V t bhattathiripad quotes of the day
V. T. Bhattathiripad
Indian social critic and dramatist
Vellithuruthi Thazhathu Karutha Patteri Raman Bhattathiripad (26 March – 12 February ), also known as V. T. Bhattathiripad, was an Indian social reformer, dramatist and an Indian independence activist. He was best known for his contributions in the reformation of the casteism and conservatism that existed in the Namboothiri community.[1] He wrote a number of books which include a play, Adukkalayail Ninnu Arangathekku and his autobiography, Kanneerum Kinavum[2] (Tears and Dreams in English) and many critics consider them as notable works in Malayalam literature.
Kerala Sahitya Akademi honoured him with distinguished fellowship in
Biography
V. T. Bhattathiripad, born Raman Bhattathiripad, was born on 26 March to Thuppan Bhattathiripad and Sridevi Andarjanam in Kaippilly Mana at Mezhathur, Ponnani talukMalabar District, Madras Presidency, British India , on the bank of River Ponnani.[3] He belonged to the family of Mezhathol Agnihothri on his father's side and had the lineage of Adi Sankara on his mother's side.
After early education in the traditional way under Narayanan Othikkan, he studied under Pathakkara Manaikkal Meledam and Muthukurissi Mana Kunjunni Namboothirippad and on completion of vedic studies, he started working as a priest at shornur Mundamuka Sastha temple, owned by Kudalloor Mana.[4] A ten-year-old girl from the neighbourhood taught him Malayalam alphabets and mathematics.[5][note 1] He would study English soon after by joining Edakkuni Namboodiri School during which time he also ran a magazine by name, Vidyarthi.[3]
Indian independence movement was gaining popularity and Bhattathiripad participated in the Allahabad session of the Indian National Congress due to which he was expelled from his community.
This prompted him to fight against casteism and he started campaigning for Brahmin widow remarriage and for raising funds for the campaign, he organized a march from Thrissur to Chandragiri River in which came to be known as Yachana Yathra (Begging March).[7]
The first marriage of Bhattathiripad did not last long and later he married Sreedevi Antharjanam of Ittyaparambath Illam.[4] He died on 12 February , at the age of [3]
Legacy
Bhattathiripad sought the emancipation of Namboothiri women, and encouraged widow marriages which was a taboo during those times.[8] Along with M.
R. Bhattathiripad, popularly known as MRB, he campaigned for widow remarriage by putting it in practice in his own household; he gave his sister in law. a widow, in marriage to MRB which was the first widow remarriage among Namboothiris in Kerala. Another widow marriage also followed soon which was the marriage of M. P. Bhattathiripad, better known as Premji, who was MRB's younger brother, to Arya, a 27 year old Namboothiri widow and Bhattathiripad, along with E.
M. S. Namboothiripad, as well as the couple were excommunicated (Brashtu) by the community leaders.[9]
Bhattathiripad utilised his writing skills as a tool for social reforms[10] and his writings contrasted the social changes that followed the Indian independence movement against the dormant state of Namboothiri community.[11][12] The staging of his play, Adukkalayilninnu Arangathekku (From the Kitchen to the Stage), which featured Premji as one of the actors, in at Edakkunni, a village in Thrissur, was an important event in the social reform calendar of Kerala;[13] the play highlighted the discriminatory rituals and practices prevalent in the Namboothiri community, especially the plight of Namboothiti women.[14] The drama also marked a deviation in Malayalam theatre from historical plays to social dramas.[15][16][note 2]
Bhattathiripad's oeuvre consists of a play, a short story anthology, eleven essay compilations and three memoirs,[18] of which Kanneerum Kinavum,[19] the first of his three memoirs, narrates his life from until and is a documentation of the Namboothiri rituals and feudalism.
The book was later translated into English by Sindhu V. Nair under the title, My Tears, My Dreams and was published by Oxford University Press.[6]
Honours
Kerala Sahitya Akademi honoured him with distinguished fellowship in [20] The Sreekrishnapuram VT Bhattathiripad College in Sreekrishnapuram, Palakkad district, is named after him.[21]
Bibliography
Play
Short story anthology
Essays
Memoirs
Translations
Writings on V.
T. Bhattathiripad
See also
See Also (Social reformers of Kerala)
Notes
- ^His autobiography, Kanneerum Kinavum, has more details[6]
- ^The year is most significant in the sense that V. T. Bhattathiripad wrote his play Adukkalayilninnu Arangathekku.
It was the first play in Malayalam to have a definite and concrete social objective and which was produced in itself as part of a very powerful social reformist movement led by Namboodiri Yogakshema Sabha. The degenerate Brahmanical ideology and its social structure had its first powerful assault from within for the first time and the most fervent slogan of the period was for the transformation of "Brahmans into human beings.[17]
References
- ^Bhattathiripad, V.
T.Encyclopaedia of Indian literature and Knowledge vol.
- P.n. panicker famous books
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- Biography of V. T. Bhattathiripad
- Item 3 of 3
- ^"Kanneerum Kinavum – Nastik Nation". Archived from the original on 17 May Retrieved 17 May
- ^ abc"V. T. Bhattathiripad - the renowned Social reformer of Kerala".V t bhattathiripad quotes of the day pdf Sankaran Valsala N. Kurup M. DC Books.
. 4 April Retrieved 4 April
- ^ ab"Biography on Kerala Sahitya Akademi portal". Kerala Sahitya Akademi portal. 4 April Retrieved 4 April
- ^Shaji, K. a (29 March ).V t bhattathiripad quotes of the day Who wrote the play "Adukkalayil Ninnum Arangathekku" - V. Founder of Namboothiri Yuvajana Sangam Translations [ edit ]. The New Indian Express.
"An inspiring banyan tree". The Hindu. Retrieved 4 April
- ^ abNazeer, Mohamed (13 May ). "A memoir with the Enlightenment legacy". The Hindu. Retrieved 4 April
- ^"Kerala History Timeline". . 4 April Retrieved 4 April
- ^Amaresh Datta ().
Encyclopaedia of Indian Literature: A-Devo. Sahitya Akademi. pp.–. ISBN.
- ^Praveen, S. r (24 May ). "Arya Premji passes away".V t bhattathiripad quotes of the day in hindi Retrieved 4 April Kunhiraman E. Germany United States Czech Republic. Mukundan P.
The Hindu. Retrieved 4 April
- ^P. P. Raveendran (). Joseph Mundasseri. Sahitya Akademi.V t bhattathiripad quotes of the day in english Caste system in Kerala Untouchability Hindu reforms Varna. Memoirs [ edit ]. Friday, 30 March V. Bhattathiripad - the renowned Social reformer of Kerala".
pp.24–. ISBN.
- ^Ester Gallo (15 February ). The Fall of Gods: Memory, Kinship, and Middle Classes in South India. OUP India. pp.94–. ISBN.
- ^Basheer, K. P. M. (24 May ). "Arya Premji, an icon of struggle for Namboodiri widows' rights".
V t bhattathiripad quotes of the day youtube: Bhattathiripad kerala Renaissance. He was co-founder of the Yogakshema Sabha and its youth wing Namputhiri Yuvajana samajam. Surendran S. No stories found.
businessline. Retrieved 4 April
- ^Kunhikrishnan, K. (23 June ). "Can drama return to television?". The Hindu. Retrieved 4 April
- ^"'Adukkalayil ninnu arangathekku' staged". The New Indian Express. 11 November Retrieved 4 April
- ^A.
Sreedhara Menon (12 July ). Legacy of Kerala. DC Books. pp.48–. ISBN.
- ^Sivasankari (5 March ). Knit India Through Literature Volume 1 - The South.
- V t bhattathiripad quotes of the day youtube
- V t bhattathiripad quotes of the day in urdu
- V t bhattathiripad quotes of the day in telugu
Pustaka Digital Media. pp.–. PKEY
- ^Ramachandran, V. M. "The Modern Malayalam Theatre". Archived from the original on 21 December
- ^"List of works". Kerala Sahitya Akademi. 4 April Retrieved 4 April
- ^"Kanneerum Kinavum". . Retrieved 4 April
- ^"Kerala Sahitya Akademi Fellowship".
Kerala Sahitya Akademi. 4 April Retrieved 4 April
- ^"About reekrishnapuram V T Bhattathiripad College". . 4 April Retrieved 4 April
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