Rabindranath tagore on sikhs

Saumyendranath Tagore

Indian communist leader and intellectual

Saumyendranath Tagore (October 8, 1901 – September 22, 1974),[1] son of Sudhindranath Tagore, fourth child of Dwijendranath Tagore, and nephew of Rabindranath Tagore,was the leader of the Revolutionary Communist Party of India,[2][3] and the first translator of The Communist Manifesto into Bengali, which was published in Langal magazine edited by Kazi Nazrul Islam.

Education

Tagore passed matriculation in 1917 from Mitra Institution in Kolkata and became graduate with Hon's in Economics from the Presidency College in the year of 1921.

Communist movement

In 1920, Tagore joined the "Akhil Bharat Chatra Sammelan" ("All-India Student Conference") in Ahmedabad. He befriended Muzaffar Ahmed and the poet, Kazi Nazrul Islam. After Tagore joined the Workers and Peasants Party (WPP) in April 1926, he began mobilizing the jute mill‐workers of Bengal to form the Bengal Jute Workers' Association. His effectiveness as a trade union activist and his attempts to win revolut

Rabindranath Tagore Beyond His Language - Introduction

Rabindranath Tagore Beyond His Language Introduction The present volume is based on the papers presented at the conference Rabindranath Tagore Beyond Bengali Literature, organized at Eötvös Loránd University, Budapest from 19-20 March 2012. Held in the year between the poet’s 150th birth anniversary and the centenary of his Nobel Prize, it was one of the many events reaping the fruits of academic activities encouraged by the celebrations of a towering figure claimed to be their own by both India and Bangladesh. The conference focussed on Tagore as a global figure who rises above divides and speaks to people distant both in time and space, transcending the boundaries of language. Papers presented here as essays, extended essays or dialogues investigate how his writings and art are linked to the meta-linguistic domains of the psychological, medical and the mythical, how he was received in various cultures outside Bengal, how his art is determined by individual circumstances and global aspirations, and how he acted as an inspira

Rabindranath Tagore

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Rabindranath Tagore, a multitalented personality, can be explained as "here is god's plenty." He was a poet, a novelist, a painter, a social reformer, a composer, a philosopher, etc., and was also known as Gurudev. Although his first language was Bengali, he started his writings in Bengali but later translated many of them into English, which became the milestone of his literary career. However, he has written so many poems, short stories, novels, dramas, etc., but his fame mainly lies in 'Gitanjali' and the national anthem 'Jana Gana Mana'. He also wrote the national anthem for Bangladesh, 'Amar Shonar Bangla'. Tagore's work also inspired the national anthem of Sri Lanka.

Tagore's Greatness

Rabindranath Tagore was one of the great personalities in the history of Indian English and Bengali literature. His contribution to emerging Indian English or Bengali literature is significant and remarkable. However, Tagore did not have academic struggles due to improper schooling. His conscious mind and ability to penetrate or underst

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