Social Sciences, asked by vinodcse6228, 11 months ago

A short essay on swami vivekananda as a social reformer

Answers

Answered by Anonymous
9
Swami Vivekananda was born Narendranath Dutta, son of a well-known lawyer in Calcutta, Biswanath Dutta and a very intelligent and pious lady, Bhuvaneswari Devi in the year 1863. He was chief disciple of Ramakrishna. The most notable thing about Vivekananda was his flaming zeal for reviving the greatness of Hinduism and the motherland.

Contributions of Vivekananda in Indian culture is vast.

He was deeply shocked by the conditions of rural indian people ignorant, superstitious, half starvd and callousness of the so called educated upper classes. He wanted education taken to the door- step of every poor peasant, so that their children could work and learn side by side. It was a kind of non formal education which perhaps he visualised.

It pained Vivekananda to see India struggling about in western clothes and imitating western ways and manners, as if that made them really western. He wanted Indian to learn science and technology from the west and its power organise and its practical sense, but at the same time, retain its high moral and spiritual idealism.

' If you want to know India, study Vivekananda', was Rabindranath Tagore's advice to Romain Rolland. This holds true even today, indeed no one was studied India's body and mind so thoroughly as Vivekananda did.

The treasure-which Vivekananda never tired of mentioning is India's spirituality. He made it clear to the Indians that India may be poor in respect of worldly treasures, but in the domain of thought she is the wealthiest. And in the art of showing how noble and beautiful a human being can be, India is the most skilled in the world.

This self awareness, this new insight, was Vivekananda contribution to India. It eventually gave rise to nation wide regeneration which resulted in the struggle for independence and its eventual attainment.

Romain Rolland said that just as, at the call of Jesus, the dead Lazarus came to life, so also, at Vivekananda's call, a moribund India was infused with new life.

Answered by Anonymous
1

Explanation:

Swami Vivekananda was born Narendranath Dutta, son of a well-known lawyer in Calcutta, Biswanath Dutta and a very intelligent and pious lady, Bhuvaneswari Devi in the year 1863. He was chief disciple of Ramakrishna. The most notable thing about Vivekananda was his flaming zeal for reviving the greatness of Hinduism and the motherland.

Contributions of Vivekananda in Indian culture is vast.

He was deeply shocked by the conditions of rural indian people ignorant, superstitious, half starvd and callousness of the so called educated upper classes. He wanted education taken to the door- step of every poor peasant, so that their children could work and learn side by side. It was a kind of non formal education which perhaps he visualised.

It pained Vivekananda to see India struggling about in western clothes and imitating western ways and manners, as if that made them really western. He wanted Indian to learn science and technology from the west and its power organise and its practical sense, but at the same time, retain its high moral and spiritual idealism.

' If you want to know India, study Vivekananda', was Rabindranath Tagore's advice to Romain Rolland. This holds true even today, indeed no one was studied India's body and mind so thoroughly as Vivekananda did.

The treasure-which Vivekananda never tired of mentioning is India's spirituality. He made it clear to the Indians that India may be poor in respect of worldly treasures, but in the domain of thought she is the wealthiest. And in the art of showing how noble and beautiful a human being can be, India is the most skilled in the world.

This self awareness, this new insight, was Vivekananda contribution to India. It eventually gave rise to nation wide regeneration which resulted in the struggle for independence and its eventual attainment.

Romain Rolland said that just as, at the call of Jesus, the dead Lazarus came to life, so also, at Vivekananda's call, a moribund India was infused with new life.

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