering or leaving the city. By the end of May, the epidemic was under control. The measures used to curb the pandemic caused widespread resentment among the Indian public. Tilak took up this issue by publishing inflammatory articles in his paper Kesari (Kesari was written in Marathi, and "Maratha" was written in English), quoting the Hindu scripture, the Bhagavad Gita, to say that no blame could be attached to anyone who killed an oppressor without any thought of reward. Following this, on 22 June 1897, Commissioner Rand and another British officer, Lt. Ayerst were shot and killed by the Chapekar brothers and their other associates. According to Barbara and Thomas R. Metcalf, Tilak "almost surely concealed the identities of the perpetrators".[16] Tilak was charged with incitement to murder and sentenced to 18 months imprisonment. When he emerged from prison in present-day Mumbai, he was revered as a martyr and a national hero.[17] He adopted a new slogan coined by his associate Kaka Baptista: "Swaraj (self-rule) is my birthright and I shall have it."[18]

Following the Partition of Bengal, which was a strategy set out by Lord Curzon to weaken the nationalist movement, Tilak encouraged the Swadeshi movement and the Boycott movement.[19] The movement consisted of the boycott of foreign goods and also the social boycott of any Indian who used foreign goods. The Swadeshi movement consisted of the usage of natively produced goods. Once foreign goods were boycotted, there was a gap which had to be filled by the production of those goods in India itself. Tilak said that the Swadeshi and Boycott movements are two sides of the same coin.[20]

 
Lala Lajpat Rai of Punjab, Bal Gangadhar Tilak (middle) of Maharashtra, and Bipin Chandra Pal of Bengal, the triumvirate were popularly known as Lal Bal Pal, changed the political discourse of the Indian independence movement.

Tilak opposed the moderate views of Gopal Krishna Gokhale, and was supported by fellow Indian nationalists Bipin Chandra Pal in Bengal and Lala Lajpat Rai in Punjab. They were referred to as the "Lal-Bal-Pal triumvirate". In 1907, the annual session of the Congress Party was held at Surat, Gujarat. Trouble broke out over the selection of the new president of the Congress between the moderate and the radical sections of the party. The party split into the radicals faction, led by Tilak, Pal and Lajpat Rai, and the moderate faction. Nationalists like Aurobindo Ghose, V. O. Chidambaram Pillai were Tilak supporters.[15][21]

When asked in Calcutta whether he envisioned a Maratha-type of government for independent India, Tilak answered that the Maratha-dominated governments of 17th and 18th centuries were outmoded in the 20th century, and he wanted a genuine federal system for Free India where everyone was an equal partner.[22] He added that only such a form of government would be able to safeguard India's freedom. He was the first Congress leader to suggest that Hindi written in the Devanagari script be accepted as the sole national language of India.[23]

Sedition Charges

During his lifetime among other political cases, Tilak had been tried for sedition charges in three times by British India Government—in 1897,[24] 1909,[25] and 1916.[26] In 1897, Tilak was sentenced to 18 months in prison for preaching disaffection against the Raj. In 1909, he was again charged with sedition and intensifying racial animosity between Indians and the British. The Bombay lawyer Muhammad Ali Jinnah appeared in Tilak's defence but he was sentenced to six years in prison in Burma in a controversial judgement.[27] In 1916 when for the third time Tilak was charged for sedition over his lectures on self-rule, Jinnah again was his lawyer and this time led him to acquittal in the case.[28][29]

Imprisonment in Mandalay

On 30 April 1908, two Bengali youths, Prafulla Chaki and Khudiram Bose, threw a bomb on a carriage at Muzzafarpur, to kill the Chief Presidency Magistrate Douglas Kingsford of Calcutta fame, but erroneously killed two women traveling in it. While Chaki committed suicide when caught, Bose was hanged. Tilak, in his paper Kesari, defended the revolutionaries and called for immediate Swaraj or self-rule. The Government swiftly charged him with sedition. At the conclusion of the trial, a special jury convicted him by 7:2 majority. The judge, Dinshaw D. Davar gave him a six years jail sentence to be served in Mandalay, Burma and a fine of 1,000 (US$13).[30] On being asked by the judge whether he had anything to say, Tilak said:

All that I wish to say is that, in spite of the verdict of the jury, I still maintain that I am innocent. There are higher powers that rule the destinies of men and nations; and I think, it may be the will of Providence that the cause I represent may be benefited more by my suffering than by my pen and tongue.

Muhammad Ali Jinnah was his lawyer in the case.[29] Justice Davar's judgement came under stern criticism in press and was seen against impartiality of British justice system. Justice Davar himself previously had appeared for Tilak in his first sedition case in 1897.[27] In passing sentence, the judge indulged in some scathing strictures against Tilak's conduct. He threw off the judicial restraint which, to some extent, was observable in his charge to the jury. He condemned the articles as "seething with sedition", as preaching violence, speaking of murders with approval. "You hail the advent of the bomb in India as if something had come to India for its good. I say, such journalism is a curse to the country". Tilak was sent to Mandalay from 1908 to 1914.[31] While imprisoned, he continued to read and write, further developing his ideas on the Indian nationalist movement. While in the prison he wrote the Gita Rahasya.[32] Many copies of which were sold, and the money was donated for the Indian Independence movement.[33]

Life after Mandalay

 
Bal Gangadhar Tilak

Tilak developed diabetes during his sentence in Mandalay prison. This and the general ordeal of prison life had mellowed him at his release on 16 June 1914. When World War I started in August of that year, Tilak cabled the King-Emperor George V of his support and turned his oratory to find new recruits for war efforts. He welcomed The Indian Councils Act, popularly known as Minto-Morley Reforms, which had been passed by British Parliament in May 1909, terming it as "a marked increase of confidence between the Rulers and the Ruled". It was his conviction that acts of violence actually diminished, rather than hastening, the pace of political reforms. He was eager for reconciliation with Congress and had abandoned his demand for direct action and settled for agitations "strictly by constitutional means" – a line that had long been advocated by his rival Gokhale.[34][additional citation(s) needed] Tilak reunited with his fellow nationalists and rejoined the Indian National Congress during the Lucknow pact 1916. .[35]

Tilak tried to convince Mohandas Gandhi to leave the idea of Total non-violence ("Total Ahimsa") and try to get self-rule ("Swarajya") by all means.[citation needed] Though Gandhi did not entirely concur with Tilak on the means to achieve self-rule and was steadfast in his advocacy of satyagraha, he appreciated Tilak's services to the country and his courage of conviction. After Tilak lost a civil suit against Valentine Chirol and incurred pecuniary loss, Gandhi even called upon Indians to contribute to the Tilak Purse Fund started with the objective of defraying the expenses incurred by Tilak.[36]

All India Home Rule League

Tilak helped found the All India Home Rule League in 1916–18, with G. S. Khaparde and Annie Besant. After years of trying to reunite the moderate and radical factions, he gave up and focused on the Home Rule League, which sought self-rule. Tilak travelled from village to village for support from farmers and locals to join the movement towards self-rule.[31] Tilak was impressed by the Russian Revolution, and expressed his admiration for Vladimir Lenin.[37] The league had 1400 members in April 1916, and by 1917 membership had grown to approximately 32,000. Tilak started his Home Rule League in Maharashtra, Central Provinces, and Karnataka and Berar region. Besant's League was active in the rest of India.[38]

Thoughts and views

Religio-Political Views

Tilak sought to unite the Indian population for mass political action throughout his life. For this to happen, he believed there needed to be a comprehensive justification for anti-British pro-Hindu activism. For this end, he sought justification in the supposed original principles of the Ramayana and the Bhagavad Gita. He named this call to activism karma-yoga or the yoga of action.[39] In his interpretation, the Bhagavad Gita reveals this principle in the conversation between Krishna and Arjuna when Krishna exhorts Arjuna to fight his enemies (which in this case included many members of his family) because it is his duty. In Tilak's opinion, the Bhagavad Gita provided a strong justification of activism. However, this conflicted with the mainstream exegesis of the text at the time which was dominated by renunciate views and the idea of acts purely for God. This was represented by the two mainstream views at the time by Ramanuja and Adi Shankara. To find support for this philosophy, Tilak wrote his own interpretations of the relevant passages of the Gita and backed his views using Jnanadeva's commentary on the Gita, Ramanuja's critical commentary and his own translation of the Gita.[40] His main battle was against the renunciate views of the time which conflicted with worldly activism. To fight this, he went to great lengths to reinterpret words such as karma, dharma and yoga, as well as the concept of renunciation itself. Because he founded his rationalization on Hindu religious symbols and lines, he alienated many non-Hindus such as the Muslims who began to ally with the British for support.[citation needed]

Social views against women

Tilak was strongly opposed to liberal trends emerging in Pune such as women's rights and social reforms against untouchability.[41][42][43] Tilak vehemently opposed the establishment of the first Native girls High school (now called Huzurpaga) in Pune in 1885 and its curriculum using his newspapers, the Mahratta and Kesari.[42][44][45] Tilak was also opposed to intercaste marriage, particularly the match where an upper caste woman married a lower caste man.[45] In the case of Deshasthas, Chitpawans and Karhades, he encouraged these three Maharashtrian Brahmin groups to give up "caste exclusiveness" and intermarry.[a] Tilak officially opposed the age of consent bill which raised the age of marriage from ten to twelve for girls, however he was willing to sign a circular that increased age of marriage for girls to sixteen and twenty for boys.[47]

Child bride Rukhmabai was married at the age of eleven but refused to go and live with her husband. The husband sued for restitution of conjugal rights, initially lost but appealed the decision. On 4 March 1887, Justice Farran, using interpretations of Hindu laws, ordered Rukhmabai to "go live with her husband or face six months of imprisonment". Tilak approved of this decision of the court and said that the court was following Hindu Dharmaśāstras. Rukhmabai responded that she would rather face imprisonment than obey the verdict. Her marriage was later dissolved by Queen Victoria. Later, she went on to receive her Doctor of Medicine degree from the London School of Medicine for Women.[48][49][50][51]

In 1890, when an eleven-year-old Phulamani Bai died while having sexual intercourse with her much older husband, the Parsi social reformer Behramji Malabari supported the Age of Consent Act, 1891 to raise the age of a girl's eligibility for marriage. Tilak opposed the Bill and said that the Parsis as well as the English had no jurisdiction over the (Hindu) religious matters. He blamed the girl for having "defective female organs" and questioned how the husband could be "persecuted diabolically for doing a harmless act". He called the girl one of those "dangerous freaks of nature".[43] Tilak did not have a progressive view when it came to gender relations. He did not believe that Hindu women should get a modern education. Rather, he had a more conservative view, believing that women were meant to be homemakers who had to subordinate themselves to the needs of their husbands and children.[11] Tilak refused to sign a petition for the abolition of untouchability in 1918, two years before his death, although he had spoken against it earlier in a meeting.[41]

Esteem for Swami Vivekananda

Tilak and Swami Vivekananda had great mutual respect and esteem for each other. They met accidentally while travelling by train in 1892 and Tilak had Vivekananda as a guest in his house. A person who was present there(Basukaka), heard that it was agreed between Vivekananda and Tilak that Tilak would work towards nationalism in the "political" arena, while Vivekananda would work for nationalism in the "religious" arena. When Vivekananda died at a young age, Tilak expressed great sorrow and paid tributes to him in the Kesari.[b][c][d][e] Tilak said about Vivekananda:

"No Hindu, who, has the interests of Hinduism at his heart, could help feeling grieved over Vivekananda's samadhi. Vivekananda, in short, had taken the work of keeping the banner of Advaita philosophy forever flying among all the nations of the world and made them realize the true greatness of Hindu religion and of the Hindu people. He had hoped that he would crown his achievement with the fulfillment of this task by virtue of his learning, eloquence, enthusiasm and sincerity, just as he had laid a secure foundation for it; but with Swami's samadhi, these hopes have gone. Thousands of years ago, another saint, Shankaracharya, who, showed to the world the glory and greatness of Hinduism. At the fag of the 19th century, the second Shankaracharya is Vivekananda, who, showed to the world the glory of Hinduism. His work has yet to be completed. We have lost our glory, our independence, everything."[f]

Conflicts with Shahu over caste issues

Shahu, the ruler of the princely state of Kolhapur, had several conflicts with Tilak as the latter agreed with the Brahmins decision of Puranic rituals for the Marathas that were intended for Shudras. Tilak even suggested that the Marathas should be "content" with the Shudra status assigned to them by the Brahmins. Tilak's newspapers, as well as the press in Kolhapur, criticized Shahu for his caste prejudice and his unreasoned hostility towards Brahmins. These included serious allegations such as sexual assaults by Shahu against four Brahmin women. An English woman named Lady Minto was petitioned to help them. The agent of Shahu had blamed these allegations on the "troublesome brahmins". Tilak and another Brahmin suffered from the confiscation of estates by Shahu, the first during a quarrel between Shahu and the Shankaracharya of Sankareshwar and later in another issue.[g][h]

Social contributions

 
Statue of Tilak near Supreme Court of Delhi

Tilak started two weeklies, Kesari ("The Lion") in Marathi and Mahratta in English (sometimes referred as 'Maratha' in Academic Study Books) in 1880–1881 with Gopal Ganesh Agarkar as the first editor.[59] By this he was recognized as 'awakener of India', as Kesari later became a daily and continues publication to this day.[citation needed] In 1894, Tilak transformed the household worshipping of Ganesha into a grand public event (Sarvajanik Ganeshotsav). The celebrations consisted of several days of processions, music, and food. They were organized by the means of subscriptions by neighbourhood, caste, or occupation. Students often would celebrate Hindu and national glory and address political issues; including patronage of Swadeshi goods.[60] In 1895, Tilak founded the Shri Shivaji Fund Committee for the celebration of "Shiv Jayanti", the birth anniversary of Shivaji, the founder of the Maratha Empire. The project also had the objective of funding the reconstruction of the tomb (Samadhi) of Shivaji at Raigad Fort. For this second objective, Tilak established the Shri Shivaji Raigad Smarak Mandal along with Senapati Khanderao Dabhade II of Talegaon Dabhade, who became the founder President of the Mandal.[citation needed]

The events like the Ganapati festival and Shiv Jayanti were used by Tilak to build a national spirit beyond the circle of the educated elite in opposition to colonial rule. But it also exacerbated Hindu-Muslim differences. The festival organizers would urge Hindus to protect cows and boycott the Muharram celebrations organized by Shi'a Muslims, in which Hindus had formerly often participated. Thus, although the celebrations were meant to be a way to oppose colonial rule, they also contributed to religious tensions.[60] Contemporary Marathi Hindu nationalist parties like the Shiv Sena took up his reverence for Shivaji.[61] However, Indian Historian, Uma Chakravarti cites Professor Gordon Johnson and states "It is significant that even at the time when Tilak was making political use of Shivaji the question of conceding Kshatriya status to him as Maratha was resisted by the conservative Brahmins including Tilak. While Shivaji was a Brave man, all his bravery, it was argued, did not give him the right to a status that very nearly approached that of a Brahmin. Further, the fact that Shivaji worshiped the Brahmanas in no way altered social relations, 'since it was as a Shudra he did it – as a Shudra the servant, if not the slave, of the Brahmin'".[62]

The Deccan Education Society that Tilak founded with others in the 1880s still runs Institutions in Pune like the Fergusson College.[63] The Swadeshi movement started by Tilak at the beginning of the 20th century became part of the Independence movement until that goal was achieved in 1947. One can even say Swadeshi remained part of Indian Government policy until the 1990s when the Congress Government liberalised the economy.[64][better source needed] Tilak said, "I regard India as my Motherland and my Goddess, the people in India are my kith and kin, and loyal and steadfast work for their political and social emancipation is my highest religion and duty".[65]

Books

In 1903, Tilak wrote the book The Arctic Home in the Vedas. In it, he argued that the Vedas could only have been composed in the Arctics, and the Aryan bards brought them south after the onset of the last ice age. He proposed a new way to determine the exact time of the Vedas.[citation needed] In The Orion, he tried to calculate the time of the Vedas by using the position of different Nakshatras.[66] The positions of the Nakshtras were described in different Vedas. Tilak wrote Shrimadh Bhagvad Gita Rahasya in prison at Mandalay – the analysis of Karma Yoga in the Bhagavad Gita, which is known to be a gift of the Vedas and the Upanishads.[citation needed]

Descendants

Tilak's son, Shridhar Tilak campaigned for removal of untouchability in late 1920s with dalit leader, Dr. Ambedkar.[67] Both were leaders of the multi-caste Samata sangh.[68][69] Shridhar's son, Jayantrao Tilak (1921–2001) was editor of the Kesari newspaper for many years. Jayantrao was also a politician from the Congress party. He was a member of the Parliament of India representing Maharashtra in the Rajya Sabha, the upper house of the Indian Parliament. He was also a member of the Maharashtra Legislative Council.[70]

Rohit Tilak, a descendant of Bal Gangadhar Tilak, is a Pune-based Congress party politician.[71] In 2017, a woman with whom he had an extra-marital affair accused him of rape and other crimes. He is currently out on bail in connection with these charges.[72][73]

Legacy

On 28 July 1956, a portrait of B. G. Tilak was put in the Central Hall of Parliament House. The portrait of Tilak, painted by Gopal Deuskar, was unveiled by the then Prime Minister of India, Jawaharlal Nehru.[74][75]

Tilak Smarak Ranga Mandir, a theatre auditorium in Pune is dedicated to him. In 2007, the Government of India released a coin to commemorate the 150th birth anniversary of Tilak.[76][77] The formal approval of the government of Burma was received for the construction of clafs-cum-lecture hall in the Mandalay prison as a memorial to Lokmanya Tilak. 35,000 (US$440) were given by the Indian Government and 7,500 (US$94) by the local Indian community in Burma.[78]

Several Indian films have been made on his life, including: the documentary films Lokmanya Bal Gangadhar Tilak (1951) and Lokmanya Tilak (1957) both by Vishram Bedekar, Lokmanya: Ek Yugpurush (2015) by Om Raut, and The Great Freedom Fighter Lokmanya Bal Gangadhar Tilak - Swaraj My Birthright (2018) by Vinay Dhumale.[79][80][81]

Notes

  1. ^ As early as 1881, in a few articles Bal Gangadhar Tilak, the resolute thinker and the enfant terrible of Indian politics, wrote comprehensive discourses on the need for united front by the Chitpavans, Deshasthas and the Karhades. Invoking the urgent necessity of this remarkable Brahmans combination, Tilak urged sincerely that these three groups of Brahmans should give up caste exclusiveness by encouraging inter sub-caste marriages and community dining."[46]
  2. ^ THE RELATIONS OF TILAK AND VIVEKANANDA The personal relations between Tilak and Swami Vivekananda (1863– 1902) were marked by great mutual regards and esteem. In 1892, Tilak was returning from Bombay to Poona and had occupied a seat in a second-class railway compartment. Some Gujaratis accompanied Swami Vivekananda who also came and sat in the same compartment. The Gujarati introduced the Swami to Tilak and requested the Swami to stay with the latter.[52]
  3. ^ 93. Among the Congressmen there was one exception and that was Bal Gangadhar Tilak, whose patriotism was marked by 'sacrifice, scholastic fervour and militancy.'94 Tilak a great scholar, was also a fearless patriot, who wanted to meet the challenge of British imperialism with passive resistance and boycott of British goods. This programme came to the forefront in 1905-7, some years after the death of Swami Vivekananda. It would be useless to speculate what Swamiji would have ...[53]
  4. ^ Here it will not be out of place to refer to Tilak's views of Swami Vivekananda whom he did not know intimately; but Swamiji's dynamic personality and powerful exposition of the Vedantic doctrine, could not fail to impress Tilak. When Swamiji's great soul sought eternal rest on 4 July 1902, Tilak, paying his tributes to him, wrote in his Kesari: "No Hindu who has the interest of Hinduism at his heart, can help feeling grieved over Swami Vivekananda's Samadhi"[54]
  5. ^ According to Basukaka, when Swamiji was living in Tilak's house as the latter's guest, Basukaka, who was present there, heard that it was agreed between Vivekananda and Tilak that Tilak would work for nationalism in the political field, while Vivekananda would work for nationalism in the religious field. Tilak and Vivekananda Now let us see what Tilak had himself to say about the meeting he had with Swamiji. Writing in the Vedanta Kesari (January •934), Tilak recalled the meeting.[55]
  6. ^ ... Vivekanand was another powerful influence in turning the thoughts of Tilak from western to eastern philosophy. No Hindu, he says, who, has the interests of Hinduism at his heart, could help to feel grieved over Vivekananda's samadhi. ...Vivekananda, in short, had taken the work of keeping the banner of Advaita philosophy forever flying among all the nations of the world and made them realize the true greatness of Hindu religion and of the Hindu people. He had hoped that he would crown his achievement with the fulfillment of this task by virtue of his learning, eloquence, enthusiasm, and sincerity, just as he had laid a secure foundation for it; but with Swami's samadhi, these hopes have gone. Thousands of years ago, another saint, Shankaracharya, showed to the world the glory and greatness of Hinduism. At the fag of the 19th century, the second Shankaracharya is Vivekananda, who, showed to the world the glory of Hinduism. His work has yet to be completed. We have lost our glory, our independence, everything.[56]
  7. ^ This connection with the British has tended to obscure an equally important significance in Shahu's exchanges with Tilak, especially in the dispute over the Vedokta, the right of Shahu's family and of other Marathas to use the Vedic rituals of the twice-born Kshatriya, rather than the puranic rituals and shudra status with which Tilak and conservative Brahman opinion held that the Marathas should be content.[57]
  8. ^ The anti-durbar pressin kolhapur aligned itself with Tilak's newspapers and reproved Shahu for his caste prejudice and his unreasoned hostility towards Brahmins. To the Bombay government, and to the Vicereine herself, the Brahmins in Kolhapur presented themselves as the victims of a ruthless persecution by the Maharaja. .....Both Natu and Tilak suffered from the durbar's confiscation of estates – first during the confiscation of estates in Kolhapur – the first during a quarrel between Shahu and the Shankaracharya of Sankareshwar. S ee, for example, Samarth, 8 August 1906, quoted in I. Copland, 'The Maharaja of Kolhapur', in Modern Asian studies, vol II, no 2(April 1973), 218. In 1906, the 'poor helpless women' of Kolhapur petitioned Lady Minto alleging that four Brahmin ladies had been forcibly seduced by the Maharaja and that the Political Agent had refused to act in the matter. Broadsheets were distributed maintaining 'no beautiful woman is immune from the violence of the Maharaja...and the Brahmins being special objects of hatred no Brahmin women can hope to escape this shameful fate'...But the agent blamed everything on the troublesome brahmins.[58]

References

Citations

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  2. ^ Anupama Rao 2009, pp. 315–.
  3. ^ "Bal Gangadhar Tilak birth anniversary". India Today. 23 July 2021. Retrieved 15 November 2021.
  4. ^ "Bal Gangadhar Tilak Birth Anniversary: Inspiring Quotes by the Freedom Fighter". News18. 23 July 2021. Retrieved 15 November 2021.
  5. ^ Ashalatha, Koropath & Nambarathil 2009, p. 72.
  6. ^ Tahmankar 1956.
  7. ^ "Bal Gangadhar Tilak", Encyclopedia Britannica
  8. ^ Inamdar 1983.
  9. ^ Brown 1970, p. 76.
  10. ^ Karve 1961, pp. 206–207.
  11. ^ a b c Guha 2011, p. 112.
  12. ^ Edwardes 1961, p. 322.
  13. ^ Inamdar 1983, p. 20.
  14. ^ Singh et al. 2011, p. 43.
  15. ^ a b Brown 1970, p. 34.
  16. ^ Metcalf & Metcalf 2006, p. 154.
  17. ^ Popplewell 2018, p. 34.
  18. ^ HY Sharada Prasad (2003). The Book I Won't be Writing and Other Essays. Orient Blackswan. p. 22. ISBN 9788180280023.
  19. ^ Vohra 1997, p. 120.
  20. ^ Shanta Sathe (1994). Lokmanya Tilak, his social and political thoughts. Ajanta. p. 49.
  21. ^ Wolpert 1962, p. 67.
  22. ^ Mahesh Kumar Singh (1 January 2009). Encyclopaedia on Tilak. Anmol Publications. p. 3. ISBN 978-81-261-3778-7.
  23. ^ Chaturvedi, p. 144.
  24. ^ "FIRST TILAK TRIAL – 1897". Bombay High Court. Retrieved 29 February 2016.
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  37. ^ M. V. S. Koteswara Rao 2003, p. 82.
  38. ^ Tarique 2008.
  39. ^ Harvey 1986, pp. 321–331.
  40. ^ Harvey 1986, pp. 322–324.
  41. ^ a b Jaffrelot 2005, p. 177.
  42. ^ a b P.V. Rao 2008, pp. 141–148.
  43. ^ a b Figueira 2002, p. 129.
  44. ^ P.V. Rao 2007, p. 307.
  45. ^ a b Omvedt 1974, pp. 201–219.
  46. ^ Gokhale 2008, p. 147.
  47. ^ Cashman 1975, pp. 52–54.
  48. ^ Forbes 1999, p. 69.
  49. ^ Lahiri 2000, p. 13.
  50. ^ Chandra 1996, pp. 2937–2947.
  51. ^ Rappaport 2003, p. 429.
  52. ^ Varma & Agarwa 1978.
  53. ^ Bhuyan 2003, p. 191.
  54. ^ Vedanta Kesari 1978, p. 407.
  55. ^ Yuva Bharati 1979, p. 70.
  56. ^ Bhagwat & Pradhan 2015, p. 226.
  57. ^ Shepperdson & Simmons 1988, p. 109.
  58. ^ Johnson 2005, p. 104.
  59. ^ Britannica 1997, p. 772.
  60. ^ a b Metcalf & Metcalf 2006, p. 152.
  61. ^ Gellner 2009, p. 34.
  62. ^ Chakravarti 2013, p. 125.
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  64. ^ Globalisation versus Swadeshi – A tricky problem for Vajpayee | South Asia Analysis Group. Southasiaanalysis.org. Retrieved on 20 December 2018.
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  68. ^ Anupama Rao 2009, p. 315.
  69. ^ Sukhdeo Thorat. "9th Dr. Asghar Ali Engineer Memorial Lecture on 5th August 2017 "Why Untouchability, Caste Discrimination and Atrocities still persists despite Law? Reflections on Causes for Persistence and Solutions"" (PDF). Centre for Study of Society and Secularism. Retrieved 19 March 2018.
  70. ^ "Rajya Sabha Web Site" (PDF). p. 5. Retrieved 9 January 2011.
  71. ^ Shoumojit Banerjee (16 March 2017). "Mukta Tilak, MBA, is Pune's first BJP mayor". The Hindu.
  72. ^ Archana More (11 August 2017). "ROHIT TILAK'S BAIL IN RAPE CASE EXTENDED BY COURT". India Times.
  73. ^ Shalaka Shinde (19 July 2017). "Great grandson of Bal Gangadhar Tilak charged with rape in Pune". Hindustan Times.
  74. ^ "Rajya Sabha".
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  76. ^ "Tilak family awaits 3 lakh coins". Indian Express. Pune. 5 August 2007. Retrieved 7 January 2013.
  77. ^ "Flawed 'Tilak coin' upsets many". Pune: Zee News. 2 August 2007. Retrieved 7 January 2013.
  78. ^ "Lok Sabha Debates" (PDF), eparlib.nic.in, Second, vol. II, p. 6, 1957
  79. ^ Ashish Rajadhyaksha; Paul Willemen (10 July 2014). Encyclopedia of Indian Cinema. Routledge. p. 274. ISBN 978-1-135-94318-9.
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External links

gangadhar, tilak, poet, devarakonda, balagangadhara, tilak, lokmanya, tilak, redirects, here, other, uses, lokmanya, tilak, disambiguation, pronunciation, help, info, born, keshav, gangadhar, tilak, pronunciation, keʃəʋ, ɡəŋɡaːd, ʱəɾ, ʈiɭək, july, 1856, august. For the poet see Devarakonda Balagangadhara Tilak Lokmanya Tilak redirects here For other uses see Lokmanya Tilak disambiguation Bal Gangadhar Tilak pronunciation help info born Keshav Gangadhar Tilak 3 4 pronunciation keʃeʋ ɡeŋɡaːd ʱeɾ ʈiɭek 23 July 1856 1 August 1920 endeared as Lokmanya IAST Lokmanya was an Indian nationalist teacher and an independence activist He was one third of the Lal Bal Pal triumvirate 5 Tilak was the first leader of the Indian independence movement The British colonial authorities called him The father of the Indian unrest He was also conferred with the title of Lokmanya which means accepted by the people as their leader 6 Mahatma Gandhi called him The Maker of Modern India 7 Bal Gangadhar TilakBornKeshav Gangadhar Tilak 1856 07 23 23 July 1856Ratnagiri district Bombay Presidency British India present day Maharashtra India 1 Died1 August 1920 1920 08 01 aged 64 Bombay Bombay Presidency British India present day Mumbai Maharashtra India Occupation s Author politician freedom fighterPolitical partyIndian National CongressMovementIndian Independence movementSpouseSatyabhamabai TilakChildren3 2 Tilak was one of the first and strongest advocates of Swaraj self rule and a strong radical in Indian consciousness He is known for his quote in Marathi Swaraj is my birthright and I shall have it He formed a close alliance with many Indian National Congress leaders including Bipin Chandra Pal Lala Lajpat Rai Aurobindo Ghose V O Chidambaram Pillai and Muhammad Ali Jinnah Contents 1 Early life 2 Political career 2 1 Indian National Congress 2 2 Sedition Charges 2 3 Imprisonment in Mandalay 2 4 Life after Mandalay 2 5 All India Home Rule League 3 Thoughts and views 3 1 Religio Political Views 3 2 Social views against women 3 3 Esteem for Swami Vivekananda 3 4 Conflicts with Shahu over caste issues 4 Social contributions 5 Books 6 Descendants 7 Legacy 8 Notes 9 References 9 1 Citations 9 2 Sources 10 External linksEarly life Tilak s birthplace Keshav Gangadhar Tilak was born on 23 July 1856 in an Marathi Hindu Chitpavan Brahmin family in Ratnagiri the headquarters of the Ratnagiri district of present day Maharashtra then Bombay Presidency 1 His ancestral village was Chikhali His father Gangadhar Tilak was a school teacher and a Sanskrit scholar who died when Tilak was sixteen In 1871 Tilak was married to Tapibai Nee Bal when he was sixteen a few months before his father s death After marriage her name was changed to Satyabhamabai He obtained his Bachelor of Arts in first class in Mathematics from Deccan College of Pune in 1877 He left his M A course of study midway to join the L L B course instead and in 1879 he obtained his L L B degree from Government Law College 8 After graduating Tilak started teaching mathematics at a private school in Pune Later due to ideological differences with the colleagues in the new school he withdrew and became a journalist Tilak actively participated in public affairs He stated Religion and practical life are not different The real spirit is to make the country your family instead of working only for your own The step beyond is to serve humanity and the next step is to serve God 9 Inspired by Vishnushastri Chiplunkar he co founded the New English school for secondary education in 1880 with a few of his college friends including Gopal Ganesh Agarkar Mahadev Ballal Namjoshi and Vishnushastri Chiplunkar Their goal was to improve the quality of education for India s youth The success of the school led them to set up the Deccan Education Society in 1884 to create a new system of education that taught young Indians nationalist ideas through an emphasis on Indian culture 10 The Society established the Fergusson College in 1885 for post secondary studies Tilak taught mathematics at Fergusson College In 1890 Tilak left the Deccan Education Society for more openly political work 11 He began a mass movement towards independence by an emphasis on a religious and cultural revival 12 Political careerTilak had a long political career agitating for Indian autonomy from British colonial rule Before Gandhi he was the most widely known Indian political leader Unlike his fellow Maharashtrian contemporary Gokhale Tilak was considered a radical Nationalist but a Social conservative He was imprisoned on a number of occasions that included a long stint at Mandalay At one stage in his political life he was called the father of Indian unrest by British author Sir Valentine Chirol 13 Indian National Congress Tilak joined the Indian National Congress in 1890 14 He opposed its moderate attitude especially towards the fight for self government He was one of the most eminent radicals at the time 15 In fact it was the Swadeshi movement of 1905 1907 that resulted in the split within the Indian National Congress into the Moderates and the Extremists 11 During late 1896 a bubonic plague spread from Bombay to Pune and by January 1897 it reached epidemic proportions The British Indian Army was brought in to deal with the emergency and strict measures were employed to curb the plague including the allowance of forced entry into private houses the examination of the house s occupants evacuation to hospitals and quarantine camps removing and destroying personal possessions and preventing patients from entering or leaving the city By the end of May the epidemic was under control The measures used to curb the pandemic caused widespread resentment among the Indian public Tilak took up this issue by publishing inflammatory articles in his paper Kesari Kesari was written in Marathi and Maratha was written in English quoting the Hindu scripture the Bhagavad Gita to say that no blame could be attached to anyone who killed an oppressor without any thought of reward Following this on 22 June 1897 Commissioner Rand and another British officer Lt Ayerst were shot and killed by the Chapekar brothers and their other associates According to Barbara and Thomas R Metcalf Tilak almost surely concealed the identities of the perpetrators 16 Tilak was charged with incitement to murder and sentenced to 18 months imprisonment When he emerged from prison in present day Mumbai he was revered as a martyr and a national hero 17 He adopted a new slogan coined by his associate Kaka Baptista Swaraj self rule is my birthright and I shall have it 18 Following the Partition of Bengal which was a strategy set out by Lord Curzon to weaken the nationalist movement Tilak encouraged the Swadeshi movement and the Boycott movement 19 The movement consisted of the boycott of foreign goods and also the social boycott of any Indian who used foreign goods The Swadeshi movement consisted of the usage of natively produced goods Once foreign goods were boycotted there was a gap which had to be filled by the production of those goods in India itself Tilak said that the Swadeshi and Boycott movements are two sides of the same coin 20 Lala Lajpat Rai of Punjab Bal Gangadhar Tilak middle of Maharashtra and Bipin Chandra Pal of Bengal the triumvirate were popularly known as Lal Bal Pal changed the political discourse of the Indian independence movement Tilak opposed the moderate views of Gopal Krishna Gokhale and was supported by fellow Indian nationalists Bipin Chandra Pal in Bengal and Lala Lajpat Rai in Punjab They were referred to as the Lal Bal Pal triumvirate In 1907 the annual session of the Congress Party was held at Surat Gujarat Trouble broke out over the selection of the new president of the Congress between the moderate and the radical sections of the party The party split into the radicals faction led by Tilak Pal and Lajpat Rai and the moderate faction Nationalists like Aurobindo Ghose V O Chidambaram Pillai were Tilak supporters 15 21 When asked in Calcutta whether he envisioned a Maratha type of government for independent India Tilak answered that the Maratha dominated governments of 17th and 18th centuries were outmoded in the 20th century and he wanted a genuine federal system for Free India where everyone was an equal partner 22 He added that only such a form of government would be able to safeguard India s freedom He was the first Congress leader to suggest that Hindi written in the Devanagari script be accepted as the sole national language of India 23 Sedition Charges During his lifetime among other political cases Tilak had been tried for sedition charges in three times by British India Government in 1897 24 1909 25 and 1916 26 In 1897 Tilak was sentenced to 18 months in prison for preaching disaffection against the Raj In 1909 he was again charged with sedition and intensifying racial animosity between Indians and the British The Bombay lawyer Muhammad Ali Jinnah appeared in Tilak s defence but he was sentenced to six years in prison in Burma in a controversial judgement 27 In 1916 when for the third time Tilak was charged for sedition over his lectures on self rule Jinnah again was his lawyer and this time led him to acquittal in the case 28 29 Imprisonment in Mandalay See also Alipore bomb caseOn 30 April 1908 two Bengali youths Prafulla Chaki and Khudiram Bose threw a bomb on a carriage at Muzzafarpur to kill the Chief Presidency Magistrate Douglas Kingsford of Calcutta fame but erroneously killed two women traveling in it While Chaki committed suicide when caught Bose was hanged Tilak in his paper Kesari defended the revolutionaries and called for immediate Swaraj or self rule The Government swiftly charged him with sedition At the conclusion of the trial a special jury convicted him by 7 2 majority The judge Dinshaw D Davar gave him a six years jail sentence to be served in Mandalay Burma and a fine of 1 000 US 13 30 On being asked by the judge whether he had anything to say Tilak said All that I wish to say is that in spite of the verdict of the jury I still maintain that I am innocent There are higher powers that rule the destinies of men and nations and I think it may be the will of Providence that the cause I represent may be benefited more by my suffering than by my pen and tongue Muhammad Ali Jinnah was his lawyer in the case 29 Justice Davar s judgement came under stern criticism in press and was seen against impartiality of British justice system Justice Davar himself previously had appeared for Tilak in his first sedition case in 1897 27 In passing sentence the judge indulged in some scathing strictures against Tilak s conduct He threw off the judicial restraint which to some extent was observable in his charge to the jury He condemned the articles as seething with sedition as preaching violence speaking of murders with approval You hail the advent of the bomb in India as if something had come to India for its good I say such journalism is a curse to the country Tilak was sent to Mandalay from 1908 to 1914 31 While imprisoned he continued to read and write further developing his ideas on the Indian nationalist movement While in the prison he wrote the Gita Rahasya 32 Many copies of which were sold and the money was donated for the Indian Independence movement 33 Life after Mandalay This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Bal Gangadhar Tilak news newspapers books scholar JSTOR August 2019 Learn how and when to remove this template message Bal Gangadhar Tilak Tilak developed diabetes during his sentence in Mandalay prison This and the general ordeal of prison life had mellowed him at his release on 16 June 1914 When World War I started in August of that year Tilak cabled the King Emperor George V of his support and turned his oratory to find new recruits for war efforts He welcomed The Indian Councils Act popularly known as Minto Morley Reforms which had been passed by British Parliament in May 1909 terming it as a marked increase of confidence between the Rulers and the Ruled It was his conviction that acts of violence actually diminished rather than hastening the pace of political reforms He was eager for reconciliation with Congress and had abandoned his demand for direct action and settled for agitations strictly by constitutional means a line that had long been advocated by his rival Gokhale 34 additional citation s needed Tilak reunited with his fellow nationalists and rejoined the Indian National Congress during the Lucknow pact 1916 35 Tilak tried to convince Mohandas Gandhi to leave the idea of Total non violence Total Ahimsa and try to get self rule Swarajya by all means citation needed Though Gandhi did not entirely concur with Tilak on the means to achieve self rule and was steadfast in his advocacy of satyagraha he appreciated Tilak s services to the country and his courage of conviction After Tilak lost a civil suit against Valentine Chirol and incurred pecuniary loss Gandhi even called upon Indians to contribute to the Tilak Purse Fund started with the objective of defraying the expenses incurred by Tilak 36 All India Home Rule League Main article All India Home Rule League Tilak helped found the All India Home Rule League in 1916 18 with G S Khaparde and Annie Besant After years of trying to reunite the moderate and radical factions he gave up and focused on the Home Rule League which sought self rule Tilak travelled from village to village for support from farmers and locals to join the movement towards self rule 31 Tilak was impressed by the Russian Revolution and expressed his admiration for Vladimir Lenin 37 The league had 1400 members in April 1916 and by 1917 membership had grown to approximately 32 000 Tilak started his Home Rule League in Maharashtra Central Provinces and Karnataka and Berar region Besant s League was active in the rest of India 38 Thoughts and viewsReligio Political Views Tilak sought to unite the Indian population for mass political action throughout his life For this to happen he believed there needed to be a comprehensive justification for anti British pro Hindu activism For this end he sought justification in the supposed original principles of the Ramayana and the Bhagavad Gita He named this call to activism karma yoga or the yoga of action 39 In his interpretation the Bhagavad Gita reveals this principle in the conversation between Krishna and Arjuna when Krishna exhorts Arjuna to fight his enemies which in this case included many members of his family because it is his duty In Tilak s opinion the Bhagavad Gita provided a strong justification of activism However this conflicted with the mainstream exegesis of the text at the time which was dominated by renunciate views and the idea of acts purely for God This was represented by the two mainstream views at the time by Ramanuja and Adi Shankara To find support for this philosophy Tilak wrote his own interpretations of the relevant passages of the Gita and backed his views using Jnanadeva s commentary on the Gita Ramanuja s critical commentary and his own translation of the Gita 40 His main battle was against the renunciate views of the time which conflicted with worldly activism To fight this he went to great lengths to reinterpret words such as karma dharma and yoga as well as the concept of renunciation itself Because he founded his rationalization on Hindu religious symbols and lines he alienated many non Hindus such as the Muslims who began to ally with the British for support citation needed Social views against women Tilak was strongly opposed to liberal trends emerging in Pune such as women s rights and social reforms against untouchability 41 42 43 Tilak vehemently opposed the establishment of the first Native girls High school now called Huzurpaga in Pune in 1885 and its curriculum using his newspapers the Mahratta and Kesari 42 44 45 Tilak was also opposed to intercaste marriage particularly the match where an upper caste woman married a lower caste man 45 In the case of Deshasthas Chitpawans and Karhades he encouraged these three Maharashtrian Brahmin groups to give up caste exclusiveness and intermarry a Tilak officially opposed the age of consent bill which raised the age of marriage from ten to twelve for girls however he was willing to sign a circular that increased age of marriage for girls to sixteen and twenty for boys 47 Child bride Rukhmabai was married at the age of eleven but refused to go and live with her husband The husband sued for restitution of conjugal rights initially lost but appealed the decision On 4 March 1887 Justice Farran using interpretations of Hindu laws ordered Rukhmabai to go live with her husband or face six months of imprisonment Tilak approved of this decision of the court and said that the court was following Hindu Dharmasastras Rukhmabai responded that she would rather face imprisonment than obey the verdict Her marriage was later dissolved by Queen Victoria Later she went on to receive her Doctor of Medicine degree from the London School of Medicine for Women 48 49 50 51 In 1890 when an eleven year old Phulamani Bai died while having sexual intercourse with her much older husband the Parsi social reformer Behramji Malabari supported the Age of Consent Act 1891 to raise the age of a girl s eligibility for marriage Tilak opposed the Bill and said that the Parsis as well as the English had no jurisdiction over the Hindu religious matters He blamed the girl for having defective female organs and questioned how the husband could be persecuted diabolically for doing a harmless act He called the girl one of those dangerous freaks of nature 43 Tilak did not have a progressive view when it came to gender relations He did not believe that Hindu women should get a modern education Rather he had a more conservative view believing that women were meant to be homemakers who had to subordinate themselves to the needs of their husbands and children 11 Tilak refused to sign a petition for the abolition of untouchability in 1918 two years before his death although he had spoken against it earlier in a meeting 41 Esteem for Swami VivekanandaTilak and Swami Vivekananda had great mutual respect and esteem for each other They met accidentally while travelling by train in 1892 and Tilak had Vivekananda as a guest in his house A person who was present there Basukaka heard that it was agreed between Vivekananda and Tilak that Tilak would work towards nationalism in the political arena while Vivekananda would work for nationalism in the religious arena When Vivekananda died at a young age Tilak expressed great sorrow and paid tributes to him in the Kesari b c d e Tilak said about Vivekananda No Hindu who has the interests of Hinduism at his heart could help feeling grieved over Vivekananda s samadhi Vivekananda in short had taken the work of keeping the banner of Advaita philosophy forever flying among all the nations of the world and made them realize the true greatness of Hindu religion and of the Hindu people He had hoped that he would crown his achievement with the fulfillment of this task by virtue of his learning eloquence enthusiasm and sincerity just as he had laid a secure foundation for it but with Swami s samadhi these hopes have gone Thousands of years ago another saint Shankaracharya who showed to the world the glory and greatness of Hinduism At the fag of the 19th century the second Shankaracharya is Vivekananda who showed to the world the glory of Hinduism His work has yet to be completed We have lost our glory our independence everything f Conflicts with Shahu over caste issues Shahu the ruler of the princely state of Kolhapur had several conflicts with Tilak as the latter agreed with the Brahmins decision of Puranic rituals for the Marathas that were intended for Shudras Tilak even suggested that the Marathas should be content with the Shudra status assigned to them by the Brahmins Tilak s newspapers as well as the press in Kolhapur criticized Shahu for his caste prejudice and his unreasoned hostility towards Brahmins These included serious allegations such as sexual assaults by Shahu against four Brahmin women An English woman named Lady Minto was petitioned to help them The agent of Shahu had blamed these allegations on the troublesome brahmins Tilak and another Brahmin suffered from the confiscation of estates by Shahu the first during a quarrel between Shahu and the Shankaracharya of Sankareshwar and later in another issue g h Social contributionsFurther information Sarvajanik Ganeshotsav and Kesari newspaper Statue of Tilak near Supreme Court of Delhi Tilak started two weeklies Kesari The Lion in Marathi and Mahratta in English sometimes referred as Maratha in Academic Study Books in 1880 1881 with Gopal Ganesh Agarkar as the first editor 59 By this he was recognized as awakener of India as Kesari later became a daily and continues publication to this day citation needed In 1894 Tilak transformed the household worshipping of Ganesha into a grand public event Sarvajanik Ganeshotsav The celebrations consisted of several days of processions music and food They were organized by the means of subscriptions by neighbourhood caste or occupation Students often would celebrate Hindu and national glory and address political issues including patronage of Swadeshi goods 60 In 1895 Tilak founded the Shri Shivaji Fund Committee for the celebration of Shiv Jayanti the birth anniversary of Shivaji the founder of the Maratha Empire The project also had the objective of funding the reconstruction of the tomb Samadhi of Shivaji at Raigad Fort For this second objective Tilak established the Shri Shivaji Raigad Smarak Mandal along with Senapati Khanderao Dabhade II of Talegaon Dabhade who became the founder President of the Mandal citation needed The events like the Ganapati festival and Shiv Jayanti were used by Tilak to build a national spirit beyond the circle of the educated elite in opposition to colonial rule But it also exacerbated Hindu Muslim differences The festival organizers would urge Hindus to protect cows and boycott the Muharram celebrations organized by Shi a Muslims in which Hindus had formerly often participated Thus although the celebrations were meant to be a way to oppose colonial rule they also contributed to religious tensions 60 Contemporary Marathi Hindu nationalist parties like the Shiv Sena took up his reverence for Shivaji 61 However Indian Historian Uma Chakravarti cites Professor Gordon Johnson and states It is significant that even at the time when Tilak was making political use of Shivaji the question of conceding Kshatriya status to him as Maratha was resisted by the conservative Brahmins including Tilak While Shivaji was a Brave man all his bravery it was argued did not give him the right to a status that very nearly approached that of a Brahmin Further the fact that Shivaji worshiped the Brahmanas in no way altered social relations since it was as a Shudra he did it as a Shudra the servant if not the slave of the Brahmin 62 The Deccan Education Society that Tilak founded with others in the 1880s still runs Institutions in Pune like the Fergusson College 63 The Swadeshi movement started by Tilak at the beginning of the 20th century became part of the Independence movement until that goal was achieved in 1947 One can even say Swadeshi remained part of Indian Government policy until the 1990s when the Congress Government liberalised the economy 64 better source needed Tilak said I regard India as my Motherland and my Goddess the people in India are my kith and kin and loyal and steadfast work for their political and social emancipation is my highest religion and duty 65 BooksIn 1903 Tilak wrote the book The Arctic Home in the Vedas In it he argued that the Vedas could only have been composed in the Arctics and the Aryan bards brought them south after the onset of the last ice age He proposed a new way to determine the exact time of the Vedas citation needed In The Orion he tried to calculate the time of the Vedas by using the position of different Nakshatras 66 The positions of the Nakshtras were described in different Vedas Tilak wrote Shrimadh Bhagvad Gita Rahasya in prison at Mandalay the analysis of Karma Yoga in the Bhagavad Gita which is known to be a gift of the Vedas and the Upanishads citation needed DescendantsTilak s son Shridhar Tilak campaigned for removal of untouchability in late 1920s with dalit leader Dr Ambedkar 67 Both were leaders of the multi caste Samata sangh 68 69 Shridhar s son Jayantrao Tilak 1921 2001 was editor of the Kesari newspaper for many years Jayantrao was also a politician from the Congress party He was a member of the Parliament of India representing Maharashtra in the Rajya Sabha the upper house of the Indian Parliament He was also a member of the Maharashtra Legislative Council 70 Rohit Tilak a descendant of Bal Gangadhar Tilak is a Pune based Congress party politician 71 In 2017 a woman with whom he had an extra marital affair accused him of rape and other crimes He is currently out on bail in connection with these charges 72 73 LegacyOn 28 July 1956 a portrait of B G Tilak was put in the Central Hall of Parliament House The portrait of Tilak painted by Gopal Deuskar was unveiled by the then Prime Minister of India Jawaharlal Nehru 74 75 Tilak Smarak Ranga Mandir a theatre auditorium in Pune is dedicated to him In 2007 the Government of India released a coin to commemorate the 150th birth anniversary of Tilak 76 77 The formal approval of the government of Burma was received for the construction of clafs cum lecture hall in the Mandalay prison as a memorial to Lokmanya Tilak 35 000 US 440 were given by the Indian Government and 7 500 US 94 by the local Indian community in Burma 78 Several Indian films have been made on his life including the documentary films Lokmanya Bal Gangadhar Tilak 1951 and Lokmanya Tilak 1957 both by Vishram Bedekar Lokmanya Ek Yugpurush 2015 by Om Raut and The Great Freedom Fighter Lokmanya Bal Gangadhar Tilak Swaraj My Birthright 2018 by Vinay Dhumale 79 80 81 Notes As early as 1881 in a few articles Bal Gangadhar Tilak the resolute thinker and the enfant terrible of Indian politics wrote comprehensive discourses on the need for united front by the Chitpavans Deshasthas and the Karhades Invoking the urgent necessity of this remarkable Brahmans combination Tilak urged sincerely that these three groups of Brahmans should give up caste exclusiveness by encouraging inter sub caste marriages and community dining 46 THE RELATIONS OF TILAK AND VIVEKANANDA The personal relations between Tilak and Swami Vivekananda 1863 1902 were marked by great mutual regards and esteem In 1892 Tilak was returning from Bombay to Poona and had occupied a seat in a second class railway compartment Some Gujaratis accompanied Swami Vivekananda who also came and sat in the same compartment The Gujarati introduced the Swami to Tilak and requested the Swami to stay with the latter 52 93 Among the Congressmen there was one exception and that was Bal Gangadhar Tilak whose patriotism was marked by sacrifice scholastic fervour and militancy 94 Tilak a great scholar was also a fearless patriot who wanted to meet the challenge of British imperialism with passive resistance and boycott of British goods This programme came to the forefront in 1905 7 some years after the death of Swami Vivekananda It would be useless to speculate what Swamiji would have 53 Here it will not be out of place to refer to Tilak s views of Swami Vivekananda whom he did not know intimately but Swamiji s dynamic personality and powerful exposition of the Vedantic doctrine could not fail to impress Tilak When Swamiji s great soul sought eternal rest on 4 July 1902 Tilak paying his tributes to him wrote in his Kesari No Hindu who has the interest of Hinduism at his heart can help feeling grieved over Swami Vivekananda s Samadhi 54 According to Basukaka when Swamiji was living in Tilak s house as the latter s guest Basukaka who was present there heard that it was agreed between Vivekananda and Tilak that Tilak would work for nationalism in the political field while Vivekananda would work for nationalism in the religious field Tilak and Vivekananda Now let us see what Tilak had himself to say about the meeting he had with Swamiji Writing in the Vedanta Kesari January 934 Tilak recalled the meeting 55 Vivekanand was another powerful influence in turning the thoughts of Tilak from western to eastern philosophy No Hindu he says who has the interests of Hinduism at his heart could help to feel grieved over Vivekananda s samadhi Vivekananda in short had taken the work of keeping the banner of Advaita philosophy forever flying among all the nations of the world and made them realize the true greatness of Hindu religion and of the Hindu people He had hoped that he would crown his achievement with the fulfillment of this task by virtue of his learning eloquence enthusiasm and sincerity just as he had laid a secure foundation for it but with Swami s samadhi these hopes have gone Thousands of years ago another saint Shankaracharya showed to the world the glory and greatness of Hinduism At the fag of the 19th century the second Shankaracharya is Vivekananda who showed to the world the glory of Hinduism His work has yet to be completed We have lost our glory our independence everything 56 This connection with the British has tended to obscure an equally important significance in Shahu s exchanges with Tilak especially in the dispute over the Vedokta the right of Shahu s family and of other Marathas to use the Vedic rituals of the twice born Kshatriya rather than the puranic rituals and shudra status with which Tilak and conservative Brahman opinion held that the Marathas should be content 57 The anti durbar pressin kolhapur aligned itself with Tilak s newspapers and reproved Shahu for his caste prejudice and his unreasoned hostility towards Brahmins To the Bombay government and to the Vicereine herself the Brahmins in Kolhapur presented themselves as the victims of a ruthless persecution by the Maharaja Both Natu and Tilak suffered from the durbar s confiscation of estates first during the confiscation of estates in Kolhapur the first during a quarrel between Shahu and the Shankaracharya of Sankareshwar S ee for example Samarth 8 August 1906 quoted in I Copland The Maharaja of Kolhapur in Modern Asian studies vol II no 2 April 1973 218 In 1906 the poor helpless women of Kolhapur petitioned Lady Minto alleging that four Brahmin ladies had been forcibly seduced by the Maharaja and that the Political Agent had refused to act in the matter Broadsheets were distributed maintaining no beautiful woman is immune from the violence of the Maharaja and the Brahmins being special objects of hatred no Brahmin women can hope to escape this shameful fate But the agent blamed everything on the troublesome brahmins 58 ReferencesCitations a b Bhagwat amp Pradhan 2015 pp 11 Anupama Rao 2009 pp 315 Bal Gangadhar Tilak birth anniversary India Today 23 July 2021 Retrieved 15 November 2021 Bal Gangadhar Tilak Birth Anniversary Inspiring Quotes by the Freedom Fighter News18 23 July 2021 Retrieved 15 November 2021 Ashalatha Koropath amp Nambarathil 2009 p 72 Tahmankar 1956 Bal Gangadhar Tilak Encyclopedia Britannica Inamdar 1983 Brown 1970 p 76 Karve 1961 pp 206 207 a b c Guha 2011 p 112 Edwardes 1961 p 322 Inamdar 1983 p 20 Singh et al 2011 p 43 a b Brown 1970 p 34 Metcalf amp Metcalf 2006 p 154 Popplewell 2018 p 34 HY Sharada Prasad 2003 The Book I Won t be Writing and Other Essays Orient Blackswan p 22 ISBN 9788180280023 Vohra 1997 p 120 Shanta Sathe 1994 Lokmanya Tilak his social and political thoughts Ajanta p 49 Wolpert 1962 p 67 Mahesh Kumar Singh 1 January 2009 Encyclopaedia on Tilak Anmol Publications p 3 ISBN 978 81 261 3778 7 Chaturvedi p 144 FIRST TILAK TRIAL 1897 Bombay High Court Retrieved 29 February 2016 SECOND TILAK TRIAL 1909 Bombay High Court Retrieved 29 February 2016 THIRD TILAK TRIAL 1916 Bombay High Court Retrieved 29 February 2016 a b On Tilak s hundredth death anniversary what governments can learn from his two trials The Indian Express 1 August 2020 Retrieved 11 August 2020 Jinnah Tilak and Indian independence movement DAWN COM 17 March 2010 Retrieved 11 August 2020 a b Where Jinnah defended Tilak Hindustan Times 3 March 2010 Retrieved 11 August 2020 Remove portrait of judge who sentenced Bal Gangadhar Tilak Indian Express Mumbai 17 August 2012 Retrieved 7 January 2013 a b Tilak 1988 p 98 Davis 2015 p 131 Sukh Karta Dukh harta 17 September 2011 From the Archives May 10 1919 Mr Tilak and the Indian Situation The Hindu 10 May 2019 ISSN 0971 751X Retrieved 12 January 2020 N Jayapalan 2001 History of India Atlantic Publishers amp Dist p 78 ISBN 978 81 7156 917 5 From the Archives June 3 1919 Mr Tilak s Service Mr Gandhi s Speech The Hindu 3 June 2019 ISSN 0971 751X Retrieved 10 August 2019 M V S Koteswara Rao 2003 p 82 Tarique 2008 Harvey 1986 pp 321 331 Harvey 1986 pp 322 324 a b Jaffrelot 2005 p 177 a b P V Rao 2008 pp 141 148 a b Figueira 2002 p 129 P V Rao 2007 p 307 a b Omvedt 1974 pp 201 219 Gokhale 2008 p 147 Cashman 1975 pp 52 54 Forbes 1999 p 69 Lahiri 2000 p 13 Chandra 1996 pp 2937 2947 Rappaport 2003 p 429 Varma amp Agarwa 1978 Bhuyan 2003 p 191 Vedanta Kesari 1978 p 407 Yuva Bharati 1979 p 70 Bhagwat amp Pradhan 2015 p 226 Shepperdson amp Simmons 1988 p 109 Johnson 2005 p 104 Britannica 1997 p 772 a b Metcalf amp Metcalf 2006 p 152 Gellner 2009 p 34 Chakravarti 2013 p 125 www fergusson edu https www fergusson edu Retrieved 10 April 2022 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a Missing or empty title help Globalisation versus Swadeshi A tricky problem for Vajpayee South Asia Analysis Group Southasiaanalysis org Retrieved on 20 December 2018 Robert 1986 Tilak 1893 Sanjay Paswan Pramanshi Jaideva 2002 Encyclopaedia of Dalits in India Gyan Publishing House pp 123 124 ISBN 978 81 7835 128 5 Anupama Rao 2009 p 315 Sukhdeo Thorat 9th Dr Asghar Ali Engineer Memorial Lecture on 5th August 2017 Why Untouchability Caste Discrimination and Atrocities still persists despite Law Reflections on Causes for Persistence and Solutions PDF Centre for Study of Society and Secularism Retrieved 19 March 2018 Rajya Sabha Web Site PDF p 5 Retrieved 9 January 2011 Shoumojit Banerjee 16 March 2017 Mukta Tilak MBA is Pune s first BJP mayor The Hindu Archana More 11 August 2017 ROHIT TILAK S BAIL IN RAPE CASE EXTENDED BY COURT India Times Shalaka Shinde 19 July 2017 Great grandson of Bal Gangadhar Tilak charged with rape in Pune Hindustan Times Rajya Sabha Photo Gallery Lok Sabha Tilak family awaits 3 lakh coins Indian Express Pune 5 August 2007 Retrieved 7 January 2013 Flawed Tilak coin upsets many Pune Zee News 2 August 2007 Retrieved 7 January 2013 Lok Sabha Debates PDF eparlib nic in Second vol II p 6 1957 Ashish Rajadhyaksha Paul Willemen 10 July 2014 Encyclopedia of Indian Cinema Routledge p 274 ISBN 978 1 135 94318 9 Lokmanya Ek Yugapurush A film on Lokmanya Tilak Indian Express Mumbai 21 November 2014 Decade long wait over Bal Gangadhar Tilak film hits the screen The Times of India 2 August 2018 Sources The New Encyclopaedia Britannica Solovyov Truck vol 11 Encyclopaedia Britannica 1997 ISBN 9780852296332 The Vedanta Kesari vol 65 Ramakrishna Math 1978 Yuva Bharati vol 7 1979 Ashalatha A Koropath Pradeep Nambarathil Saritha 2009 6 Indian National Movement PDF Social Science Standard VIII Part 1 Government of Kerala Department of Education State Council of Educational Research and Training SCERT Bhagwat A K Pradhan G P 2015 Lokmanya Tilak A Biography Jaico Publishing House ISBN 978 81 7992 846 2 Bhuyan P R 2003 Swami Vivekananda Messiah of Resurgent India ISBN 978 81 269 0234 7 Brown Donald Mackenzie 1970 The Nationalist Movement Indian Political Thought from Ranade to Bhave University of California Press ISBN 9780520001831 Cashman Richard I 1975 The myth of the Lokamanya Tilak and mass politics in Maharashtra Berkeley University of California Press ISBN 978 0520024076 Chakravarti Uma 2013 Rewriting History The Life and Times of Pandita Ramabai Zubaan Books ISBN 9789383074631 Chandra Sudhir 1996 Rukhmabai Debate over Woman s Right to Her Person Economic and Political Weekly 31 44 2937 2947 JSTOR 4404742 Chaturvedi R P Great Personalities Upkar Prakashan Davis Richard H 2015 The Bhagavad Gita A Biography Princeton University Press ISBN 9781400851973 Edwardes Michael 1961 A History of India New York Farrar Straus and Cudahy Figueira Dorothy M 2002 Aryans Jews Brahmins Theorizing Authority through Myths of Identity State University of New York Press ISBN 9780791455326 Forbes Geraldine Hancock 1999 Women in Modern India vol 2 Cambridge University Press ISBN 9780521653770 Gellner David 2009 Ethnic Activism and Civil Society in South Asia SAGE ISBN 9789352802524 Gokhale Sandhya 2008 The Chitpavans social ascendancy of a creative minority in Maharashtra 1818 1918 Shubhi Publications ISBN 978 81 8290 132 2 Guha Ramachandra 2011 Makers of Modern India Cambridge Belknap Press of Harvard University Press Harvey Mark 1986 Secular as Sacred The Religio Political Rationalization of B G Tilak Modern Asian Studies 20 2 321 331 doi 10 1017 s0026749x00000858 JSTOR 312578 S2CID 145454162 Inamdar N R 1983 Political Thought and Leadership of Lokmanya Tilak Concept Publishing Company Jaffrelot Christophe 2005 Dr Ambedkar and Untouchability Fighting the Indian Caste System Columbia University Press ISBN 9780231136020 Jayapalan N 2003 8 Bal Gangadhar Tilak 1856 1920 Indian Political Thinkers Modern Indian Political Thought Atlantic Publishers and Distributers ISBN 81 7156 929 3 Johnson Gordon 2005 Provincial Politics and Indian Nationalism Bombay and the Indian National Congress 1880 1915 Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 61965 3 Karve D D 1961 The Deccan Education Society The Journal of Asian Studies 20 2 205 212 doi 10 2307 2050484 JSTOR 2050484 S2CID 161328407 Lahiri Shompa 2000 Indians in Britain Anglo Indian Encounters Race and Identity 1880 1930 ISBN 9780714649863 Metcalf Barbara D Metcalf Thomas R 2006 A Concise History of India 2nd ed Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0521682251 Omvedt Gail 1974 Non Brahmans and Nationalists in Poona Economic and Political Weekly 9 6 8 201 216 JSTOR 4363419 Popplewell Richard James 2018 Intelligence and Imperial Defence British Intelligence and the Defence of the Indian Empire 1904 1924 Routledge ISBN 9781135239336 Rao Anupama 2009 The Caste Question Dalits and the Politics of Modern India University of California Press ISBN 978 0 520 25761 0 Rao M V S Koteswara 2003 Communist parties and United Front experience in Kerala and West Bengal Prajasakti Book House ISBN 978 81 86317 37 2 Rao P V 2007 Women s Education and the Nationalist Response in Western India Part I Basic Education Indian Journal of Gender Studies 14 2 doi 10 1177 097152150701400206 S2CID 197651677 Rao P V 2008 Women s Education and the Nationalist Response in Western India Part II Higher Education Indian Journal of Gender Studies 15 1 doi 10 1177 097152150701500108 S2CID 143961063 Rappaport Helen 2003 Queen Victoria A Biographical Companion ABC CLIO ISBN 9781851093557 Robert Minor 1986 Modern Indian Interpreters of the Bhagavad Gita State University of NY press ISBN 0 88706 298 9 Shepperdson Mike Simmons Colin 1988 The Indian National Congress Party and Political Economy in India 1885 1985 ISBN 9780566050763 Singh Vipu Dhillon Jasmine Shanmugavel Gita Basu Sucharita 2011 History And Civics Pearson Education ISBN 9788131763186 Tahmankar D V 1956 Lokamany Tilak Father of Indian Unrest and Maker of Modern India 1st ed John Murray Tarique Mohammad 2008 Modern Indian History Tata McGraw Hill Education ISBN 978 0 07 066030 4 Tilak Bal Gangadhar 1988 Embree Ainslie Thomas ed Encyclopedia of Asian History New York Charles Scribner s Sons and Macmillan Publishing Company ISBN 9780684186191 Tilak Bal Gangadhar 1893 Orion or Researches into the Antiquities of the Vedas Varma Vishwanath Prasad Agarwa Lakshmi Narain 1978 The Life and Philosophy of Lokamanya Tilak With Excerpts from Original Sources Vohra Ranbir 1997 The Making of India A Historical Survey Armonk M E Sharpe Inc Wolpert Stanley A 1962 Tilak and Gokhale revolution and reform in the making of modern IndiaExternal linksBal Gangadhar Tilak at Wikipedia s sister projects Media from Commons Quotations from Wikiquote Texts from Wikisource Data from Wikidata Tilak Bal Gangadhar Encyclopaedia Britannica 12th ed 1922 Newspaper clippings about Bal Gangadhar Tilak in the 20th Century Press Archives of the ZBW Portals Hinduism India Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Bal Gangadhar Tilak amp oldid 1111331802, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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