Page 1
Socio-Religious
Reforms
in the 19
th
Century
Page 2
Socio-Religious
Reforms
in the 19
th
Century
Causes of Social
Awakening
The Impact of British rule
• The British conquest and the consequent dissemination of colonial
culture and ideology led to an inevitable introspection about the
strengths and weaknesses of indigenous culture and institutions.
The effort of the European Orientalists
• They put India’s glorious past into limelight. This includes work done by
Sir William Jones, James Princep, Charles Wilkins, Max Muller etc.
• Further, many Indian scholars such as Raja Rammohan Roy, Radhakanta
Deb, Rajendralal Mitra, MG Ranade etc. also contributed in
reinterpreting India’s past.
Highly creative literature
• Marked by fusion of old and new
The detrimental effect of the Christian missionaries
• They held that propaganda of Christianity in India would serve Britain’s
imperial interests; and would secure the empire. The Indians took it as
an onslaught on their religion and social customs. They wanted to
reform it so that evil social practices could be removed from society.
Page 3
Socio-Religious
Reforms
in the 19
th
Century
Causes of Social
Awakening
The Impact of British rule
• The British conquest and the consequent dissemination of colonial
culture and ideology led to an inevitable introspection about the
strengths and weaknesses of indigenous culture and institutions.
The effort of the European Orientalists
• They put India’s glorious past into limelight. This includes work done by
Sir William Jones, James Princep, Charles Wilkins, Max Muller etc.
• Further, many Indian scholars such as Raja Rammohan Roy, Radhakanta
Deb, Rajendralal Mitra, MG Ranade etc. also contributed in
reinterpreting India’s past.
Highly creative literature
• Marked by fusion of old and new
The detrimental effect of the Christian missionaries
• They held that propaganda of Christianity in India would serve Britain’s
imperial interests; and would secure the empire. The Indians took it as
an onslaught on their religion and social customs. They wanted to
reform it so that evil social practices could be removed from society.
Social Conditions
that facilitated the
Reforms
Religious and Social Ills
Indian society in the nineteenth century was caught in a vicious web created by
religious superstitions and social obscurantism. Hinduism had become steeped in
magic and superstition. Idolatry and polytheism helped to reinforce their position,
and their monopoly of scriptural knowledge imparted a deceptive character to all
religious systems.
Depressing Position of Women
Attempts to kill female infants at birth were not unusual. Child marriage was another
bane of society. The practice of polygamy prevailed and in Bengal, under Kulinism,
even old men took very young girls as wives. Several women hardly had a married life
worth the name, yet (at least among the higher castes) when their husbands died
they were expected to commit sati. If they escaped this social coercion, they were
condemned to a life of misery and humiliation.
The Caste Problem
This entailed a system of segregation, hierarchically ordained on the basis of ritual
status. At the bottom of the ladder came the untouchables or scheduled castes, as
they came to be called later. The untouchables suffered from numerous and severe
disabilities and restrictions. The system splintered people into numerous groups.
Caste consciousness, particularly with regard to marriage, prevailed also among
Muslims, Christians and Sikhs who also practised untouchability, though in a less
virulent form. Under a rigid caste system, social mobility was checked, social
divisions grew, and individual initiative was thwarted. Above all, the humiliation of
untouchability—so much a part of the caste system—militated against human dignity.
Page 4
Socio-Religious
Reforms
in the 19
th
Century
Causes of Social
Awakening
The Impact of British rule
• The British conquest and the consequent dissemination of colonial
culture and ideology led to an inevitable introspection about the
strengths and weaknesses of indigenous culture and institutions.
The effort of the European Orientalists
• They put India’s glorious past into limelight. This includes work done by
Sir William Jones, James Princep, Charles Wilkins, Max Muller etc.
• Further, many Indian scholars such as Raja Rammohan Roy, Radhakanta
Deb, Rajendralal Mitra, MG Ranade etc. also contributed in
reinterpreting India’s past.
Highly creative literature
• Marked by fusion of old and new
The detrimental effect of the Christian missionaries
• They held that propaganda of Christianity in India would serve Britain’s
imperial interests; and would secure the empire. The Indians took it as
an onslaught on their religion and social customs. They wanted to
reform it so that evil social practices could be removed from society.
Social Conditions
that facilitated the
Reforms
Religious and Social Ills
Indian society in the nineteenth century was caught in a vicious web created by
religious superstitions and social obscurantism. Hinduism had become steeped in
magic and superstition. Idolatry and polytheism helped to reinforce their position,
and their monopoly of scriptural knowledge imparted a deceptive character to all
religious systems.
Depressing Position of Women
Attempts to kill female infants at birth were not unusual. Child marriage was another
bane of society. The practice of polygamy prevailed and in Bengal, under Kulinism,
even old men took very young girls as wives. Several women hardly had a married life
worth the name, yet (at least among the higher castes) when their husbands died
they were expected to commit sati. If they escaped this social coercion, they were
condemned to a life of misery and humiliation.
The Caste Problem
This entailed a system of segregation, hierarchically ordained on the basis of ritual
status. At the bottom of the ladder came the untouchables or scheduled castes, as
they came to be called later. The untouchables suffered from numerous and severe
disabilities and restrictions. The system splintered people into numerous groups.
Caste consciousness, particularly with regard to marriage, prevailed also among
Muslims, Christians and Sikhs who also practised untouchability, though in a less
virulent form. Under a rigid caste system, social mobility was checked, social
divisions grew, and individual initiative was thwarted. Above all, the humiliation of
untouchability—so much a part of the caste system—militated against human dignity.
Other Conditions
that facilitated the
Reforms
Opposition to Western Culture
The establishment of colonial rule in India was followed by a systematic attempt to
disseminate colonial culture and ideology as the dominant cultural current.
Faced with the challenge of the intrusion of colonial culture and ideology, an attempt
to reinvigorate traditional institutions and to realize the potential of traditional
culture developed during the nineteenth century.
New Awareness among Enlightened Indians
There was an awareness that a vast country like India had been colonized by a
handful of foreigners because of weaknesses within the Indian social structure and
culture.
Some English-educated Bengali youth developed a revulsion for Hindu religion and
culture, gave up old religious ideas and traditions and deliberately adopted practices
most offensive to Hindu sentiments, such as drinking wine and eating beef.
The response, indeed, was varied but the need to reform social and religious life was
a commonly shared conviction.
Page 5
Socio-Religious
Reforms
in the 19
th
Century
Causes of Social
Awakening
The Impact of British rule
• The British conquest and the consequent dissemination of colonial
culture and ideology led to an inevitable introspection about the
strengths and weaknesses of indigenous culture and institutions.
The effort of the European Orientalists
• They put India’s glorious past into limelight. This includes work done by
Sir William Jones, James Princep, Charles Wilkins, Max Muller etc.
• Further, many Indian scholars such as Raja Rammohan Roy, Radhakanta
Deb, Rajendralal Mitra, MG Ranade etc. also contributed in
reinterpreting India’s past.
Highly creative literature
• Marked by fusion of old and new
The detrimental effect of the Christian missionaries
• They held that propaganda of Christianity in India would serve Britain’s
imperial interests; and would secure the empire. The Indians took it as
an onslaught on their religion and social customs. They wanted to
reform it so that evil social practices could be removed from society.
Social Conditions
that facilitated the
Reforms
Religious and Social Ills
Indian society in the nineteenth century was caught in a vicious web created by
religious superstitions and social obscurantism. Hinduism had become steeped in
magic and superstition. Idolatry and polytheism helped to reinforce their position,
and their monopoly of scriptural knowledge imparted a deceptive character to all
religious systems.
Depressing Position of Women
Attempts to kill female infants at birth were not unusual. Child marriage was another
bane of society. The practice of polygamy prevailed and in Bengal, under Kulinism,
even old men took very young girls as wives. Several women hardly had a married life
worth the name, yet (at least among the higher castes) when their husbands died
they were expected to commit sati. If they escaped this social coercion, they were
condemned to a life of misery and humiliation.
The Caste Problem
This entailed a system of segregation, hierarchically ordained on the basis of ritual
status. At the bottom of the ladder came the untouchables or scheduled castes, as
they came to be called later. The untouchables suffered from numerous and severe
disabilities and restrictions. The system splintered people into numerous groups.
Caste consciousness, particularly with regard to marriage, prevailed also among
Muslims, Christians and Sikhs who also practised untouchability, though in a less
virulent form. Under a rigid caste system, social mobility was checked, social
divisions grew, and individual initiative was thwarted. Above all, the humiliation of
untouchability—so much a part of the caste system—militated against human dignity.
Other Conditions
that facilitated the
Reforms
Opposition to Western Culture
The establishment of colonial rule in India was followed by a systematic attempt to
disseminate colonial culture and ideology as the dominant cultural current.
Faced with the challenge of the intrusion of colonial culture and ideology, an attempt
to reinvigorate traditional institutions and to realize the potential of traditional
culture developed during the nineteenth century.
New Awareness among Enlightened Indians
There was an awareness that a vast country like India had been colonized by a
handful of foreigners because of weaknesses within the Indian social structure and
culture.
Some English-educated Bengali youth developed a revulsion for Hindu religion and
culture, gave up old religious ideas and traditions and deliberately adopted practices
most offensive to Hindu sentiments, such as drinking wine and eating beef.
The response, indeed, was varied but the need to reform social and religious life was
a commonly shared conviction.
Social and
Ideological Base
Middle Class Base
The social base of the regeneration seen in the nineteenth century = newly
emerging middle class and the educated intellectuals
The nineteenth century intelligentsia searched for its model in the European ‘middle
class’, which had brought about the great transformation in the West from medieval
to modern times through movements like the Renaissance, the Reformation, the
Enlightenment and democratic revolution or reform.
However, the intelligentsia of nineteenth century India did not grow from trade or
industry (which were firmly under the control of British agencies); their roots lay in
government service or the professions of law, education, journalism or medicine
The Intellectual Criteria
What gave these reform movements an ideological unity were rationalism, religious
universalism and humanism.
Rationalism was brought to judge social relevance. Raja Rammohan Roy and Akshay
Kumar Dutt used a rational approach to study tradition; they evaluated the
contemporary socioreligious practices from the standpoint of social utility and to
replace faith with rationality. As a consequence, in the Brahmo Samaj the infallibility
of the Vedas was repudiated, while the Aligarh movement emphasised reconciliation
of Islamic teachings with the needs of the modern age.
Many of the intellectuals set aside the authority of religion and evaluated truth in any
religion by the criteria of logic, reason or science. onnection with land in the form of
the intermediate tenures.
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