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Harichand Thakur

Harichand Thakur (হরিচাঁদ ঠাকুর) (30 March 1812 – 5 March 1878), worked among the untouchable people of Bengal Presidency. He formed the Matua sect of Hindus.[1]

Harichand Thakur
হরিচাঁদ ঠাকুর (Bengali)
Bornc. 30 March 1812
Died5 March 1878(1878-03-05) (aged 65)
Faridpur (Present day Bangladesh)
NationalityIndian
Occupation(s)Social and religious reformer
Known forUpliftment of the Dalits
ChildrenGuruchand Thakur
RelativesPramatha Ranjan Thakur (great-grandson)

Life edit

Harichand Thakur was born in a Namashudra (or avarna nee Chandala) peasant family in 1811[2](or 1812[3]) in the Orakandi village of Gopalganj District, Bangladesh of what was then Bengal Presidency (now a part of Bangladesh).[4][5] He was the son of Jashomanta Biswas (father) and Annapurna Devi (mother).[5][6] His family was a vaishnavite for generations[4] His grandfather Manchanram Biswas was a devout vaishnavite and known as Thakur Manchanram in the locality.[5] His father Jashomanta also inherited the same Thakur title from his grandfather and during the time of his father, his family adopted the surname Thakur abandoning their original surname Biswas.[5] He was married to Jagat Mata Shanti Mata and they had two sons. He was evicted from his native village Orakandi through the machinations of the village zamindar and finally he became settled in the village Orakandi of the same district.[5] He did cultivation and some small trading for his daily living.[5]

He was well known in the locality as a very religious person who has magical power. Because of that, many people of his community from his own village, as well as surrounding villages, came to him as a disciple. Eventually, he founded a sect of Vaishnavite Hinduism called Matua.[4][5] He did not believe in asceticism and preached the word of God staying within the family. According to him, the best ascetic is the person who can express his devotion to God remaining a family man (Grihete thakiya jar hay bhaboday. Sei je param sadhu janio nishchay).[6] He passed away at Faridpur District in 1878.

Social and Religious Reforms edit

People started gathering around him because of his religious nature as well as his miraculous power well known in the nearby locality.[5] According to historian Sekhar Bandyopadhyay, one day Thakur "experienced atma darshan or self-revelation, through which he realized that he was the incarnation of God himself, born in this world to bring salvation to the downtrodden".[7] After that he started preaching his own religious realization which is only based on Bhakti. According to his doctrine, all traditional rituals, except devotion to God, faith in mankind, and love for living beings, are meaningless and distortions from the real aim of attaining God.[5] During that time, lower-caste peoples in India were terribly oppressed and marginalized by the upper-caste people (mostly belong to the Vaishnav or Hindu Brahmin religions).[8][9] These downtrodden people did not have any right in anything. His simple doctrine attracted many adherents from his own marginalized community. However, higher caste Hindus and Vaishnavs distanced themselves from his religion.[5] He organized these downtrodden peoples of his own community under the banner of his new religious doctrine (known as Matua religion) and established Matua Mahasangha.[10] In one sense, he gave the religionless Namashudras a new religion, his own Matua religion and helped them to establish their own right.[3][11][8] His followers began to believe that he was gifted with supernatural power and can protect them from the Brahmanical cruel rules and regulations in the society. [12] They started considering him as God (Param Brahma) Harichand and as an avatar (incarnation) of Vishnu or Krishna. Thus, he became known as Sri Sri Harichand Thakur.[13][14] Although he initially attracted followers only from his community, later his religion attracted followers from other caste communities that were marginalised by the upper castes, including the Chamars, Malis, and Telis.[5][15]

His newly founded Matua religion is based on only three basic principles - Truth, Love, and Sanity.[12] He completely rejected the sermons of earlier Hindu saints which described the household as an illusion and family as the main obstacle on the path of attaining salvation. Earlier Hindu saints discouraged people toward family life by preaching One has to leave home to achieve Nirvana (attaining salvation). However, he said Let karma (work) be our religion.[16] There is no need for leaving home to lead a saintly life. He insisted that one can achieve salvation only through simple love and devotion to God. There is no need for initiation by a guru (Diksha) or pilgrimage. One can attain God by chanting Haribol and praying the God. All other mantras except the name of God and Harinam (Haribol) are just meaningless and distortions. He formulated his new Matua religion by combining the work with religion. He said haate kam mukhe nam (work in the hand and name of the God Hari in mouth).[16] He challenged the traditional Hindu belief which described the woman as an illusion (maya), the gateway to hell, and the main obstacle on the path of attaining God. However, he insisted on strict sexual discipline and family values for his followers.[5][12] According to his religion, all people are equal. He told his followers to treat everyone with the same dignity.[6][12][17]

He gave twelve instructions to his followers. These twelve instructions are: (I) Always speak the truth (II) Treat the woman as your mother-being; Respect the woman (III) Always respect your parents (IV) Treat your neighbors and all earthly living beings with love, pity, and kindness (V) Never discriminate on racial grounds (VI) Bring all the six passions of the mind under your control. These six passions of mind are - Lust, Anger, Greed, Infatuation, Pride, and Jealousy. (VII) Remain liberal to all other religions and creeds (VIII) Become honest in mind and activities and avoid saintly dress to adorn yourself with (IX) Perform your duties devotedly and utter the sacred Haribol and pray to God simultaneously (X) Build a temple of pure thoughts in your heart and soul and a temple of Shree Hariparameshwar at your dwelling place (XI) Pray daily to God with devotion and sanctity (XII) Sacrifice yourself to the cause of God.[17][12]

Legacy edit

After his death, one of his sons, Guruchand Thakur, himself a Chandala or avarna (born 1846), worked with C. S. Mead in a campaign to have the Chandala people recategorised as Namasudra. He established number of schools in his locality for the education of Dalit community.[18][19] According to Sekhar Bandyopadhyay, it was under the leadership of Guruchand that the Matua sect "achieved its doctrinal cohesion and organisational push, as it came to be associated with the Namasudra social protest movement started in 1872".[4]

A considerable body of Dalit literature that mixes religious and secular themes has emerged around Thakur and Matua. This includes biographies, promotions of the teachings and interpretations of the relationship to later events, such as the thoughts of B. R. Ambedkar and comparisons with the situation of black people in the US.[15]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Eye on Bengal votes, PM Modi to visit Matua mandir in Bangladesh". The Times of India. 14 March 2021.
  2. ^ Robb, Peter (2011). A History of India (2nd, revised ed.). Palgrave Macmillan. p. 255. ISBN 978-0-23034-549-2.
  3. ^ a b Sarkar, Sumit (1997). "Renaissance and Kaliyuga: Time, Myth, and History in Colonial Bengal". In Sider, Gerald M.; Smith, Gavin A. (eds.). Between History and Histories: The Making of Silences and Commemorations. University of Toronto Press. p. 115. ISBN 978-0-80207-883-4.
  4. ^ a b c d Bandyopadhyay, Sekhar (2004). Caste, Culture and Hegemony: Social Dominance in Colonial Bengal. SAGE. p. 96. ISBN 978-0-76199-849-5.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Bandyopadhyay, Sekhar (1997). Caste, Protest and Identity in Colonial India: The Namasudras of Bengal, 1872–1947. Curzon. p. 96. ISBN 978-0-70070-626-6.
  6. ^ a b c "New Vaisnavism and Sri Sri Harichand Thaku" (PDF). Retrieved 30 August 2021.
  7. ^ Bandyopadhyay, Sekhar (1995). "The Matua Sect and the Namasudras". In Ray, Rajat Kanta (ed.). Mind Body and Society: Life and Mentality in Colonial Bengal. Oxford University Press. p. 163. ISBN 019-563757-7.
  8. ^ a b "Historical Development of the Education of the Namasudras" (PDF). Retrieved 27 August 2021.
  9. ^ "Problem of Caste and Identity: The Namasudras of Colonial India" (PDF). Retrieved 27 August 2021.
  10. ^ "Bengal's unsung Namasudra movement". Retrieved 27 August 2021.
  11. ^ Sinharay, Praskanva (2015). "Building Up the Harichand-Guruchand Movement: The Politics of the Matua Mahansgha". In Chandra, Uday; Heierstad, Geir; Nielsen, Kenneth Bo (eds.). The Politics of Caste in West Bengal. Routledge. p. 152. ISBN 978-1-31741-477-3.
  12. ^ a b c d e "The Role of Sri Sri Hari Chand Thakur and Sri Sri Guru Chand Thakur to the Social Awakening Movement of the Namasudras: An overview" (PDF). Retrieved 30 August 2021.
  13. ^ Sinharay, Praskanva (2015). "Building Up the Harichand-Guruchand Movement: The Politics of the Matua Mahansgha". In Chandra, Uday; Heierstad, Geir; Nielsen, Kenneth Bo (eds.). The Politics of Caste in West Bengal. Routledge. p. 159. ISBN 978-1-31741-477-3.
  14. ^ Bandyopadhyay, Sekhar (1995). "The Matua Sect and the Namasudras". In Ray, Rajat Kanta (ed.). Mind Body and Society: Life and Mentality in Colonial Bengal. Oxford University Press. p. 173. ISBN 019-563757-7. Harichand, as many of the devotional songs of the sect indicate, was believed to have been the incarnation of Hari [Vishnu] or Krishna.
  15. ^ a b Mukherjee, Sipra (2015). "Creating Their Own Gods: Literature from the Margins of Bengal". In Abraham, Joshil K.; Misrahi-Barak, Judith (eds.). Dalit Literatures in India. Routledge. pp. 132, 140. ISBN 978-1-31740-880-2.
  16. ^ a b Thakur, Kapil Krishna (2009). "Harichand Thakur's Matua Movement and Dalit Awakening in Bengal". Voice of Dalit. 2: 37–44. doi:10.1177/0974354520090104. S2CID 164684840. Retrieved 31 August 2021.
  17. ^ a b "Twelve Doctrines of Shri Shri Harichand Thakur". Retrieved 28 August 2021.
  18. ^ "Orakandi's pilgrim Prime Minister of India: Look London see Paris? | AK (...) - Mainstream". mainstreamweekly.net. Retrieved 2021-04-10.
  19. ^ Biswas, Ratan Kumar (2010). Namasudra Movements In Bengal (1872-1947). Progressive Book Forum. pp. 158–160. ISBN 978-81-88006-19-9.
  • Hitesh Ranjan Sanyal : Social Mobility in Bengal, Calcutta, 1985, OCLC 654280803
  • Mandal, Mahitosh (2022). "Dalit Resistance during the Bengal Renaissance: Five Anti-Caste Thinkers from Colonial Bengal, India". Caste: A Global Journal on Social Exclusion. 3 (1): 11–30. doi:10.26812/caste.v3i1.367. S2CID 249027627.

harichand, thakur, হর, march, 1812, march, 1878, worked, among, untouchable, people, bengal, presidency, formed, matua, sect, hindus, হর, bengali, bornc, march, 1812, orakandi, gopalganj, bengal, presidency, british, india, present, bangladesh, died5, march, 1. Harichand Thakur হর চ দ ঠ ক র 30 March 1812 5 March 1878 worked among the untouchable people of Bengal Presidency He formed the Matua sect of Hindus 1 Harichand Thakurহর চ দ ঠ ক র Bengali Bornc 30 March 1812 Orakandi Gopalganj Bengal Presidency British India Present day Bangladesh Died5 March 1878 1878 03 05 aged 65 Faridpur Present day Bangladesh NationalityIndianOccupation s Social and religious reformerKnown forUpliftment of the DalitsChildrenGuruchand ThakurRelativesPramatha Ranjan Thakur great grandson Contents 1 Life 2 Social and Religious Reforms 3 Legacy 4 See also 5 ReferencesLife editHarichand Thakur was born in a Namashudra or avarna nee Chandala peasant family in 1811 2 or 1812 3 in the Orakandi village of Gopalganj District Bangladesh of what was then Bengal Presidency now a part of Bangladesh 4 5 He was the son of Jashomanta Biswas father and Annapurna Devi mother 5 6 His family was a vaishnavite for generations 4 His grandfather Manchanram Biswas was a devout vaishnavite and known as Thakur Manchanram in the locality 5 His father Jashomanta also inherited the same Thakur title from his grandfather and during the time of his father his family adopted the surname Thakur abandoning their original surname Biswas 5 He was married to Jagat Mata Shanti Mata and they had two sons He was evicted from his native village Orakandi through the machinations of the village zamindar and finally he became settled in the village Orakandi of the same district 5 He did cultivation and some small trading for his daily living 5 He was well known in the locality as a very religious person who has magical power Because of that many people of his community from his own village as well as surrounding villages came to him as a disciple Eventually he founded a sect of Vaishnavite Hinduism called Matua 4 5 He did not believe in asceticism and preached the word of God staying within the family According to him the best ascetic is the person who can express his devotion to God remaining a family man Grihete thakiya jar hay bhaboday Sei je param sadhu janio nishchay 6 He passed away at Faridpur District in 1878 Social and Religious Reforms editPeople started gathering around him because of his religious nature as well as his miraculous power well known in the nearby locality 5 According to historian Sekhar Bandyopadhyay one day Thakur experienced atma darshan or self revelation through which he realized that he was the incarnation of God himself born in this world to bring salvation to the downtrodden 7 After that he started preaching his own religious realization which is only based on Bhakti According to his doctrine all traditional rituals except devotion to God faith in mankind and love for living beings are meaningless and distortions from the real aim of attaining God 5 During that time lower caste peoples in India were terribly oppressed and marginalized by the upper caste people mostly belong to the Vaishnav or Hindu Brahmin religions 8 9 These downtrodden people did not have any right in anything His simple doctrine attracted many adherents from his own marginalized community However higher caste Hindus and Vaishnavs distanced themselves from his religion 5 He organized these downtrodden peoples of his own community under the banner of his new religious doctrine known as Matua religion and established Matua Mahasangha 10 In one sense he gave the religionless Namashudras a new religion his own Matua religion and helped them to establish their own right 3 11 8 His followers began to believe that he was gifted with supernatural power and can protect them from the Brahmanical cruel rules and regulations in the society 12 They started considering him as God Param Brahma Harichand and as an avatar incarnation of Vishnu or Krishna Thus he became known as Sri Sri Harichand Thakur 13 14 Although he initially attracted followers only from his community later his religion attracted followers from other caste communities that were marginalised by the upper castes including the Chamars Malis and Telis 5 15 His newly founded Matua religion is based on only three basic principles Truth Love and Sanity 12 He completely rejected the sermons of earlier Hindu saints which described the household as an illusion and family as the main obstacle on the path of attaining salvation Earlier Hindu saints discouraged people toward family life by preaching One has to leave home to achieve Nirvana attaining salvation However he said Let karma work be our religion 16 There is no need for leaving home to lead a saintly life He insisted that one can achieve salvation only through simple love and devotion to God There is no need for initiation by a guru Diksha or pilgrimage One can attain God by chanting Haribol and praying the God All other mantras except the name of God and Harinam Haribol are just meaningless and distortions He formulated his new Matua religion by combining the work with religion He said haate kam mukhe nam work in the hand and name of the God Hari in mouth 16 He challenged the traditional Hindu belief which described the woman as an illusion maya the gateway to hell and the main obstacle on the path of attaining God However he insisted on strict sexual discipline and family values for his followers 5 12 According to his religion all people are equal He told his followers to treat everyone with the same dignity 6 12 17 He gave twelve instructions to his followers These twelve instructions are I Always speak the truth II Treat the woman as your mother being Respect the woman III Always respect your parents IV Treat your neighbors and all earthly living beings with love pity and kindness V Never discriminate on racial grounds VI Bring all the six passions of the mind under your control These six passions of mind are Lust Anger Greed Infatuation Pride and Jealousy VII Remain liberal to all other religions and creeds VIII Become honest in mind and activities and avoid saintly dress to adorn yourself with IX Perform your duties devotedly and utter the sacred Haribol and pray to God simultaneously X Build a temple of pure thoughts in your heart and soul and a temple of Shree Hariparameshwar at your dwelling place XI Pray daily to God with devotion and sanctity XII Sacrifice yourself to the cause of God 17 12 Legacy editAfter his death one of his sons Guruchand Thakur himself a Chandala or avarna born 1846 worked with C S Mead in a campaign to have the Chandala people recategorised as Namasudra He established number of schools in his locality for the education of Dalit community 18 19 According to Sekhar Bandyopadhyay it was under the leadership of Guruchand that the Matua sect achieved its doctrinal cohesion and organisational push as it came to be associated with the Namasudra social protest movement started in 1872 4 A considerable body of Dalit literature that mixes religious and secular themes has emerged around Thakur and Matua This includes biographies promotions of the teachings and interpretations of the relationship to later events such as the thoughts of B R Ambedkar and comparisons with the situation of black people in the US 15 See also editGuruchand Thakur Pramatha Ranjan ThakurReferences edit Eye on Bengal votes PM Modi to visit Matua mandir in Bangladesh The Times of India 14 March 2021 Robb Peter 2011 A History of India 2nd revised ed Palgrave Macmillan p 255 ISBN 978 0 23034 549 2 a b Sarkar Sumit 1997 Renaissance and Kaliyuga Time Myth and History in Colonial Bengal In Sider Gerald M Smith Gavin A eds Between History and Histories The Making of Silences and Commemorations University of Toronto Press p 115 ISBN 978 0 80207 883 4 a b c d Bandyopadhyay Sekhar 2004 Caste Culture and Hegemony Social Dominance in Colonial Bengal SAGE p 96 ISBN 978 0 76199 849 5 a b c d e f g h i j k l Bandyopadhyay Sekhar 1997 Caste Protest and Identity in Colonial India The Namasudras of Bengal 1872 1947 Curzon p 96 ISBN 978 0 70070 626 6 a b c New Vaisnavism and Sri Sri Harichand Thaku PDF Retrieved 30 August 2021 Bandyopadhyay Sekhar 1995 The Matua Sect and the Namasudras In Ray Rajat Kanta ed Mind Body and Society Life and Mentality in Colonial Bengal Oxford University Press p 163 ISBN 019 563757 7 a b Historical Development of the Education of the Namasudras PDF Retrieved 27 August 2021 Problem of Caste and Identity The Namasudras of Colonial India PDF Retrieved 27 August 2021 Bengal s unsung Namasudra movement Retrieved 27 August 2021 Sinharay Praskanva 2015 Building Up the Harichand Guruchand Movement The Politics of the Matua Mahansgha In Chandra Uday Heierstad Geir Nielsen Kenneth Bo eds The Politics of Caste in West Bengal Routledge p 152 ISBN 978 1 31741 477 3 a b c d e The Role of Sri Sri Hari Chand Thakur and Sri Sri Guru Chand Thakur to the Social Awakening Movement of the Namasudras An overview PDF Retrieved 30 August 2021 Sinharay Praskanva 2015 Building Up the Harichand Guruchand Movement The Politics of the Matua Mahansgha In Chandra Uday Heierstad Geir Nielsen Kenneth Bo eds The Politics of Caste in West Bengal Routledge p 159 ISBN 978 1 31741 477 3 Bandyopadhyay Sekhar 1995 The Matua Sect and the Namasudras In Ray Rajat Kanta ed Mind Body and Society Life and Mentality in Colonial Bengal Oxford University Press p 173 ISBN 019 563757 7 Harichand as many of the devotional songs of the sect indicate was believed to have been the incarnation of Hari Vishnu or Krishna a b Mukherjee Sipra 2015 Creating Their Own Gods Literature from the Margins of Bengal In Abraham Joshil K Misrahi Barak Judith eds Dalit Literatures in India Routledge pp 132 140 ISBN 978 1 31740 880 2 a b Thakur Kapil Krishna 2009 Harichand Thakur s Matua Movement and Dalit Awakening in Bengal Voice of Dalit 2 37 44 doi 10 1177 0974354520090104 S2CID 164684840 Retrieved 31 August 2021 a b Twelve Doctrines of Shri Shri Harichand Thakur Retrieved 28 August 2021 Orakandi s pilgrim Prime Minister of India Look London see Paris AK Mainstream mainstreamweekly net Retrieved 2021 04 10 Biswas Ratan Kumar 2010 Namasudra Movements In Bengal 1872 1947 Progressive Book Forum pp 158 160 ISBN 978 81 88006 19 9 Hitesh Ranjan Sanyal Social Mobility in Bengal Calcutta 1985 OCLC 654280803 Mandal Mahitosh 2022 Dalit Resistance during the Bengal Renaissance Five Anti Caste Thinkers from Colonial Bengal India Caste A Global Journal on Social Exclusion 3 1 11 30 doi 10 26812 caste v3i1 367 S2CID 249027627 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Harichand Thakur amp oldid 1217532431, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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