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Pandita Ramabai, India's woman of the Millennium
History of Christianity is a six part survey designed to stimulate your curiosity by providing glimpses of pivotal events and persons in the spread of the church.
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omen have no minds. They are lower than
pigs." In her short autobiography, Ramabai remembered these as the Hindu
attitudes that she faced as a young woman around 1880. She became India's
first female pundit and refuted such claims. Ramabai was blessed with
good parents. Her father, Anant Dongre, a wealthy Hindu guru, believed
women have good minds. He had been astonished to overhear an Indian princess
recite verses in the Sanskrit language. He made up his mind that when
he married, he would teach his wife to read the ancient Hindu scriptures.
Desperate Enough to Run Away
Like many Hindu men of the day, Anant married a young girl. He took his
child-wife home to his mother and began to teach her. But his mother said
no. Under Hindu custom, she was within her rights. So Anant fled with
his wife into the Gungamul forest of Southern India, built a hut and taught
her Sanskrit. Under the forest leaves, Ramabai was born in 1858.
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When Ramabai was eight years old, her mother began teaching her Sanskrit.
The girl applied herself diligently. By the time she was twenty, she could
recite 18,000 verses of the Puranas, a Hindu holy book. She learned
many of the languages of India: Marathi, Bengali, Hindustani, Kanarese,
and English, clearly demonstrating that women are fully capable of learning.
"We Had No Common Sense."
Anant was regarded as wise and holy. Even in the forest, students sought
him out. Yet he was unhappy. Seeking peace, he led his family on pilgrimages.
"We bad no common sense, " wrote Ramabai, "and foolishly spent all the
money we had in hand in giving alms .. to please the gods... We went to
several sacred places and temples, to worship different gods and to bathe
in sacred rivers and tanks to free ourselves from sin and curse, which
brought poverty on us. We prostrated ourselves before the stone and metal
images of the gods and prayed before them day and night... But nothing
came of all this futile effort to please the gods--the stone images remained
as hard as ever and never answered our prayers.
Dying Daddy, Pitiless Priests
Anant's money ran out. Famine came. His family would not beg and bring
disgrace on their caste, so they went days without food. The priests,
who had been all smiles, now turned them away with empty bellies.
Dying of starvation, Anant drew Ramabai to him. "Though his blind eyes
could see me no longer, be held me tightly in his arms, and stroking my
head and cheeks, told me, in a few words broken by, emotion, to remember
how he loved me, how he had taught me to do right, and never to depart
from the way of righteousness.
"His last loving command to me was to lead an honorable life .. and to
serve God all my life. He did not know the only true God, but served the--to
him--unknown God with all his heart and strength; and he was desirous
that his children should serve Him to the last. 'Remember, my child' he
said, 'you are my youngest and most beloved child. I have given you into
the hand of our God; you are His, and to Him alone you must belong, and
serve Him all your life. "'
Ceaseless Search for Salvation
Anant died and soon was followed to the grave by Ramabai's mother and
sister. Ramabai and her brother wandered 4,000 miles more, hoping to find
favor with the gods. In their quest for truth they suffered cold, hunger,
and thirst, even burying themselves in sand to keep warm, but their search
proved futile. Finally, the two gave up their quest for salvation and
settled in Calcutta.
Potent Compliment
Pandita Ramabai's immense knowledge impressed Calcutta's Hindu scholars.
They called her "Pandita," which means "learned." She was the first woman
ever awarded this tide. Leaders asked her to lecture their wives on the
duties of highborn Hindu women. Studying Hindu scriptures that had formerly
been denied to her, Ramabai found that the books disagreed on almost everything--except
that women are worse than demons. She could not believe this because her
father had taught her otherwise.
Salvation a Free Gift
In Calcutta Ramabai first heard about Christ. She discovered that salvation
is a free gift from God, not a reward earned by pilgrimages and payments.
But Ramabai thought a Christian had to adopt European customs. Since she
did not like European food or clothes, she joined a cult that mixed Christian
and Hindu ideas. She escaped this only after a missionary explained that
Christianity allows great freedom. She could eat and dress in the Hindu
tradition. Meanwhile, her brother died. Ramabai married, but her husband
died, too, of cholera. She was left with a baby daughter, whom she named
Manoramabai, "Heart's joy."
"Hells on Earth"
If women in India ranked low, widows ranked lower. Some were burned alive
on their husbands' funeral pyres. Many who were allowed to live were forced
to become slaves. Others were sent to temples as prostitutes to make money
for priests. Pandita had seen all of this and was indignant.
There are thousands of priests and men learned in sacred lore...
They neglect and oppress the widows, and devour widows' houses ... hire
them out to wicked men so long as they can get money; and when the poor,
miserable slaves are no longer pleasing to their cruel masters, they turn
them out in the street to beg their livelihood, to suffer the horrible
consequences of sin, to carry the burden of shame, and finally to die
the death worse than that of a starved street dog. The so-called sacred
places--those veritable hells on earth--have become the graveyards of
countless widows and orphans.
A Talent Turned to Teaching
It is all very well to be called "Pandita," but such honors need to be
turned to good purposes. Ramabai pioneered an organization to reform the
treatment of women.
But she felt that God was nudging her to go to England. Although she
had no money, she set out, taking her daughter with her. At St. Mary's
Home in Wantage, England, Church of England sisters took her in, taught
her about Christ, and baptized her. Later she said God had led her into
a strange land just as he led Abraham. From England, Ramabai traveled
to the United States, where she studied education and spoke to assemblies
about India's needs. She published an influential book, The High Caste
Hindu Woman. Interested Americans formed an organization to support
her.
The Refuge Called "Mukti"
Ramabai began by opening a school for a few pupils. She promised not to
pressure Hindu girls to become Christians. However, she offered the Bible
to them. Through reading the Bible and observing Ramabai's godly life,
several girls converted to Christianity. Hindus complained that Ramabai
was betraying her own culture. Eventually Ramabai saw that she could not
walk between two faiths. She declared that her school would be completely
Christian.
Other projects followed. Many women came to her--girl brides so abused
they were terrified of a touch; older women, snarling like animals from
years of cruelty. On farmland inherited from her family and land bought
from a liquor dealer, she created a refuge called Mukti, which means "salvation"
in many Indian languages. There she developed orchards and taught arts
that would support women.
But many widows refused to come to Mukti. Their minds were filled with
dread of Christians. ". . They think that some day after they are well
fattened they will be hung head downward, and a great fire will be built
underneath, and oil will be extracted from them to be sold at a fabulously
large price for medical purposes. Others think that they will be put into
mills and their bones ground.... They cannot understand that anyone would
be kind to them without some selfish purpose."
Holy Burning.
In the history of the church, there are times when the Holy Spirit moves
with extraordinary power among God's people. They awaken to their true
spiritual condition. Pandita and 550 women prayed for such a movement
to come to Mukti. On June 29, 1905, a large group felt the Spirit's presence.
Weeping, they confessed their sins. Women testified to a holy burning
that was almost unbearable.
Not Lower than Pigs After All
Pandita died in 1922, having done much to raise the status of her Hindu
sisters. If ever a life demonstrated that women are not lower than pigs,
that life was Ramabai's.
Was Ramabai the Greatest Indian Woman in the Past
1,000 Years?
Vishal Mangalwadi thinks so. He is an internationally renowned scholar
and the author of India: The Grand Experiment, Beyond the New Age,
The World of Gurus, and many more. He comments, "There are good reasons
to nominate Mrs. Indira Gandhi as the Indian Woman of the 20th Century.
However, had she been born a century earlier, she would have been married
off to a Brahmin as an illiterate girl before she was 12 years old. And
had she refused to be burnt alive on her husband's funeral pyre, she would
have had to spend her widowhood in seclusion as an inauspicious woman.
The woman who began reforming India's attitude towards women was Pandita
Ramabai Sarswati--a builder of modem India. Pandita Ramabai is the Indian
woman of the Millennium."
Ramabai in her Own Words
Some years ago I was brought to the conviction that mine was only an intellectual
belief--a belief in which them was no life. It looked for salvation in
the future after death; and consequently my soul had not "Passed from
death unto life." God showed me how very dangerous my position was, and
what a wretched and lost sinner I was, and how necessary it was to obtain
salvation in the present, and not in some future time. I repented long;
I became very restless and almost ill and passed many sleepless nights.
The Holy Spirit so got hold of me that I could not rest until I found
salvation then and there. So I prayed earnestly to God to pardon my sins
for the sake of Jesus Christ and let me realize that I had really got
salvation through him. I believed God's promise and took Him at His word,
and when I had done this, my burden rolled away, and I realized that I
was forgiven and freed from the power of sin.
Anatomy of a Hoax
Ramabai and her brother came to a lake in which seven sages supposedly
took the form of seven "mountains." For a purified person, the mountains
swam forward, but for the evil stood still. The mountains stayed put for
Ramabai and her brother. Despite warnings from the priests that crocodiles
lived in the water, the brother swam to the islands at night. He found
that they were built on rafts which a priest pushed forward at a signal
from shore after a pilgrim proved his virtue with a coin.
A Merciful Reprieve
Ramabai's learning was not in vain. In the last 15 years of her life,
she mastered Greek and Hebrew to translate the Bible into Marathi. As
death neared, she prayed for ten days to finish the proofs and God granted
her exactly ten.
Christ's Work Continues at Ramabai Mukti Mission
It plants churches and advances her noble ideals of justice and mercy
for the oppressed by providing orphanages, rescue homes for destitute
women and unwed mothers, schools, vocational training, village evangelism,
and a large hospital. The work at Mukti today remains devoted to Christ
and the Scriptures, as Ramabai arranged that the work would be overseen
in the future by committed Christians.
Resources:
- Dyer, Helen S. Pandita Ramabai: the story of her life. London:
Morgan and Scott, 1900.
- MacNicol, Nicol and Vishal Mangalwadi. What Liberates a Woman?
The story of Pandita Ramabai, a builder of modern India. Good Books,
1996.
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