Pandita
Ramabai
Jesus Was Her Guru
By Keith J. White, Christian History Magazine
Pandita Ramabai was just five feet tall, with short black hair and small
bones. Yet wherever she went the presence of this Brahman Indian womancharacterized
by her grey-green eyes, shapely lips, and light complexionseemed
to cast a spell over all whom she met. She was adored as a goddess when
she arrived in Calcutta at age 20. Years later, when she addressed the
2000 delegates of the National Social Congress in Bombay in 1889 (the
first woman to do so), she took the assembly by storm.
As she was preparing to speak on two resolutions for gender
reform, her audience took some time to settle down. She remained silent
and still until you could have heard a pin drop and then began with
the remarkable words: "It is not strange, my countrymen, that my
voice is small, for you have never given a woman the chance to make
her voice strong!" From that moment on, she carried her enraptured
listeners in the palm of her hand, and the resolutions were passed by
a huge majority.
And so it was throughout much of India and then America:
Audiences were moved to laughter and tears before responding with resounding
applause and standing ovations. She knew many of the sacred texts of
the Hindu religion by heart and had an ear for the varied cadences of
the written and spoken word.
But she also knew from 20 years of wandering the hard
realities of everyday life for Indian women. It was a brave person who
ventured to contradict this combination of academic brilliance and personal
experience. She was a born leader, held in awe by the rich and famous
and trusted by the poor and oppressed.
The renowned Indian social reformer D. K. Karve wrote,
"Pandita Ramabai was one of the greatest daughters of India."
As an outstanding linguist, author, educational pioneer,
social reformer, and Bible translator, she attracted the praise of scholars,
politicians, and theologians. As a strong patriot, she was the first
to advocate Hindi as the national language of India and the first woman
to promote allegiance to the motherland rather than to the British crown.
But her conversion to Christianity and her staunch rebuttal
of Westerners' romanticizing of "Hinduism" as a new world
religion drew ever-increasing opposition. Like Jesus, Ramabai found
herself "outside the city" of contemporary discourses and
paradigms. With the British Raj fully established and the missionary
movement still operating in a Western mindset, there was little place
for a woman who quietly but firmly insisted on her own cultural and
personal identity and refused to accept the gatekeeping of Western denominational
Christianity. Until recently this extraordinary woman had been virtually
erased from history.
Pandita Ramabai Dongre Medhavi (her full married name)
was born on April 23, 1858, in her father's ashram (a religious community
where devotees stayed to learn more of the Hindu faith) 4,000 feet above
sea level on the forest slopes of the Western Ghats near Karkal. Her
father was a renowned Brahman scholar whose search for and devotion
to the One True God was a lifelong commitment. He was orthodox in his
beliefs and practice, with one significant exception: He was convinced
(against considerable institutional and peer pressure) that women should
be allowed to learn the holy ancient language of Sanskrit and therefore
have access to the Hindu scriptures.
Although he successfully argued his case from the scriptures,
it seems likely that he was never fully accepted as one of the community
of bhaktas (devotional Hindus) from this point on.
When his ashram ran out of money due to his generosity,
he became a wandering mendicant who, along with his family, survived
by reciting the Puranas (sacred Hindu texts) at pilgrimage sites all
over the subcontinent.
Ramabai was therefore on the move from an early age. Her
mother taught her in the open air, and lessons lasted for three hours
at a stretch. It was not long before Ramabai knew 18,000 verses of the
Bhagavata Purana by heart. She also learned astronomy, botany, and physiology.
During the great famine from 1874-76, Ramabai helplessly
watched her parents and sister starve to death. She and her older brother
continued to wander throughout India, experiencing extreme physical
hardship and hunger before finally reaching Calcutta in 1878. There
her exceptional knowledge of Sanskrit texts so astonished scholars that
they immediately awarded her two titles: Pandita (a wise person) and
Saraswati (goddess of learning).
But she had become disillusioned with ancient texts that
forbade women to learn what her father had taught her, and saddened
and angered by the oppression of women legitimated by a patriarchal
reading of these sacred texts. She deplored the belief that "women
of high and low caste, as a class, were bad, very bad, worse than demons,
as unholy as untruth," as she wrote later, and that women, like
people of lower castes, could not obtain mukti (ultimate liberation
or salvation) unless by their merit they were reincarnated as Brahman
men. Ramabai began to champion women's rights and education and soon
became renowned in India as a lecturer.
When her brother died, Ramabai shocked all who knew her
by marrying someone of a lower caste. Bapu Bipin Behari Das Medhavi
was a lawyer and teacher, and together they studied Western ideas and
philosophy. After considering for a time the views of the reformist
group Brahmo Samaj, which sought to integrate the teachings and insights
of different religions, Ramabai began to read a Bengali Gospel of Luke
given to her husband by a Baptist missionary while they were living
in Assam.
This was the beginning of a lengthy and tortuous process
of conversion. Later she wrote, "Having lost all faith in my former
religion, and with my heart hungering after something better, I eagerly
learnt everything I could about the Christian religion, and declared
my intention to become a Christian."
Her decision met with predictable opposition both from
her husband and also from many of the Indian reformers who had seen
her as a champion of the Hindu/Indian cause. There was little precedent
for a woman remaining culturally and socially Indian while at the same
time embracing Christianity. One of the people who helped her greatly
during this time of struggle was the Brahman convert and Anglican priest
Nehemiah Goreh.
After less than 18 months of marriage, Ramabai's husband
died of cholera, leaving her a widow with an infant daughter, Manorama.
At that time in India, widows were effectively isolated from the public
world for the rest of their lives, confined to the women's quarters
of households and forced to devote themselves to menial tasks. But Ramabai
refused to accept this status. She responded to an invitation from social
reformers to lecture in Pune.
There her fame as a brilliant scholar and social activist
continued to grow, and she devoted herself to alleviating the oppression
of women and girls, especially child widows. She was tireless in speaking,
testified before the Education Commission (where her eloquence even
brought her to the attention of Queen Victoria), started women's reform
organizations in Bombay and Pune, and published her first book, Stree
Dharma-Niti (Morals for Women).
This book, coupled with her radical reforming zeal and
the news about her move towards the Christian faith, provoked deep-seated
resentment and lasting criticism from the orthodox and male reform sections
of Maharashtrian (western Indian) society. With her charismatic personality,
she was challenging patriarchal authority and norms.
Contemplating the study of medicine in England, Ramabai
accepted an invitation in 1883 to stay at the Community of the Sisters
of St. Mary the Virgin in Wantage, where she improved her English while
teaching Sanskrit in return. She was greatly affected by her visit to
the establishment for "fallen women" that the Sisters of Wantage
helped run, as well as by the biblical story of Jesus and the Samaritan
woman to which the Sisters pointed as justification for their ministry.
"I realized," she later wrote, "after reading the fourth
chapter of St. John's Gospel, that Christ was truly the Divine Saviour
he claimed to be, and no one but He could transform and uplift the downtrodden
women of India. ? Thus my heart was drawn to the religion of Christ."
She and her daughter Manorama were baptized in Wantage.
But her stay in England became one long struggle to establish her own
spiritual and personal identity in the face of relentless pressures
to conform to Anglican teaching, and she was at times anxious and depressed.
This did not prevent her, however, from engaging in substantive doctrinal
discussion and debate with some of the leading Anglican and Baptist
theologians of the time. From September 1883 until February 1886, she
attended Cheltenham Ladies' College where she found a sympathetic teacher
and friend in the principal, Dorothy Beale.
Beale made a genuine attempt to step into Ramabai's shoes
and to see the unique challenges of being both "Hindu" (i.e.,
culturally Indian) and "Christian." Ramabai in turn shared
with Beale her struggles to reconcile biblical teaching with the church's
creeds and dogma, her shock at the multiplicity of Christian denominations,
and her reluctance to be identified with a particular one.
Admiring the honesty and spiritual depth which drove this
Indian convert to arrive at her own conclusions, Beale was not threatened
by the way Ramabai articulated her guiding principles: "I believe
in Christ ? But at the same time I shall not bind myself to believe
in and accept everything that is taught by the church; before I accept
it I must be convinced that it is according to Christ's teaching."
In 1883, Ramabai was invited to Philadelphia to attend
the graduation ceremony of her cousin Anandibai Joshee, India's first
female doctor. She became an instant sensation in North America and
made several lasting friendships with notable figures such as Frances
Willard (one of the leaders of the Women's Movement), and Rachel Bodley
(Dean of the Women's Medical College in Philadelphia). She was soon
convinced that her life's work in India should be to transform the situation
of India's high caste women, especially child widows, by establishing
an all-women's residential school modeled on the radical kindergarten
system pioneered by Friedrich Froebel.
Encouraged by Rachel Bodley, she published her first English
book, The High Caste Hindu Woman, a work that increased her fame and
brought invitations from far and near. As she traveled throughout the
United States on speaking tours, supporters collected funds and set
up a Ramabai Association to assist the formation of her proposed school.
Meanwhile, she also prepared curriculum materials for six grades, read
widely, collected huge amounts of resource information, and compiled
her own observations about America for a book that was published (in
the Marathi language) soon after her return to India. On her departure,
Ramabai left behind a significant band of enthusiastic admirers, especially
among the Women's Movement and the National Women's Temperance Union.
Soon after her return to India, Ramabai established her
first residential school, the Sharada Sadan (House of Learning), in
Bombay. In 1890 the school moved to Pune, the place where she had always
intended it should be. But she encountered increasingly fierce criticism
from both Christian and Hindu communities when she sought to run her
school in an open and tolerant way, making Hindu and Christian texts
freely available side by side. Though she was by this time a widely
respected and influential figure-it was during this period that she
made her famous address to the Indian National Social Conference, the
forerunner of the National Congress Party-opposition continued to mount.
Finally, after some of her students converted to Christianity and were
baptized, there was a massive withdrawal of local support.
Eventually, through a combination of circumstances, Ramabai
bought some land and set up a residential community in a village called
Khedgaon on the railway line 40 miles away. She named the community
"Mukti." For several years, Mukti's newsletter sported the
Liberty Bell in Philadelphia on its cover, inscribed with the motto
"Proclaim LIBERTY throughout the Land unto all the inhabitants
here," from Leviticus 25:10. It was symbolic of Ramabai's own personal
lifelong quest for mukti-freedom, rest, salvation-which she ultimately
found in Christ.
Whereas the Sharada Sadan in Pune, as in Bombay, was intended
for the daughters of Brahman families, Mukti was open to all women in
need. Soon the place was filled to overflowing with starving child-widows,
orphans, victims of famines in central India, and other needy women.
At times the Mukti Mission provided for as many as 2000. In addition
to housing so many women, it had a kindergarten for young children,
schools, a hospital, a refuge for "fallen women," 64 cloth-weaving
looms, five printing presses, tailoring and handicrafts, a flourmill,
an oil press, a laundry, a farm, orchards, and wells. Ramabai managed
to set up this establishment and to sustain and run it with the help
of an efficient administrative staff. Among her assistants was her daughter
Manorama, who joined her after returning from college in America, and
who Ramabai hoped would be her eventual successor.
The intention of Mukti was that women should be accepted,
nurtured, loved, trained, and equipped to take their place in Indian
society whether as parents, teachers, nurses, or Bible women. It was
a place of empowerment and transformation-a model Christian community
following the teaching of Jesus and the life of the early Christians.
Although Ramabai never lost her desire to draw from and
celebrate the best of India's native cultures, including its music,
dress, literature, and traditions, Mukti was an openly Christian establishment,
as evidenced by the publication of Ramabai's life-story, A Testimony,
and many other tracts and Christian booklets. From 1905 to 1907 a "Holy
Spirit" revival broke out-an event similar to revivals that were
occurring in Wales, the Khasi Hills of northeast India, and Azusa Street
in Los Angeles.
Despite the heavy responsibilities involved in setting
up Sharada Sadan and then Mukti, Ramabai never deviated from her commitment
to follow Jesus as her guru, and her writings and correspondence show
how her bhakti (devotional) Hindu upbringing prepared her for a life
of devotion to her Lord.
She studied the Bible with great care, her prayer life
was regular and disciplined, and she read many Christian biographies.
She was deeply influenced by the book From Death unto Life written by
the Anglican minister Rev. William Haslam, through whose very honest
testimony Ramabai came to see the distinction between formal religion
(whether Hindu or Christian) and the personal relationship of faith
between a devotee and her guru.
She wrote of this discovery, "Although I was quite
contented with my newly-found religion, so far as I understood it, still
I was labouring under great intellectual difficulties, and my heart
longed for something better ? I came to know after eight years from
the time of my baptism that I had found the Christian religion, which
was good enough for me; but I had not found Christ, Who is the Life
of the religion and 'the Light of every man that cometh into the world.'"
For Ramabai a living faith meant a seamless interweaving
of life and beliefs. She chose as her mentors in the Christian faith
a few such people. Perhaps the closest to her was the Marathi poet Narayan
Tilak, who had spent his life seeking to follow Christ without sacrificing
his Marathi roots and culture. His poetry contained profound Indian
theology, and she printed some of his songs and hymns for use in worship
at Mukti.
Tilak also helped her a little with what became her magnum
opus: the translation of the whole Bible from Hebrew and Greek into
contemporary Marathi. It was in some ways a natural undertaking for
such a brilliant scholar and linguist. She had benefited from the way
her parents had given her access to the sacred Hindu texts by means
of Sanskrit, and now she was offering the people of Maharashtra the
opportunity to read the Bible in their own language.
But it was more than this. She had come to the conclusion
that the key to India's transformation was Christian women going from
village to village sharing their lives and the Bible with their fellow
countrywomen. Because she believed that the Bible was a radical instrument
of change, she was willing to devote 12 years of her life to this Marathi
translation.
She completed the revision of the final drafts only hours
before she died in April 1922. Her daughter Manorama had died a few
months before, and Ramabai knew her mission was complete. Mukti was
soundly established and would be run by those whom she knew and trusted.
The Marathi Bible would be printed on Mukti presses. And former "Mukti
girls" would take the message of freedom in Christ to every part
of Maharashtra.
Mukti survives to the present day and is one of Ramabai's
lasting legacies. As Christians worldwide explore new ways of being
"church," Mukti stands as an example of an ecclesial community
comprising the least and the lowest of India, focusing not on itself
but on God's calling to be an agent of change in the nation.
Yet Mukti's founder has been relegated to the margins
of history. A wooden cross marks her grave amid scrubby farmland not
far from a railway line. She is only hazily known, if at all, in her
motherland, and almost completely unknown in the wider world. It could
be argued that this marginalization is exactly what Ramabai wanted.
From her father and from the Sisters at St. Mary's, she had learned
the virtues of the "hidden life," and she was determined to
be a servant, an enabler, and a sweeper, so that in all things Jesus
might be pre-eminent and glorified.