Bala Guru Shadananda (also spelled as Balaguru Sadanda or Balaguru Khadananda, Nepaliःबाला गुरु षडानन्द) was a social reformer and education activist of eastern Nepal. He is credited with establishing the first school in Nepal, outside the Kathmandu Valley and actively taking part to abolish Sati tradition.[1]
Shadananda was born in Dingla village of Bhojpur district in Poush . His birth name was Shadananda Adhikari. He was the youngest child of mother Rukmini and father Laxmi Narayan Adhikari. [1]
In, he opened a Sanskrit school that was open to students from all communities at the time when Rana regime strictly restricted to open schools in Nepal.[2] His vision was to have a school that can produce a productive labour. For this, he started the commercial cultivation of the Rudraksha and invented the concept of jageda ban meaning extra forest which is considered as the initial idea of community forest in Nepal. He started a weekly market every Saturday in Dingla to enhance the income of people from Bhojpur and Sankhuwasabha.[3]
In, he established the Sitaram Guthi(Sitaram trust) to promote social and cultural works such as to run school, construct temples and resting places.
Balaguru also campaigned against the Sati practices which was widely in practise at his time. His campaign later inspired Chandra Shumsher to abolish the practice in . [4]