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Brahmo Samaj

Brahmo Samaj (Bengali: ব্রহ্ম সমাজ, romanizedBrahmô Sômaj, Bengali pronunciation: [bram.ho ʃɔ.b̤a]) is the societal component of Brahmoism, which began as a monotheistic reformist movement that appeared during the Bengal Renaissance.

Brahmo Samaj
ScriptureBrahmo Dharma
TheologyMonotheism
Pradhanacharya-1Raja Ram Mohan Roy
Pradhanacharya-2Dwarkanath Tagore
Pradhanacharya-3Debendranath Tagore
AssociationsBrahmo Samaj (Adi Brahmo Samaj and Sadharan Brahmo Samaj)
FounderRaja Ram Mohan Roy
Origin28 August 1828 (194 years ago) (1828-08-28)
Calcutta, British India
Other name(s)Adi Dharm
Official websitetrue.brahmosamaj.in

It was one of the most influential religious movements in India[1] and made a significant contribution to the making of modern India.[2] It was started at Calcutta on 20 August 1828 by Raja Ram Mohan Roy and Dwarkanath Tagore as reformation of the prevailing customs of the time (specifically Kulin practices) and began the Bengal Renaissance of the 19th century pioneering all religious, social and educational advance of the Bengali community in the 19th century. Its Trust Deed was made in 1830 formalising its inception and it was duly and publicly inaugurated in January 1830 by the consecration of the first house of prayer, now known as the Adi Brahmo Samaj.[3] From the Brahmo Samaj springs Brahmoism, the most recent of legally recognised religions in India and Bangladesh, reflecting its foundation on reformed spiritual Hinduism with vital elements of Judeo-Islamic faith and practice.[4][5]

Meaning of the name

The Brahmo Samaj literally denotes community (Sanskrit: 'samaj') of men who worship Brahman the highest reality.[6] In reality Brahmo Samaj does not discriminate between caste, creed or religion and is an assembly of all sorts and descriptions of people without distinction, meeting publicly for the sober, orderly, religious and devout adoration of "the (nameless) unsearchable Eternal, Immutable Being who is the Author and Preserver of the Universe."[7]

Doctrine

The following doctrines, as noted in Renaissance of Hinduism, are common to all varieties and offshoots of the Brahmo Samaj:[8][9]

  • Brahmo Samajists denied that any scripture could enjoy the status of ultimate authority transcending human reason and conscience.
  • Brahmo Samajists have no faith in Avatars (incarnations)
  • Brahmo Samajists denounce polytheism and idol-worship.
  • Brahmo Samajists are against caste system.
  • Brahmo Samajists took no definite stand on the doctrine of karma and transmigration of soul (Rebirth) and left it to individual Brahmos to believe either way

Divisions of Brahmo Samaj

Anusthanic versus Ananusthanic (Non-Anusthanic) Brahmos

Anusthanic Brahmos comprise Adi Brahmos, Adi Dharmaites and many Sadharan Brahmos. Anusthanic Brahmos are exclusively adherents of the Brahmo religion and have no other faith.

The concept of the soul is anathema to Anusthanic Brahmos, which they consider to have been ruled out by the "1861 Anusthan"[citation needed] and they instead refer to the soul as "being". Every "being", which they consider immortal, is a part of God, who they see as the singularity, author and preserver of existence. "Beings" are sent out by God for a mission, "Kriya" on completion of which the "being" reintegrates (re-absorbs) into God.

For Anusthanic Brahmos the next step after death is this reintegration, re-absorption and renewal with God.

This corresponds to the 2nd "Adi" Prime Principle:[citation needed]

Being is created from Singularity. Being is renewed to Singularity. Being exists to be one again with Loving Singularity.

Ananusthanic (Non-Anusthanic Brahmos) believe in the concept of immortal souls eternally progressing towards God. This implies a karmic and fatalistic belief, which is different to Kriayic Brahmoism.[10]

History and timeline

Brahmo Sabha

On 20 August 1828 the first assembly of the Brahmo Sabha (progenitor of the Brahmo Samaj) was held at the North Calcutta house of Feringhee Kamal Bose. This day was celebrated by Brahmos as Bhadrotsab (ভাদ্রোৎসব Bhadrotshôb "Bhadro celebration"). These meetings were open to all Brahmins and there was no formal organisation or theology as such.[11][12]

On 8 January 1830 influential progressive members of the closely related Kulin Brahmin clan[13] scurrilously[14] described as Pirali Brahmin ie. ostracised for service in the Mughal Nizaamat of Bengal) of Tagore (Thakur) and Roy zameendar family mutually executed the Trust deed of Brahmo Sabha for the first Adi Brahmo Samaj (place of worship) on Chitpore Road (now Rabindra Sarani), Kolkata, India with Ram Chandra Vidyabagish as first resident superintendent.[15]

On 23 January 1830 or 11th Magh, the Adi Brahmo premises were publicly inaugurated (with about 500 Brahmins and 1 Englishman present). This day is celebrated by Brahmos as Maghotsab (মাঘোৎসব Maghotshôb "Magh celebration").

In November 1830 Rammohun Roy left for England. Akbar II had conferred the title of 'Raja' to Rammohun Roy.[16]

Brief Eclipse of Brahmo Sabha

By the time of Rammohun's death in 1833 near Bristol (UK), attendance at the Sabha dwindled and the Telugu Brahmins revived idolatry. The zameendars, being preoccupied in business, had little time for affairs of Sabha, and flame of Sabha was almost extinguished.

Tattwabodhini period

On 6 October 1839, Debendranath Tagore, son of Dwarkanath Tagore, established Tattvaranjini Sabha which was shortly thereafter renamed the Tattwabodhini ("Truth-seekers") Sabha. Initially confined to immediate members of the Tagore family, in two years it mustered over 500 members. In 1840, Debendranath published a Bangla translation of Katha Upanishad. A modern researcher describes the Sabha's philosophy as modern middle-class (bourgeois) Vedanta.[17]. Among its first members were the "two giants of Hindu reformation and Bengal Renaissance", Akshay Kumar Datta, who in 1839 emerged from the life of an "anonymous squalor-beset individual", and Ishwar Chandra Vidyasagar, the "indigenous modernizer".[18]

First Covenant and merger with the Tattwabodhini Sabha

On 7th Pous 1765 Shaka (1843) Debendranath Tagore and twenty other Tattwabodhini stalwarts were formally invited by Pt. Vidyabagish into the Trust of Brahmo Sabha. The Pous Mela at Santiniketan starts on this day.[19] From this day forth, the Tattwabodhini Sabha dedicated itself to promoting Ram Mohan Roy's creed.[20] The other Brahmins who swore the First Covenant of Brahmoism are:-

  • Shridhar Bhattacharya
  • Shyamacharan Bhattacharya
  • Brajendranath Tagore
  • Girindranath Tagore, brother of Debendranath Tagore & father of Ganendranath Tagore
  • Anandachandra Bhattacharya
  • Taraknath Bhattacharya
  • Haradev Chattopadhyaya, the future father-in-law to MahaAcharya Hemendranath Tagore[21]
  • Shyamacharan Mukhopadhyaya
  • Ramnarayan Chattopadhyaya
  • Sashibhushan Mukhopadhyaya

Foundation of the Brahmo Samaj

In 1861 the Brahmo Somaj (as it was spelled then) was founded at Lahore by Nobin Roy.[22] It included many Bengalis from the Lahore Bar Association. Many branches were opened in the Punjab, at Quetta, Rawalpindi, Amritsar etc.

First Secession

Disagreement with the Tattvabodhini came to a head publicly between the period of 1 August 1865 till November 1866 with many tiny splinter groups styling themselves as Brahmo. The most notable of these groups styled itself "Brahmo Samaj of India". This period is also referred to in the histories of the secessionists as the "First Schism".[23]

Brahmo Samaj and Swami Narendranath Vivekananda

Swami Vivekananda was influenced by the Brahmo Samaj of India, and visited the Sadharan Brahmo Samaj in his youth.[24]

Current status and number of adherents

While the various Calcutta sponsored movements declined after 1920 and faded into obscurity after the Partition of India, the Adi Dharm creed has expanded and is now the 9th largest of India's enumerated religions with 7.83 million adherents, heavily concentrated between the states of Punjab and Uttar Pradesh. In the Indian census of 2001 only 177 persons declared themselves a "Brahmo", but the number of subscriber members to Brahmo Samaj is somewhat larger at around 20,000 members.[25][26]

Social and religious reform

In matters of social reform the Brahmo samaj attacked many dogmas and superstitions. It condemned the prevailing Hindu prejudice against going abroad (Kala pani). The samaj condemned practice of Sati (burning of widows), discouraged child marriage and polygamy, and crusaded for widow remarriage. The samaj attacked casteism and untouchability, though in these matters it attained only limited success. The influence of the Brahmo samaj however didn't go much beyond Calcutta, at most, Bengal. It didn't have lasting impact.[27]

After the controversy of underage marriage of Keshub Chunder Sen's daughter, the Special Marriages Act of 1872 was enacted to set the minimum age of 14 years for marriage of girls.[28] All Brahmo marriages were thereafter solemnised under this law. Many Indians resented the requirement of the affirmation "I am not Hindu, nor a Mussalman, nor a Christian" for solemnising a marriage under this Act. The requirement of this declaration was imposed by Henry James Sumner Maine, legal member of Governor General's Council appointed by Britain. The 1872 Act was repealed by the Special Marriage Act, 1954 under which any person of any religion could marry. The Hindu Marriage Act, 1955 applies to all Hindus (including "followers" of the Brahmo Samaj) but not to the adherents of the Brahmo religion.

See also

References and notes

  1. ^ J. N. Farquhar, Modern Religious Movements of India (1915), p. 29.
  2. ^ "Brahmo Samaj and the making of modern India, David Kopf, publ. 1979 Princeton University Press (USA)."
  3. ^ Modern Religious movements in India, J. N. Farquhar (1915), p. 29 etc.
  4. ^ "Official Brahmo website". Brahmosamaj.in. from the original on 23 October 2014. Retrieved 15 October 2012.
  5. ^ "Bangladesh Law Commission" (PDF). (PDF) from the original on 3 March 2016. Retrieved 15 October 2012.
  6. ^ page 1 Chapter 1 Volume 1 History of the Brahmo Samaj by Sivanath Sastri, 1911, 1st edn. publisher R.Chatterji, Cornwallis St. Calcutta. Brahmo (ব্রাহ্ম bramho) literally means "one who worships Brahman", and Samaj (সমাজ shômaj) mean "community of men".
  7. ^ Trust deed of Brahmo Sabha 1830
  8. ^ Source: The Gazetteer of India, Volume 1: Country and people. Delhi, Publications Division, Government of India, 1965. CHAPTER VIII – Religion. HINDUISM by Dr. C.P.Ramaswami Aiyar, Dr. Nalinaksha Dutt, Prof. A.R.Wadia, Prof. M.Mujeeb, Dr.Dharm Pal and Fr. Jerome D'Souza, S.J.
  9. ^ Ahir, Rajiv (2018). A Brief History of Modern India. Spectrum Books (P) Limited. p. 212. ISBN 978-81-7930-688-8. from the original on 30 April 2022. Retrieved 14 April 2022.
  10. ^ "Anusthanic Brahmos, Ananusthnic Brahmo Samaj". World Brahmo Council. from the original on 3 September 2014. Retrieved 29 August 2014.
  11. ^ "Socio-Religious Reform Movements in British India" By Kenneth W. Jones page 33-34, publ. 1989 Cambridge Univ. Press. ISBN 0-521-24986-4 This Sabha was convened at Calcutta by religious reformer Raja Rammohun Roy for his family and friends settled there. The Sabha regularly gathered on Saturday between seven o'clock to nine o'clock. These were informal meetings of Bengali Brahmins (the "twice born"), accompanied by Upanishadic recitations in Sanskrit followed by Bengali translations of the Sanskrit recitation and singing of Brahmo hymns composed by Rammohun.
  12. ^ "Modern Religious movements in India, J.N.Farquhar (1915)"
  13. ^ "A History of Brahmin Clans" (Brāhmaṇa Vaṃshõ kā Itihāsa) in Hindi, by Dorilāl Śarmā, published by Rāśtriya Brāmhamana Mahāsabhā, Vimal Building, Jamirābād, Mitranagar, Masūdābād, Aligarh-1, 2nd edn. 1998. and also footnotes to Bengali Brahmin
  14. ^ . Banglapedia. 22 April 2009. Archived from the original on 3 July 2015. Retrieved 23 July 2015.
  15. ^ "Online copy of 1830 Trust Deed". brahmosamaj.in. from the original on 3 September 2014. Retrieved 15 October 2012.
  16. ^ Socio-Religious Reform Movements in British India By Kenneth W. Jones page 34, publ. 1989 Cambridge Univ. Press. ISBN 0-521-24986-4
  17. ^ <2007: Brian Hatcher "Journal of American Academy of Religion"
  18. ^ "Brahmo Samaj and the making of modern India, David Kopf, Princeton University press", pp 43–57
  19. ^ . Rabindrabharatiuniversity.net. Archived from the original on 7 March 2005. Retrieved 15 October 2012.
  20. ^ "Bourgeois Hinduism", Brian Allison Hatcher. pg 57–58.
  21. ^ "History of the Brahmo Samaj", S. Sastri. 2nd ed. p.81
  22. ^ page.4 "Pakistan journal of history and culture, Volume 11", by National Institute of Historical and Cultural Research (Pakistan)
  23. ^ Pt. Shivnath Shastri: Brahmo History- 1911.Page 106-107, 2nd ed.
  24. ^ Chattopadhyaya, Rajagopal (31 December 1999). Book: "Swami Vivekananda in India: A Corrective Biography". Motilal Banarsidass Publishers Private Limited. ISBN 9788120815865. from the original on 23 September 2022. Retrieved 23 March 2017.
  25. ^ . Brahmo.org. 25 July 2011. Archived from the original on 25 July 2011. Retrieved 15 October 2012.
  26. ^ Statewise census computation 3 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine by the Brahmo Conference Organisation
  27. ^ Ahir, Rajiv (2018). A Brief History of Modern India. Spectrum Books (P) Limited. pp. 215–216. ISBN 978-81-7930-688-8. from the original on 30 April 2022. Retrieved 14 April 2022.
  28. ^ "Brahma Sabha". Banglapedia. from the original on 23 July 2015. Retrieved 23 July 2015.

External links

  • The Brahmo Samaj
  • The Sadharan Brahmo Samaj
  • Brahmo Samaj.net
  • Brahmo Samaj in the Encyclopædia Britannica
  • Biography of Raja Rammohan Roy

brahmo, samaj, this, article, multiple, issues, please, help, improve, discuss, these, issues, talk, page, learn, when, remove, these, template, messages, this, article, includes, list, general, references, lacks, sufficient, corresponding, inline, citations, . This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This article includes a list of general references but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations Please help to improve this article by introducing more precise citations June 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article may contain indiscriminate excessive or irrelevant examples Please improve the article by adding more descriptive text and removing less pertinent examples See Wikipedia s guide to writing better articles for further suggestions June 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message Brahmo Samaj Bengali ব রহ ম সম জ romanized Brahmo Somaj Bengali pronunciation bram ho ʃɔ b a is the societal component of Brahmoism which began as a monotheistic reformist movement that appeared during the Bengal Renaissance Brahmo SamajScriptureBrahmo DharmaTheologyMonotheismPradhanacharya 1Raja Ram Mohan RoyPradhanacharya 2Dwarkanath TagorePradhanacharya 3Debendranath TagoreAssociationsBrahmo Samaj Adi Brahmo Samaj and Sadharan Brahmo Samaj FounderRaja Ram Mohan RoyOrigin28 August 1828 194 years ago 1828 08 28 Calcutta British IndiaOther name s Adi DharmOfficial websitetrue wbr brahmosamaj wbr inIt was one of the most influential religious movements in India 1 and made a significant contribution to the making of modern India 2 It was started at Calcutta on 20 August 1828 by Raja Ram Mohan Roy and Dwarkanath Tagore as reformation of the prevailing customs of the time specifically Kulin practices and began the Bengal Renaissance of the 19th century pioneering all religious social and educational advance of the Bengali community in the 19th century Its Trust Deed was made in 1830 formalising its inception and it was duly and publicly inaugurated in January 1830 by the consecration of the first house of prayer now known as the Adi Brahmo Samaj 3 From the Brahmo Samaj springs Brahmoism the most recent of legally recognised religions in India and Bangladesh reflecting its foundation on reformed spiritual Hinduism with vital elements of Judeo Islamic faith and practice 4 5 Contents 1 Meaning of the name 2 Doctrine 3 Divisions of Brahmo Samaj 3 1 Anusthanic versus Ananusthanic Non Anusthanic Brahmos 4 History and timeline 4 1 Brahmo Sabha 4 2 Brief Eclipse of Brahmo Sabha 4 3 Tattwabodhini period 4 4 First Covenant and merger with the Tattwabodhini Sabha 4 5 Foundation of the Brahmo Samaj 4 6 First Secession 4 7 Brahmo Samaj and Swami Narendranath Vivekananda 4 8 Current status and number of adherents 5 Social and religious reform 6 See also 7 References and notes 8 External linksMeaning of the name EditThe Brahmo Samaj literally denotes community Sanskrit samaj of men who worship Brahman the highest reality 6 In reality Brahmo Samaj does not discriminate between caste creed or religion and is an assembly of all sorts and descriptions of people without distinction meeting publicly for the sober orderly religious and devout adoration of the nameless unsearchable Eternal Immutable Being who is the Author and Preserver of the Universe 7 Doctrine EditThe following doctrines as noted in Renaissance of Hinduism are common to all varieties and offshoots of the Brahmo Samaj 8 9 Brahmo Samajists denied that any scripture could enjoy the status of ultimate authority transcending human reason and conscience Brahmo Samajists have no faith in Avatars incarnations Brahmo Samajists denounce polytheism and idol worship Brahmo Samajists are against caste system Brahmo Samajists took no definite stand on the doctrine of karma and transmigration of soul Rebirth and left it to individual Brahmos to believe either wayDivisions of Brahmo Samaj EditAdi Brahmo Samaj Sadharan Brahmo SamajAnusthanic versus Ananusthanic Non Anusthanic Brahmos Edit Anusthanic Brahmos comprise Adi Brahmos Adi Dharmaites and many Sadharan Brahmos Anusthanic Brahmos are exclusively adherents of the Brahmo religion and have no other faith The concept of the soul is anathema to Anusthanic Brahmos which they consider to have been ruled out by the 1861 Anusthan citation needed and they instead refer to the soul as being Every being which they consider immortal is a part of God who they see as the singularity author and preserver of existence Beings are sent out by God for a mission Kriya on completion of which the being reintegrates re absorbs into God For Anusthanic Brahmos the next step after death is this reintegration re absorption and renewal with God This corresponds to the 2nd Adi Prime Principle citation needed Being is created from Singularity Being is renewed to Singularity Being exists to be one again with Loving Singularity Ananusthanic Non Anusthanic Brahmos believe in the concept of immortal souls eternally progressing towards God This implies a karmic and fatalistic belief which is different to Kriayic Brahmoism 10 History and timeline EditBrahmo Sabha Edit On 20 August 1828 the first assembly of the Brahmo Sabha progenitor of the Brahmo Samaj was held at the North Calcutta house of Feringhee Kamal Bose This day was celebrated by Brahmos as Bhadrotsab ভ দ র ৎসব Bhadrotshob Bhadro celebration These meetings were open to all Brahmins and there was no formal organisation or theology as such 11 12 On 8 January 1830 influential progressive members of the closely related Kulin Brahmin clan 13 scurrilously 14 described as Pirali Brahmin ie ostracised for service in the Mughal Nizaamat of Bengal of Tagore Thakur and Roy zameendar family mutually executed the Trust deed of Brahmo Sabha for the first Adi Brahmo Samaj place of worship on Chitpore Road now Rabindra Sarani Kolkata India with Ram Chandra Vidyabagish as first resident superintendent 15 On 23 January 1830 or 11th Magh the Adi Brahmo premises were publicly inaugurated with about 500 Brahmins and 1 Englishman present This day is celebrated by Brahmos as Maghotsab ম ঘ ৎসব Maghotshob Magh celebration In November 1830 Rammohun Roy left for England Akbar II had conferred the title of Raja to Rammohun Roy 16 Brief Eclipse of Brahmo Sabha Edit By the time of Rammohun s death in 1833 near Bristol UK attendance at the Sabha dwindled and the Telugu Brahmins revived idolatry The zameendars being preoccupied in business had little time for affairs of Sabha and flame of Sabha was almost extinguished Tattwabodhini period Edit On 6 October 1839 Debendranath Tagore son of Dwarkanath Tagore established Tattvaranjini Sabha which was shortly thereafter renamed the Tattwabodhini Truth seekers Sabha Initially confined to immediate members of the Tagore family in two years it mustered over 500 members In 1840 Debendranath published a Bangla translation of Katha Upanishad A modern researcher describes the Sabha s philosophy as modern middle class bourgeois Vedanta 17 Among its first members were the two giants of Hindu reformation and Bengal Renaissance Akshay Kumar Datta who in 1839 emerged from the life of an anonymous squalor beset individual and Ishwar Chandra Vidyasagar the indigenous modernizer 18 First Covenant and merger with the Tattwabodhini Sabha Edit On 7th Pous 1765 Shaka 1843 Debendranath Tagore and twenty other Tattwabodhini stalwarts were formally invited by Pt Vidyabagish into the Trust of Brahmo Sabha The Pous Mela at Santiniketan starts on this day 19 From this day forth the Tattwabodhini Sabha dedicated itself to promoting Ram Mohan Roy s creed 20 The other Brahmins who swore the First Covenant of Brahmoism are Shridhar Bhattacharya Shyamacharan Bhattacharya Brajendranath Tagore Girindranath Tagore brother of Debendranath Tagore amp father of Ganendranath Tagore Anandachandra Bhattacharya Taraknath Bhattacharya Haradev Chattopadhyaya the future father in law to MahaAcharya Hemendranath Tagore 21 Shyamacharan Mukhopadhyaya Ramnarayan Chattopadhyaya Sashibhushan MukhopadhyayaFoundation of the Brahmo Samaj Edit In 1861 the Brahmo Somaj as it was spelled then was founded at Lahore by Nobin Roy 22 It included many Bengalis from the Lahore Bar Association Many branches were opened in the Punjab at Quetta Rawalpindi Amritsar etc First Secession Edit Disagreement with the Tattvabodhini came to a head publicly between the period of 1 August 1865 till November 1866 with many tiny splinter groups styling themselves as Brahmo The most notable of these groups styled itself Brahmo Samaj of India This period is also referred to in the histories of the secessionists as the First Schism 23 Brahmo Samaj and Swami Narendranath Vivekananda Edit Swami Vivekananda was influenced by the Brahmo Samaj of India and visited the Sadharan Brahmo Samaj in his youth 24 Current status and number of adherents Edit While the various Calcutta sponsored movements declined after 1920 and faded into obscurity after the Partition of India the Adi Dharm creed has expanded and is now the 9th largest of India s enumerated religions with 7 83 million adherents heavily concentrated between the states of Punjab and Uttar Pradesh In the Indian census of 2001 only 177 persons declared themselves a Brahmo but the number of subscriber members to Brahmo Samaj is somewhat larger at around 20 000 members 25 26 Social and religious reform EditIn matters of social reform the Brahmo samaj attacked many dogmas and superstitions It condemned the prevailing Hindu prejudice against going abroad Kala pani The samaj condemned practice of Sati burning of widows discouraged child marriage and polygamy and crusaded for widow remarriage The samaj attacked casteism and untouchability though in these matters it attained only limited success The influence of the Brahmo samaj however didn t go much beyond Calcutta at most Bengal It didn t have lasting impact 27 After the controversy of underage marriage of Keshub Chunder Sen s daughter the Special Marriages Act of 1872 was enacted to set the minimum age of 14 years for marriage of girls 28 All Brahmo marriages were thereafter solemnised under this law Many Indians resented the requirement of the affirmation I am not Hindu nor a Mussalman nor a Christian for solemnising a marriage under this Act The requirement of this declaration was imposed by Henry James Sumner Maine legal member of Governor General s Council appointed by Britain The 1872 Act was repealed by the Special Marriage Act 1954 under which any person of any religion could marry The Hindu Marriage Act 1955 applies to all Hindus including followers of the Brahmo Samaj but not to the adherents of the Brahmo religion See also Edit Hinduism portal India portal Society portal History portalHistory of Bengal Arya Samaj Brahmo Prarthana Samaj Tattwabodhini Patrika Brahmosamaj Kerala and Dr Ayyathan GopalanReferences and notes Edit J N Farquhar Modern Religious Movements of India 1915 p 29 Brahmo Samaj and the making of modern India David Kopf publ 1979 Princeton University Press USA Modern Religious movements in India J N Farquhar 1915 p 29 etc Official Brahmo website Brahmosamaj in Archived from the original on 23 October 2014 Retrieved 15 October 2012 Bangladesh Law Commission PDF Archived PDF from the original on 3 March 2016 Retrieved 15 October 2012 page 1 Chapter 1 Volume 1 History of the Brahmo Samaj by Sivanath Sastri 1911 1st edn publisher R Chatterji Cornwallis St Calcutta Brahmo ব র হ ম bramho literally means one who worships Brahman and Samaj সম জ shomaj mean community of men Trust deed of Brahmo Sabha 1830 Source The Gazetteer of India Volume 1 Country and people Delhi Publications Division Government of India 1965 CHAPTER VIII Religion HINDUISM by Dr C P Ramaswami Aiyar Dr Nalinaksha Dutt Prof A R Wadia Prof M Mujeeb Dr Dharm Pal and Fr Jerome D Souza S J Ahir Rajiv 2018 A Brief History of Modern India Spectrum Books P Limited p 212 ISBN 978 81 7930 688 8 Archived from the original on 30 April 2022 Retrieved 14 April 2022 Anusthanic Brahmos Ananusthnic Brahmo Samaj World Brahmo Council Archived from the original on 3 September 2014 Retrieved 29 August 2014 Socio Religious Reform Movements in British India By Kenneth W Jones page 33 34 publ 1989 Cambridge Univ Press ISBN 0 521 24986 4 This Sabha was convened at Calcutta by religious reformer Raja Rammohun Roy for his family and friends settled there The Sabha regularly gathered on Saturday between seven o clock to nine o clock These were informal meetings of Bengali Brahmins the twice born accompanied by Upanishadic recitations in Sanskrit followed by Bengali translations of the Sanskrit recitation and singing of Brahmo hymns composed by Rammohun Modern Religious movements in India J N Farquhar 1915 A History of Brahmin Clans Brahmaṇa Vaṃsho ka Itihasa in Hindi by Dorilal Sarma published by Rastriya Bramhamana Mahasabha Vimal Building Jamirabad Mitranagar Masudabad Aligarh 1 2nd edn 1998 and also footnotes to Bengali Brahmin Tagore Prince Dwarkanath Banglapedia 22 April 2009 Archived from the original on 3 July 2015 Retrieved 23 July 2015 Online copy of 1830 Trust Deed brahmosamaj in Archived from the original on 3 September 2014 Retrieved 15 October 2012 Socio Religious Reform Movements in British India By Kenneth W Jones page 34 publ 1989 Cambridge Univ Press ISBN 0 521 24986 4 lt 2007 Brian Hatcher Journal of American Academy of Religion Brahmo Samaj and the making of modern India David Kopf Princeton University press pp 43 57 Rabindra Bharati Museum Kolkata The Tagores amp Society Rabindrabharatiuniversity net Archived from the original on 7 March 2005 Retrieved 15 October 2012 Bourgeois Hinduism Brian Allison Hatcher pg 57 58 History of the Brahmo Samaj S Sastri 2nd ed p 81 page 4 Pakistan journal of history and culture Volume 11 by National Institute of Historical and Cultural Research Pakistan Pt Shivnath Shastri Brahmo History 1911 Page 106 107 2nd ed Chattopadhyaya Rajagopal 31 December 1999 Book Swami Vivekananda in India A Corrective Biography Motilal Banarsidass Publishers Private Limited ISBN 9788120815865 Archived from the original on 23 September 2022 Retrieved 23 March 2017 Brahmo Samaj FAQ Frequently asked Questions Brahmo org 25 July 2011 Archived from the original on 25 July 2011 Retrieved 15 October 2012 Statewise census computation Archived 3 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine by the Brahmo Conference Organisation Ahir Rajiv 2018 A Brief History of Modern India Spectrum Books P Limited pp 215 216 ISBN 978 81 7930 688 8 Archived from the original on 30 April 2022 Retrieved 14 April 2022 Brahma Sabha Banglapedia Archived from the original on 23 July 2015 Retrieved 23 July 2015 External links Edit Wikiquote has quotations related to Brahmo Samaj The Brahmo Samaj The Sadharan Brahmo Samaj Brahmo Samaj net Brahmo Samaj in the Encyclopaedia Britannica Biography of Raja Rammohan Roy Portals Hinduism India Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Brahmo Samaj amp oldid 1154101095, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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