English, asked by Prithvigirish21, 8 months ago

Rabindranath Tagore very cleverly has mentioned about the ‘Domestic Walls’
that prevailed before independence which broke up the Indian subjects into
fragments.(Where the mind I without fear). Do you think we are now free from
these practices or not . Explain your views
In poem where the mind is without fear
(please do it fast it is an ameregency)[i will also give you brainliest]

Answers

Answered by deepa2075
4

Answer:

HERE'S YOUR ANSWER... HOPE ITS HELPFUL

Explanation:

RABINDRANATH TAGORE IN HIS POEM WHERE THE MIND IS WITHOUT FEAR HAS CLEARLY SPECIFIED THAT HE WANTS TO LIVE IN A COUNTRY WHERE PEOPLE ARE FREE FROM ORTHODOX THOUGHTS AND NARROW DOGMATISM. HE WISHES THAT HIS COUNTRY SHOULD BE A PLACE WHERE KNOWLEDGE IS FREE AND AVAILABLE TO EACH AND EVERY COUNTRY. ACCORDING TO MY OPINION, MANY CRUEL PRACTICES SO FAR HAS BEEN ELIMINATED FROM INDIA SUCH AS SATI ACT.

BUT STILL MANY PRACTICES WHICH ARE HARMFUL TO OUR COUNTRY'S IMAGE AND ARE THE REASON FOR OUR COUNTRY TO BE COUNTED AS UNDERDEVELOPED COUNTRY STILL CONTINUE IN INDIA. CRUEL ACTS SUCH AS DOWRY ARE A MOSS ON OUR COUNTRY CAN MAKE OUR COUNTRY'S STRENGTH FRAGILE. PRACTICES THAT MAKE OUR COUNTRY WEAK AND FRAIL SHOULD BE ERADICATED AS SOON AS POSSIBLE.

MY DREAM INDIA IS A BIRD WHICH IS NOT ABSURD.

Answered by kiean1107
2
Where the mind is without fear and the head is held high;
Where knowledge is free;
Where the world has not been broken up into fragments
By narrow domestic walls;
Where words come out from the depth of truth;
Where tireless striving stretches its arms towards perfection;
Where the clear stream of reason has not lost its way
Into the dreary desert sand of dead habits;
Where the mind is led forward by thee
Into ever-widening thought and action;
Into that heaven of freedom,
My Father, let my country awake.
--Rabindranath Tagore

In this poem, initially titled “Prayer,” Nobel Laureate Rabindranath Tagore calls forth an India free from British rule, and beyond that, a divine freedom that transcends physical and mental borders. To contemplate each line can take us into a deeper, more eternal freedom, “Where the world has not been broken up into fragments / By narrow domestic walls.”

Tagore’s poem resonates with meaning across the century. It is part of the human condition to find ourselves imprisoned by fear, limited by our attachment to views, hobbled by our judgments, confined by artificial boundaries, especially in times of uncertainty.

He invites us to inhabit “that heaven of freedom” beyond what we might imagine and beyond the limits of fear.
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