Page 1
Have you ever thought of how children lived about two
hundred years ago? Nowadays most girls from middle-
class families go to school, and often study with boys. On
growing up, many of them go to colleges and universities,
and take up jobs after that. They have to be adults before
they are legally married, and according to law, they can
marry anyone they like, from any caste and community,
and widows can remarry too. All women, like all men,
can vote and stand for
elections. Of course, these
rights are not actually
enjoyed by all. Poor people
have little or no access to
education, and in many
families, women cannot
choose their husbands.
Two hundred years ago
things were very different.
Most children were married
off at an early age. Both
Hindu and Muslim men
could marry more than
one wife. In some parts of
the country, widows were
praised if they chose death
by burning themselves on
the funeral pyre of their husbands. Women who died in this
manner, whether willingly or otherwise, were called “sati”,
meaning virtuous women. Women’s rights to property were
also restricted. Besides, most women had virtually no access
to education. In many parts of the country people believed
that if a woman was educated, she would become a widow.
Women, Caste and
Reform
7
Fig. 1 – Sati, painted by
Balthazar Solvyn, 1813
This was one of the many
pictures of sati painted by the
European artists who came
to India. The practice of sati
was seen as evidence of the
barbarism of the East.
Chap 7.indd 78 8/31/2022 5:02:04 PM
Reprint 2024-25
Page 2
Have you ever thought of how children lived about two
hundred years ago? Nowadays most girls from middle-
class families go to school, and often study with boys. On
growing up, many of them go to colleges and universities,
and take up jobs after that. They have to be adults before
they are legally married, and according to law, they can
marry anyone they like, from any caste and community,
and widows can remarry too. All women, like all men,
can vote and stand for
elections. Of course, these
rights are not actually
enjoyed by all. Poor people
have little or no access to
education, and in many
families, women cannot
choose their husbands.
Two hundred years ago
things were very different.
Most children were married
off at an early age. Both
Hindu and Muslim men
could marry more than
one wife. In some parts of
the country, widows were
praised if they chose death
by burning themselves on
the funeral pyre of their husbands. Women who died in this
manner, whether willingly or otherwise, were called “sati”,
meaning virtuous women. Women’s rights to property were
also restricted. Besides, most women had virtually no access
to education. In many parts of the country people believed
that if a woman was educated, she would become a widow.
Women, Caste and
Reform
7
Fig. 1 – Sati, painted by
Balthazar Solvyn, 1813
This was one of the many
pictures of sati painted by the
European artists who came
to India. The practice of sati
was seen as evidence of the
barbarism of the East.
Chap 7.indd 78 8/31/2022 5:02:04 PM
Reprint 2024-25
WOMEN, CASTE AND REFORM 79
Differences between men and women were not the
only ones in society. In most regions, people were divided
along lines of caste. Brahmans and Kshatriyas considered
themselves as “upper castes”. Others, such as traders
and moneylenders (often referred to as Vaishyas) were
placed after them. Then came peasants, and artisans
such as weavers and potters (referred to as Shudras).
At the lowest rung were those who laboured to keep
cities and villages clean or worked at jobs that upper
castes considered “polluting”, that is, it could lead to
the loss of caste status. The upper castes also treated
many of these groups at the bottom as “untouchable”.
They were not allowed to enter temples, draw water
from the wells used by the upper castes, or bathe in
ponds where upper castes bathed. They were seen as
inferior human beings.
Over the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, many of
these norms and perceptions slowly changed. Let us see
how this happened.
Working Towards Change
From the early nineteenth century, we find debates and
discussions about social customs and practices taking on
a new character. One important reason for this was the
development of new forms of communication. For the
first time, books, newspapers, magazines, leaflets and
pamphlets were printed. These were far cheaper and far
more accessible than the manuscripts that you have read
about in Class VII. Therefore ordinary people could read
these, and many of them could also write and express their
ideas in their own languages. All kinds of issues – social,
political, economic and religious – could now be debated
and discussed by men (and sometimes by women as well)
in the new cities. The discussions could reach out to a
wider public, and could become linked to movements for
social change.
These debates were often initiated by Indian reformers
and reform groups. One such reformer was Raja
Rammohun Roy (1772–1833). He founded a reform
association known as the Brahmo Sabha (later known
as the Brahmo Samaj) in Calcutta. People such as
Rammohun Roy are described as reformers because
they felt that changes were necessary in society, and
unjust practices needed to be done away with. They
thought that the best way to ensure such changes was
by persuading people to give up old practices and adopt
a new way of life.
?
Activity
Can you think of the
ways in which social
customs and practices
were discussed in the
pre-printing age when
books, newspapers and
pamphlets were not
readily available?
Chap 7.indd 79 4/21/2022 12:23:24 PM
Reprint 2024-25
Page 3
Have you ever thought of how children lived about two
hundred years ago? Nowadays most girls from middle-
class families go to school, and often study with boys. On
growing up, many of them go to colleges and universities,
and take up jobs after that. They have to be adults before
they are legally married, and according to law, they can
marry anyone they like, from any caste and community,
and widows can remarry too. All women, like all men,
can vote and stand for
elections. Of course, these
rights are not actually
enjoyed by all. Poor people
have little or no access to
education, and in many
families, women cannot
choose their husbands.
Two hundred years ago
things were very different.
Most children were married
off at an early age. Both
Hindu and Muslim men
could marry more than
one wife. In some parts of
the country, widows were
praised if they chose death
by burning themselves on
the funeral pyre of their husbands. Women who died in this
manner, whether willingly or otherwise, were called “sati”,
meaning virtuous women. Women’s rights to property were
also restricted. Besides, most women had virtually no access
to education. In many parts of the country people believed
that if a woman was educated, she would become a widow.
Women, Caste and
Reform
7
Fig. 1 – Sati, painted by
Balthazar Solvyn, 1813
This was one of the many
pictures of sati painted by the
European artists who came
to India. The practice of sati
was seen as evidence of the
barbarism of the East.
Chap 7.indd 78 8/31/2022 5:02:04 PM
Reprint 2024-25
WOMEN, CASTE AND REFORM 79
Differences between men and women were not the
only ones in society. In most regions, people were divided
along lines of caste. Brahmans and Kshatriyas considered
themselves as “upper castes”. Others, such as traders
and moneylenders (often referred to as Vaishyas) were
placed after them. Then came peasants, and artisans
such as weavers and potters (referred to as Shudras).
At the lowest rung were those who laboured to keep
cities and villages clean or worked at jobs that upper
castes considered “polluting”, that is, it could lead to
the loss of caste status. The upper castes also treated
many of these groups at the bottom as “untouchable”.
They were not allowed to enter temples, draw water
from the wells used by the upper castes, or bathe in
ponds where upper castes bathed. They were seen as
inferior human beings.
Over the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, many of
these norms and perceptions slowly changed. Let us see
how this happened.
Working Towards Change
From the early nineteenth century, we find debates and
discussions about social customs and practices taking on
a new character. One important reason for this was the
development of new forms of communication. For the
first time, books, newspapers, magazines, leaflets and
pamphlets were printed. These were far cheaper and far
more accessible than the manuscripts that you have read
about in Class VII. Therefore ordinary people could read
these, and many of them could also write and express their
ideas in their own languages. All kinds of issues – social,
political, economic and religious – could now be debated
and discussed by men (and sometimes by women as well)
in the new cities. The discussions could reach out to a
wider public, and could become linked to movements for
social change.
These debates were often initiated by Indian reformers
and reform groups. One such reformer was Raja
Rammohun Roy (1772–1833). He founded a reform
association known as the Brahmo Sabha (later known
as the Brahmo Samaj) in Calcutta. People such as
Rammohun Roy are described as reformers because
they felt that changes were necessary in society, and
unjust practices needed to be done away with. They
thought that the best way to ensure such changes was
by persuading people to give up old practices and adopt
a new way of life.
?
Activity
Can you think of the
ways in which social
customs and practices
were discussed in the
pre-printing age when
books, newspapers and
pamphlets were not
readily available?
Chap 7.indd 79 4/21/2022 12:23:24 PM
Reprint 2024-25
80 OUR P ASTS – III
Rammohun Roy was keen to spread the knowledge of
Western education in the country and bring about greater
freedom and equality for women. He wrote about the way
women were forced to bear the burden of domestic work,
confined to the home and the kitchen, and not allowed to
move out and become educated.
Changing the lives of widows
Rammohun Roy was particularly moved by the problems
widows faced in their lives. He began a campaign against
the practice of sati.
Rammohun Roy was well versed in Sanskrit, Persian
and several other Indian and Europeon languages. He tried
to show through his writings that the practice of widow
burning had no sanction in ancient texts. By the early
nineteenth century, as you have read in Chapter 6, many
British officials had also begun to criticise Indian traditions
and customs. They were therefore, more than willing to
listen to Rammohun who was reputed to be a learned man.
In 1829, sati was banned.
The strategy adopted by Rammohun was used by
later reformers as well. Whenever they wished to
challenge a practice that seemed harmful, they tried
to find a verse or sentence in the ancient sacred texts
that supported their point of view. They then suggested
that the practice as it existed at present was against
early tradition.
Fig. 2 – Raja Rammohun Roy,
painted by Rembrandt Peale, 1833
Fig. 3 – Hook swinging
festival
In this popular festival,
devotees underwent a
peculiar form of suffering
as part of ritual worship.
With hooks pierced
through their skin they
swung themselves on
a wheel. In the early
nineteenth century, when
European officials began
c r i t i c i s i n g Indian customs
and rituals as barbaric,
this was one of the rituals
that came under attack.
Chap 7.indd 80 22-03-2024 09:24:12
Reprint 2024-25
Page 4
Have you ever thought of how children lived about two
hundred years ago? Nowadays most girls from middle-
class families go to school, and often study with boys. On
growing up, many of them go to colleges and universities,
and take up jobs after that. They have to be adults before
they are legally married, and according to law, they can
marry anyone they like, from any caste and community,
and widows can remarry too. All women, like all men,
can vote and stand for
elections. Of course, these
rights are not actually
enjoyed by all. Poor people
have little or no access to
education, and in many
families, women cannot
choose their husbands.
Two hundred years ago
things were very different.
Most children were married
off at an early age. Both
Hindu and Muslim men
could marry more than
one wife. In some parts of
the country, widows were
praised if they chose death
by burning themselves on
the funeral pyre of their husbands. Women who died in this
manner, whether willingly or otherwise, were called “sati”,
meaning virtuous women. Women’s rights to property were
also restricted. Besides, most women had virtually no access
to education. In many parts of the country people believed
that if a woman was educated, she would become a widow.
Women, Caste and
Reform
7
Fig. 1 – Sati, painted by
Balthazar Solvyn, 1813
This was one of the many
pictures of sati painted by the
European artists who came
to India. The practice of sati
was seen as evidence of the
barbarism of the East.
Chap 7.indd 78 8/31/2022 5:02:04 PM
Reprint 2024-25
WOMEN, CASTE AND REFORM 79
Differences between men and women were not the
only ones in society. In most regions, people were divided
along lines of caste. Brahmans and Kshatriyas considered
themselves as “upper castes”. Others, such as traders
and moneylenders (often referred to as Vaishyas) were
placed after them. Then came peasants, and artisans
such as weavers and potters (referred to as Shudras).
At the lowest rung were those who laboured to keep
cities and villages clean or worked at jobs that upper
castes considered “polluting”, that is, it could lead to
the loss of caste status. The upper castes also treated
many of these groups at the bottom as “untouchable”.
They were not allowed to enter temples, draw water
from the wells used by the upper castes, or bathe in
ponds where upper castes bathed. They were seen as
inferior human beings.
Over the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, many of
these norms and perceptions slowly changed. Let us see
how this happened.
Working Towards Change
From the early nineteenth century, we find debates and
discussions about social customs and practices taking on
a new character. One important reason for this was the
development of new forms of communication. For the
first time, books, newspapers, magazines, leaflets and
pamphlets were printed. These were far cheaper and far
more accessible than the manuscripts that you have read
about in Class VII. Therefore ordinary people could read
these, and many of them could also write and express their
ideas in their own languages. All kinds of issues – social,
political, economic and religious – could now be debated
and discussed by men (and sometimes by women as well)
in the new cities. The discussions could reach out to a
wider public, and could become linked to movements for
social change.
These debates were often initiated by Indian reformers
and reform groups. One such reformer was Raja
Rammohun Roy (1772–1833). He founded a reform
association known as the Brahmo Sabha (later known
as the Brahmo Samaj) in Calcutta. People such as
Rammohun Roy are described as reformers because
they felt that changes were necessary in society, and
unjust practices needed to be done away with. They
thought that the best way to ensure such changes was
by persuading people to give up old practices and adopt
a new way of life.
?
Activity
Can you think of the
ways in which social
customs and practices
were discussed in the
pre-printing age when
books, newspapers and
pamphlets were not
readily available?
Chap 7.indd 79 4/21/2022 12:23:24 PM
Reprint 2024-25
80 OUR P ASTS – III
Rammohun Roy was keen to spread the knowledge of
Western education in the country and bring about greater
freedom and equality for women. He wrote about the way
women were forced to bear the burden of domestic work,
confined to the home and the kitchen, and not allowed to
move out and become educated.
Changing the lives of widows
Rammohun Roy was particularly moved by the problems
widows faced in their lives. He began a campaign against
the practice of sati.
Rammohun Roy was well versed in Sanskrit, Persian
and several other Indian and Europeon languages. He tried
to show through his writings that the practice of widow
burning had no sanction in ancient texts. By the early
nineteenth century, as you have read in Chapter 6, many
British officials had also begun to criticise Indian traditions
and customs. They were therefore, more than willing to
listen to Rammohun who was reputed to be a learned man.
In 1829, sati was banned.
The strategy adopted by Rammohun was used by
later reformers as well. Whenever they wished to
challenge a practice that seemed harmful, they tried
to find a verse or sentence in the ancient sacred texts
that supported their point of view. They then suggested
that the practice as it existed at present was against
early tradition.
Fig. 2 – Raja Rammohun Roy,
painted by Rembrandt Peale, 1833
Fig. 3 – Hook swinging
festival
In this popular festival,
devotees underwent a
peculiar form of suffering
as part of ritual worship.
With hooks pierced
through their skin they
swung themselves on
a wheel. In the early
nineteenth century, when
European officials began
c r i t i c i s i n g Indian customs
and rituals as barbaric,
this was one of the rituals
that came under attack.
Chap 7.indd 80 22-03-2024 09:24:12
Reprint 2024-25
WOMEN, CASTE AND REFORM 81
“We first tie them down to the pile”
Rammohun Roy published many pamphlets to spread his
ideas. Some of these were written as a dialogue between the
advocate and critic of a traditional practice. Here is one such
dialogue on sati:
ADVOCATE OF SATI:
Women are by nature of inferior understanding,
without resolution, unworthy of trust … Many of them,
on the death of their husbands, become desirous of
accompanying them; but to remove every chance of
their trying to escape from the blazing fire, in burning
them we first tie them down to the pile.
OPPONENT OF SATI:
When did you ever afford them a fair opportunity
of exhibiting their natural capacity? How then can
you accuse them of want of understanding? If, after
instruction in knowledge and wisdom, a person cannot
comprehend or retain what has been taught him, we
may consider him as deficient; but if you do not educate
women how can you see them as inferior.
Fig. 4 – Swami Dayanand
Saraswati
Dayanand founded the Arya Samaj
in 1875, an organisation that
attempted to reform Hinduism.
For instance, one of the most famous reformers,
Ishwarchandra Vidyasagar, used the ancient texts to
suggest that widows could remarry. His suggestion was
adopted by British officials, and a law was passed in 1856
permitting widow remarriage. Those who were against
the remarriage of widows opposed Vidyasagar, and even
boycotted him.
By the second half of the nineteenth century, the
movement in favour of widow remarriage spread to other
parts of the country. In the Telugu-speaking areas of
the Madras Presidency, Veerasalingam Pantulu formed
an association for widow remarriage. Around the same
time, young intellectuals and reformers in Bombay
pledged themselves to working for the same cause. In
the north, Swami Dayanand Saraswati, who founded the
reform association called Arya Samaj, also supported
widow remarriage.
Yet, the number of widows who actually remarried
remained low. Those who married were not easily accepted
in society and conservative groups continued to oppose
the new law.
Source 1
?
Activity
This argument was
taking place more
than 175 years ago.
Write down the
different arguments
you may have heard
around you on the
worth of women. In
what ways have the
views changed?
Chap 7.indd 81 4/21/2022 12:23:30 PM
Reprint 2024-25
Page 5
Have you ever thought of how children lived about two
hundred years ago? Nowadays most girls from middle-
class families go to school, and often study with boys. On
growing up, many of them go to colleges and universities,
and take up jobs after that. They have to be adults before
they are legally married, and according to law, they can
marry anyone they like, from any caste and community,
and widows can remarry too. All women, like all men,
can vote and stand for
elections. Of course, these
rights are not actually
enjoyed by all. Poor people
have little or no access to
education, and in many
families, women cannot
choose their husbands.
Two hundred years ago
things were very different.
Most children were married
off at an early age. Both
Hindu and Muslim men
could marry more than
one wife. In some parts of
the country, widows were
praised if they chose death
by burning themselves on
the funeral pyre of their husbands. Women who died in this
manner, whether willingly or otherwise, were called “sati”,
meaning virtuous women. Women’s rights to property were
also restricted. Besides, most women had virtually no access
to education. In many parts of the country people believed
that if a woman was educated, she would become a widow.
Women, Caste and
Reform
7
Fig. 1 – Sati, painted by
Balthazar Solvyn, 1813
This was one of the many
pictures of sati painted by the
European artists who came
to India. The practice of sati
was seen as evidence of the
barbarism of the East.
Chap 7.indd 78 8/31/2022 5:02:04 PM
Reprint 2024-25
WOMEN, CASTE AND REFORM 79
Differences between men and women were not the
only ones in society. In most regions, people were divided
along lines of caste. Brahmans and Kshatriyas considered
themselves as “upper castes”. Others, such as traders
and moneylenders (often referred to as Vaishyas) were
placed after them. Then came peasants, and artisans
such as weavers and potters (referred to as Shudras).
At the lowest rung were those who laboured to keep
cities and villages clean or worked at jobs that upper
castes considered “polluting”, that is, it could lead to
the loss of caste status. The upper castes also treated
many of these groups at the bottom as “untouchable”.
They were not allowed to enter temples, draw water
from the wells used by the upper castes, or bathe in
ponds where upper castes bathed. They were seen as
inferior human beings.
Over the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, many of
these norms and perceptions slowly changed. Let us see
how this happened.
Working Towards Change
From the early nineteenth century, we find debates and
discussions about social customs and practices taking on
a new character. One important reason for this was the
development of new forms of communication. For the
first time, books, newspapers, magazines, leaflets and
pamphlets were printed. These were far cheaper and far
more accessible than the manuscripts that you have read
about in Class VII. Therefore ordinary people could read
these, and many of them could also write and express their
ideas in their own languages. All kinds of issues – social,
political, economic and religious – could now be debated
and discussed by men (and sometimes by women as well)
in the new cities. The discussions could reach out to a
wider public, and could become linked to movements for
social change.
These debates were often initiated by Indian reformers
and reform groups. One such reformer was Raja
Rammohun Roy (1772–1833). He founded a reform
association known as the Brahmo Sabha (later known
as the Brahmo Samaj) in Calcutta. People such as
Rammohun Roy are described as reformers because
they felt that changes were necessary in society, and
unjust practices needed to be done away with. They
thought that the best way to ensure such changes was
by persuading people to give up old practices and adopt
a new way of life.
?
Activity
Can you think of the
ways in which social
customs and practices
were discussed in the
pre-printing age when
books, newspapers and
pamphlets were not
readily available?
Chap 7.indd 79 4/21/2022 12:23:24 PM
Reprint 2024-25
80 OUR P ASTS – III
Rammohun Roy was keen to spread the knowledge of
Western education in the country and bring about greater
freedom and equality for women. He wrote about the way
women were forced to bear the burden of domestic work,
confined to the home and the kitchen, and not allowed to
move out and become educated.
Changing the lives of widows
Rammohun Roy was particularly moved by the problems
widows faced in their lives. He began a campaign against
the practice of sati.
Rammohun Roy was well versed in Sanskrit, Persian
and several other Indian and Europeon languages. He tried
to show through his writings that the practice of widow
burning had no sanction in ancient texts. By the early
nineteenth century, as you have read in Chapter 6, many
British officials had also begun to criticise Indian traditions
and customs. They were therefore, more than willing to
listen to Rammohun who was reputed to be a learned man.
In 1829, sati was banned.
The strategy adopted by Rammohun was used by
later reformers as well. Whenever they wished to
challenge a practice that seemed harmful, they tried
to find a verse or sentence in the ancient sacred texts
that supported their point of view. They then suggested
that the practice as it existed at present was against
early tradition.
Fig. 2 – Raja Rammohun Roy,
painted by Rembrandt Peale, 1833
Fig. 3 – Hook swinging
festival
In this popular festival,
devotees underwent a
peculiar form of suffering
as part of ritual worship.
With hooks pierced
through their skin they
swung themselves on
a wheel. In the early
nineteenth century, when
European officials began
c r i t i c i s i n g Indian customs
and rituals as barbaric,
this was one of the rituals
that came under attack.
Chap 7.indd 80 22-03-2024 09:24:12
Reprint 2024-25
WOMEN, CASTE AND REFORM 81
“We first tie them down to the pile”
Rammohun Roy published many pamphlets to spread his
ideas. Some of these were written as a dialogue between the
advocate and critic of a traditional practice. Here is one such
dialogue on sati:
ADVOCATE OF SATI:
Women are by nature of inferior understanding,
without resolution, unworthy of trust … Many of them,
on the death of their husbands, become desirous of
accompanying them; but to remove every chance of
their trying to escape from the blazing fire, in burning
them we first tie them down to the pile.
OPPONENT OF SATI:
When did you ever afford them a fair opportunity
of exhibiting their natural capacity? How then can
you accuse them of want of understanding? If, after
instruction in knowledge and wisdom, a person cannot
comprehend or retain what has been taught him, we
may consider him as deficient; but if you do not educate
women how can you see them as inferior.
Fig. 4 – Swami Dayanand
Saraswati
Dayanand founded the Arya Samaj
in 1875, an organisation that
attempted to reform Hinduism.
For instance, one of the most famous reformers,
Ishwarchandra Vidyasagar, used the ancient texts to
suggest that widows could remarry. His suggestion was
adopted by British officials, and a law was passed in 1856
permitting widow remarriage. Those who were against
the remarriage of widows opposed Vidyasagar, and even
boycotted him.
By the second half of the nineteenth century, the
movement in favour of widow remarriage spread to other
parts of the country. In the Telugu-speaking areas of
the Madras Presidency, Veerasalingam Pantulu formed
an association for widow remarriage. Around the same
time, young intellectuals and reformers in Bombay
pledged themselves to working for the same cause. In
the north, Swami Dayanand Saraswati, who founded the
reform association called Arya Samaj, also supported
widow remarriage.
Yet, the number of widows who actually remarried
remained low. Those who married were not easily accepted
in society and conservative groups continued to oppose
the new law.
Source 1
?
Activity
This argument was
taking place more
than 175 years ago.
Write down the
different arguments
you may have heard
around you on the
worth of women. In
what ways have the
views changed?
Chap 7.indd 81 4/21/2022 12:23:30 PM
Reprint 2024-25
82 OUR PASTS – III
Girls begin going to school
Many of the reformers felt that education for girls was
necessary in order to improve the condition of women.
Vidyasagar in Calcutta and many other reformers in
Bombay set up schools for girls. When the first schools
were opened in the mid-nineteenth century, many
people were afraid of them. They feared that schools
would take girls away from home, prevent them from
doing their domestic duties. Moreover, girls had to travel
through public places in order to reach school. Many
people felt that this would have a corrupting influence
on them. They felt that girls should stay away from
public spaces. Therefore, throughout the nineteenth
century, most educated women were taught at home by
liberal fathers or husbands. Sometimes women taught
themselves. Do you remember what you read about
Rashsundari Debi in your book Social and Political Life
last year? She was one of those who secretly learned
to read and write in the flickering light of candles
at night.
In the latter part of the century, schools for girls were
established by the Arya Samaj in Punjab, and Jyotirao
Phule in Maharashtra.
In aristocratic Muslim households in North India,
women learnt to read the Koran in Arabic. They were taught
by women who came home to teach. Some reformers such
as Mumtaz Ali reinterpreted verses from the Koran to argue
for women’s education. The first Urdu novels began to be
written from the late nineteenth century. Amongst other
things, these were meant to encourage women to read
about religion and domestic management in a language
they could understand.
Women write about
women
From the early twentieth
century, Muslim women
like the Begums of Bhopal
played a notable role in
promoting education among
women. They founded a
primary school for girls at
Aligarh. Another remarkable
woman, Begum Rokeya
Sakhawat Hossain started
schools for Muslim girls in
Patna and Calcutta. She
Fig. 5
Ishwarchandra Vidyasagar
Fig. 6 – Students of Hindu Mahila
Vidyalaya, 1875
When girls’ schools were first set
up in the nineteenth century, it
was generally believed that the
curriculum for girls ought to be
less taxing than that for boys.
The Hindu Mahila Vidyalaya
was one of the first institutions
to provide girls with the kind of
learning that was usual for boys
at the time.
Chap 7.indd 82 4/21/2022 12:23:31 PM
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