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  • Who was Savitribai Phule?

    phule

    Recently, 192nd birth anniversary of Savitribai Phule, w/o Jyotiba Phule (the pioneer of Satyashodhak Samaj) was celebrated.

    Who was Savitribai Phule?

    • A Dalit woman from the Mali community, Savitribai was born on January 3, 1831, in Maharashtra’s Naigaon village.
    • Married off at the age of 10, her husband Jyotirao Phule is said to have educated her at home.
    • Later, Jyotirao admitted Savitribai to a teachers’ training institution in Pune.
    • Throughout their life, the couple supported each other and in doing so, broke many social barriers.

    Pioneering first school for girls in India

    • At a time when it was considered unacceptable for women to even attain education, the couple went on to open a school for girls in Bhidewada, Pune, in 1848.
    • This became the country’s first girls’ school.

    Opposition to Phules’ schools

    • The Phules opened more such schools for girls, Shudras and Ati-Shudras (the backward castes and Dalits, respectively) in Pune.
    • This led to discontent among Indian nationalists like Bal Gangadhar Tilak.
    • They opposed the setting up of schools for girls and non-Brahmins, citing a “loss of nationality”, and believing not following the caste rules would mean a loss of nationality itself.
    • Savitribai herself faced great animosity from the upper castes, including instances of physical violence.
    • When serving as the headmistress of the first school in Bhide Wada, upper-caste men often pelted stones and threw mud and cow dung on her.

    Phule’s role as a social reformer, beyond education

    • Infanticide prevention: Along with Jyotirao, Savitribai started the Balhatya Pratibandhak Griha (‘Home for the Prevention of Infanticide’) for pregnant widows facing discrimination.
    • Child adoption: The Phules also adopted Yashwantrao, the child of a widow, whom they educated to become a doctor.
    • Reforms in marriages: Savitribai Phule also advocated inter-caste marriages, widow remarriage, and eradication of child marriage, sati and dowry systems, among other social issues.
    • Denouncing Brahmanical ritualism: As an extension, they started ‘Satyashodhak Marriage’ – a rejection of Brahmanical rituals where the marrying couple takes a pledge to promote education and equality.
    • Bubonic plague mitigation: Savitribai became involved in relief work during the 1896 famine in Maharashtra and the 1897 Bubonic plague. She herself contracted the disease while taking a sick child to the hospital, and breathed her last on March 10, 1897.

    Savitribai’s literary works

    • Savitribai Phule published her first collection of poems, called Kavya Phule (‘Poetry’s Blossoms’), at the age of 23 in 1854.
    • She published Bavan Kashi Subodh Ratnakar (‘The Ocean of Pure Gems’), in 1892.
    • Besides these works, Matushri Savitribai Phulenchi Bhashane va Gaani (Savitribai Phule’s speeches and songs’), and her letters to her husband have also been published.

     

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  • Day 2| Daily Answer Wars| CD WarZone

    Topics for Today’s question:

    GS-1         Effects of globalization on Indian society.

    Question:

     

    HOW TO ATTEMPT ANSWERS IN DAILY ANSWER WARS (DAW)?

    1. Daily 1 question either from General Studies 1, 2, 3 or 4 will be provided via live You Tube video session.
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  • Day 1| Daily Answer Wars| CD WarZone

    Topics for Today’s question:

    GS-1         Salient features of Indian society; Diversity of India

    Question:

     

    HOW TO ATTEMPT ANSWERS IN DAILY ANSWER WARS (DAW)?

    1. Daily 1 question either from General Studies 1, 2, 3 or 4 will be provided via live You Tube video session.
    2. You can write your answer on an A4 sheet and scan/click pictures of the same.
    3. The answer needs to be submitted by joining the telegram group given in the link below.

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  • In news: Bhima-Koregaon Battle

    koregao

    The 205th anniversary of the Bhima-Koregaon battle was recently celebrated in all harmony at the Ranstambh (victory pillar) in Perne village in Pune.

    Battle of Bhima-Koregaon

    • The 1818 battle of Bhima-Koregaon, one of the last battles of the Third Anglo-Maratha War culminated in the Peshwa’s defeat.
    • It was fought on 1 January 1818 between the British East India Company (BEIC) and the Peshwa faction of the Maratha Confederacy, at Koregaon at the banks of River Bhima.
    • A 28,000-strong force led by Peshwa Baji Rao II while on their way to attack the company-held Pune were unexpectedly met by an 800-strong Company force of which 500 belonged to the Dalit community.
    • The battle was part of the Third Anglo Maratha war, a series of battles that culminated in the defeat of the Peshwa rule and subsequent rule of the BEIC in nearly all of Western, Central, and Southern India.

    Role of Mahar Community

    • Back in the seventeenth century, the community was particularly valued by the ruler Shivaji, under whom Maratha caste identities were far more fluid.
    • The value of the Mahars for military recruitment under Shivaji was noted by the social reformer Jyotirao Phule.
    • The Mahars were not only beneficiaries of the attempt at caste unity under Shivaji but were in fact valued for their martial skills, bravery, and loyalty.

    Mahars during Maratha Empire

    • The position occupied by the Mahars under Shivaji, however, was short-lived and under later Peshwa rulers, their status deteriorated.
    • The Peshwas were infamous for their Brahmin orthodoxy and their persecution of the untouchables.
    • The Mahars were forbidden to move about in public spaces and punished atrociously for disrespecting caste regulations.
    • Stories of Peshwa atrocities against the Mahars suggest that they were made to tie brooms behind their backs to wipe out their footprints and pots on their necks to collect their spit.

    Why is the battle significant?

    • The battle resulted in losses to the Maratha Empire, then under Peshwa rule, and control over most of western, central, and southern India by the British East India Company.
    • The battle has been seen as a symbol of Dalit pride because a large number of soldiers in the Company forces were the Mahar Dalits, the same oppressed community to which Babasaheb Ambedkar belonged.
    • After centuries of inhumane treatment, this battle was the first time that Mahars had been included in a battle in which they won.

    Dr. Ambedkar’s association

    • It was Babasaheb Ambedkar’s visit to the site on January 1, 1927, that revitalized the memory of the battle for the Dalit community.
    • He led to its commemoration in the form of a victory pillar, besides creating the discourse of Dalit valor against Peshwa ‘oppression’ of Dalits.

     

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  • Madan Mohan Malaviya and BHU

    Madan Mohan Malaviya

    An archive on the principal founder of the Banaras Hindu University (BHU), ‘Mahamana’ Madan Mohan Malaviya was recently unveiled.

    Who was Madan Mohan Malaviya?

    • Malaviya was born on 25th December, 1861 in Allahabad.
    • He was a great Indian educationist and freedom fighter, distinguished from others for his significant role in Indian independence and his support of Hindu nationalism.
    • At the Banaras Hindu University (BHU), which he founded in 1916, he served as Vice-Chancellor from 1919 to 1938.
    • The University has around 12,000 students all across the field such as the arts, sciences, engineering and technology.

    Political affiliations

    • Malaviya rose up the ranks, and became president four times — in 1909 (Lahore), in 1918 (Delhi), in 1930 (Delhi), and in 1932 (Calcutta).
    • He was part of the Congress for almost 50 years.
    • He was one of the early leaders of the Hindu Mahasabha, and helped found it in 1906.
    • He was a social reformer and a successful legislator, serving as a member of the Imperial Legislative Council for 11 years (1909–20).
    • In the freedom struggle, he was midway between the Liberals and the Nationalists, the Moderates and the Extremists, as the followers of Gokhale and Tilak were respectively called.
    • In 1930, when Mahatma Gandhi launched the Salt Satyagraha and the Civil Disobedience Movement, he participated in it and courted arrest.

    Literary associations

    • He remained the Hindustan Times’ Chairman from 1924 to 1946.
    • He was involved with magazines including the-
    1. Hindi language weekly, the Abhyudaya (1907)
    2. English-language daily the Leader of Allahabad (1909) and
    3. Hindi dailies Aaj

     

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  • Day 12| Daily Answer Wars| CD WarZone

    Topics for Today’s question:

    GS-1         Modern Indian history from about the middle of the eighteenth century until the present – significant events, personalities, issues.

    Question:

     

    HOW TO ATTEMPT ANSWERS IN DAILY ANSWER WARS (DAW)?

    1. Daily 1 question either from General Studies 1, 2, 3 or 4 will be provided via live You Tube video session.
    2. You can write your answer on an A4 sheet and scan/click pictures of the same.
    3. The answer needs to be submitted by joining the telegram group given in the link below.

      https://t.me/cdwarzone

    *In case your answer is not reviewed, reply to your answer saying *NOT CHECKED*. 

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  • In news: Foundation Day of the INC

    inc

    A political party recently marked the  138th foundation day of Indian National Congress (INC) on December 28.

    How the INC was founded?

    • The INC came into being on December 28, 1885.
    • The English bureaucrat Allan Octavian Hume is credited as the founder of the organisation.
    • On that day, 72 social reformers, journalists and lawyers congregated for the first session of the INC at Gokuldas Tejpal Sanskrit College, Bombay.
    • Stated objectives of INC included-
    1. First, the fusion into one national whole of all the different elements that constitute the population of India.
    2. Second, the gradual regeneration along all lines, spiritual, moral, social, and political, of the nation thus evolved; and
    3. Third, the consolidation, of, the union between England and India.

    Real motive behind: ‘Safety Valve’ Theory

    • At that point, the aim of this group was not to demand independence from the ongoing colonial rule but to influence the policies of the British government in favour of Indians.
    • Its objective is often described as providing a “safety valve” as the time, through which Indians could air out their grievances and frustration.
    • As Mr. Hume explained, the: Congress organization was ‘only one outcome of the labours of a body of cultured men, mostly Indians, who hound themselves together to labour silently for the good of India.’

    Transformation towards freedom movement

    Ans. Famous for 3P’s: Prayers, Protest and Petitions

    • The party’s work continued, to shift the colonial administrators’ attitudes and policies on the rights and powers allowed to Indians.
    • The members frequently protested issues of British colonialism, such as the Bengal famine and the drain of wealth from India.
    • However, these protests were at this point usually limited to prayers, petitions and protests, including writing letters to the authorities.
    • As the British rule continued, there grew differences in what the party’s functioning should be like.

    Strength of INC

    • Diverse participation: One of the biggest strengths of the party, which helped it appeal to a broad section of Indian society, was having members who held different ideological positions.
    • Pan-India organization: Its popularity grew across every corner of India.

    Early criticism of INC

    • Non-effective: Hume and the party were criticised, by the British for attempting to change the existing systems that favoured them and by some Indians for not achieving significant results.
    • Elite-organization: The party largely consisted of educated, upper-class people who were likely to have studied abroad.

    Splits and reconvening

    • In Surat in 1906, the divisions between the ‘moderates’ led by Gopal Krishna Gokhale and Surendranath Banerjea, and the ‘extremists’ led by Bal Gangadhar Tilak came to the fore and there was a split.
    • While Tilak and Lala Lajpat Rai wanted the Congress to boycott the visit of the Prince of Wales in protest against the Bengal Partition a year prior, the moderates opposed any such move.
    • But by 1915, the Bombay session saw these two groups coming together again as one.
    • The pattern of splits and eventual cohesion continued well after Indian independence, even after the party came to completely dominate successive general elections under PM Jawaharlal Nehru.

    Important sessions of INC

        Year     Session President Importance  
        1885 Bombay W C Banerjee First session
        1888 Allahabad George Yule First English President of INC
        1896 Calcutta Rahimtullah M. Sayani National song ‘Vande Mataram’ sung for the first time
        1906 Calcutta Dadabhai Naoroji Dadabhai Naoroji coined the term Swaraj.
        1907 Surat Rash Behari Ghosh Party splits into extremists and moderates
        1911 Calcutta Bishan Narayan Dar National Anthem ‘Jana Gana Mana’ sung for the first time
        1916 Lucknow Ambica Charan Mazumdar Reunion of Congress and Lucknow Pact, Joint session with the Muslim league
        1917 Calcutta Annie Besant First Woman President of the INC
        1919 Amritsar Motilal Nehru Jallianwalla Bagh Massacre took place
        1924 Belgaum M K Gandhi Only session where MK Gandhi was the President
        1925 Kanpur Sarojini Naidu First Indian Woman President of INC
        1927 Madras M A Ansari Independence Resolution was put forward
        1928 Calcutta Session, Motilal Nehru All India Youth Congress formed
        1929 Lahore Jawaharlal Nehru Poorna Swaraj Resolution @ 26th January, Civil Disobedience Movement launched
        1931

     

    Karachi Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel A resolution on Fundamental Rights and National Economic Progress was passed. Gandhi-Irwin pact was endorsed and  Gandhiji was nominated to represent INC in the second round table conference
        1936 Lucknow Jawaharlal Nehru Idea of Socialism was imbibed
        1938 Haripura Subhas Chandra Bose National Planning Committee set up under Nehru, Haripura Resolution passed, which demanded Poorna Swaraj, including the princely states as well.
        1940 Ramgarh Abul Kalam Azad He was the longest-serving President of INC during British rule.

    Quit India Movement started in 1942

        1946 Meerut J.B. Kripalani Last session before Indian independence

     

     

    Try this PYQ:

    Q.Consider the following statements

    1. The first woman President of the Indian National Congress was Sarojini Naidu.
    2. The first Muslim President of the Indian National Congress was Badruddin Tyabji.

    Which of the statements given above is/are correct?

    (a) 1 only

    (b) 2 only

    (c) Both 1 and 2

    (d) Neither 1 nor 2

     

    [wpdiscuz-feedback id=”txs06h4ihh” question=”Please leave a feedback on this” opened=”1″]Post your answers here.[/wpdiscuz-feedback]

     

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  • Day 11| Daily Answer Wars| CD WarZone

    Topics for Today’s question:

    GS-1         Modern Indian history from about the middle of the eighteenth century until the present – significant events, personalities, issues.

    Question:

     

    HOW TO ATTEMPT ANSWERS IN DAILY ANSWER WARS (DAW)?

    1. Daily 1 question either from General Studies 1, 2, 3 or 4 will be provided via live You Tube video session.
    2. You can write your answer on an A4 sheet and scan/click pictures of the same.
    3. The answer needs to be submitted by joining the telegram group given in the link below.

      https://t.me/cdwarzone

    *In case your answer is not reviewed, reply to your answer saying *NOT CHECKED*. 

    1. For the philosophy of Daily Answer Wars and payment: 
  • In news: Ahilyabai Holkar (1725 –1795)

    ahilya

    There has been a proposal from the district administration to rename the Western Maharashtra city of Ahmednagar as ‘Punyashlok Ahilyadevi Nagar’, after the 18th century Malwa queen, Ahilyabai Holkar.

    History of Ahmednagar

    • Ahmednagar lies in the Western region of Maharashtra.
    • It has been a part of some prominent kingdoms, starting from 240 B.C. when the vicinity is mentioned in the reference to the Mauryan Emperor Ashok.
    • The Rashtrakuta Dynasty, the Western Chalukyas, and then the Delhi Sultanate ruled over the region in the Medieval period.
    • In the last case, the rule was not direct, and a revolt by Afghan soldier Alladin Hasan Gangu led to the establishment of the Bahmani kingdom in the Deccan.
    • After some time, Ahmednagar (then known as Nizamshahi) became one of the five independent kingdoms to emerge from that empire.

    How did the city of Ahmednagar first get its name?

    • In 1486, Malik Ahmad Nizam Shah became the Bahmani Sultanate’s Prime Minister.
    • He fought back an attempt by the king to dislodge him from power, and defeated the army of the Bahamani kingdom near Ahmednagar in May 1490.
    • Finally, in 1494 he laid the foundation of a city close to where he defeated the army, on the left bank of Sina river, and named it after himself: Ahmednagar.

    Who was Ahilyabai Holkar?

    • Born in Chondi village of Ahmednagar to the village head Mankoji Shinde, on May 31, 1725, Ahilyabai was one of the few women rulers of Medieval India.
    • While the education of girls and women was rare at that time, Mankoji insisted on it for his daughter.
    • When she was eight years old, Malhar Rao Holkar, the army commander to Peshwa Bajirao, is believed to have spotted her at a temple service in Chondi.
    • Impressed by her devotion and character, he decided to get his son, Khande Rao, married to her.
    • Ahilyabai took control of Malwa after her husband’s death in the Battle of Kumbher against the king of Bharatpur in 1754.

    Her Administration

    • She brought about two important changes in the administration, both divergences from the traditions of her era.
    • She vested the military power in Tukoji Holkar, a confidante of her father-in-law though not related.
    • She separated the state’s revenue from the personal use of the ruling family. Her personal expenses were met from inherited wealth and the land holdings she had.

    Role in demolished temple re-construction

    • From Gangotri to Rameshwaram, and from Dwarka to Gaya, she spent money on rebuilding temples destroyed under the Mughal rule.
    • The most significant one, however, is the current Kashi Vishwanath Temple in Varanasi.
    • Destroyed by the Mughal ruler Aurangzeb to build the Gyaanvapi mosque, the temple was restored in its current form by Ahilyabai in the year 1780, 111 years after its destruction.
    • The Somnath temple, witness to the regular destruction by a host of aggressors over the centuries, was restored in 1783 by all the Maratha confederates, with a significant contributions from Ahilyabai.
    • With temples and rest areas in Kedarnath, Srisailam, Omkareshwar and Ujjain, Ahilyabai contributed to the improvement of facilities at other holy sites hosting Jyotirlingas too.

    Conclusion

    • Ahilyabai died in the year 1795 at the age of 70.
    • Her legacy is not documented in a structured way in history textbooks or popular references either.
    • Part of the problem is the general absence of any non-Mughal, non-British narratives in contemporary Indian history books.

     

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  • Day 10| Daily Answer Wars| CD WarZone

    Topics for Today’s question:

    GS-1         Modern Indian history from about the middle of the eighteenth century until the present – significant events, personalities, issues.

    Question:

     

    HOW TO ATTEMPT ANSWERS IN DAILY ANSWER WARS (DAW)?

    1. Daily 1 question either from General Studies 1, 2, 3 or 4 will be provided via live You Tube video session.
    2. You can write your answer on an A4 sheet and scan/click pictures of the same.
    3. The answer needs to be submitted by joining the telegram group given in the link below.

      https://t.me/cdwarzone

    *In case your answer is not reviewed, reply to your answer saying *NOT CHECKED*. 

    1. For the philosophy of Daily Answer Wars and payment: