Kamini Roy Explained

Kamini Roy
Native Name:কামিনী রায়
Birth Date:12 October 1864
Birth Place:Basanda, Jhalokati, Bengal Presidency, British India
Death Place:Hazaribagh, Bihar and Orissa Province, British India
Occupation:Poet, scholar
Notable Works:Alo O Chhaya
Spouse:Kedarnath Roy
Nationality:Indian
Alma Mater:Bethune College
University of Calcutta

Kamini Roy (12 October 1864 – 27 September 1933) was a Bengali poet, social worker and feminist in British India. She was the first woman honours graduate in British India.[1] [2]

Early life

Born on 12 October 1864 in the village of Basunda, then in Bakerganj District of Bengal Presidency and now in Jhalokati District of Bangladesh, Roy joined Bethune School in 1883. One of the first girls to attend school in British India, she earned a Bachelor of Arts degree with Sanskrit honours from Bethune College of the University of Calcutta in 1886 and started teaching there in the same year. Kadambini Ganguly, the country's second female honours graduate, attended the same institution in a class three years senior to Roy.[2]

Nisith Chandra Sen, her brother, was a renowned barrister in the Calcutta High Court, and later the Mayor of Calcutta while her sister Jamini Sen was the house physician of the Nepalese royal family and the first female Fellow of the Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons of Glasgow.[3] In 1894 she married Kedarnath Roy.[2]

Writing and feminism

She picked up the cue for feminism from a fellow student of Bethune School, Abala Bose. Speaking to a girls' school in Calcutta, Roy said that, as Bharati Ray later paraphrased it, "the aim of women's education was to contribute to their all-round development and fulfillment of their potential".[4]

In a Bengali essay titled The Fruit of the Tree of Knowledge she wrote,

In 1921, she was one of the leaders, along with Kumudini Mitra (Basu) and Mrinalini Sen, of the Bangiya Nari Samaj, an organization formed to fight for woman's suffrage. The Bengal Legislative Council granted limited suffrage to women in 1925, allowing Bengali women to exercise their right for the first time in the 1926 Indian general election.[4] She was a member of the Female Labour Investigation Commission (1922–23).[2]

Honors and laurels

Roy supported younger writers and poets, including Sufia Kamal, who she visited in 1923. She was president of the Bengali Literary Conference in 1930 and vice-president of the Bangiya Sahitya Parishad in 1932–33.[2]

She was influenced by the poet Rabindranath Tagore and Sanskrit literature. Calcutta University honoured her with the Jagattarini Gold Medal.[2]

On 12 October 2019, Google commemorated Roy with a Google Doodle on her 155th birth anniversary. The accompanying write up started with her quote, “Why should a woman be confined to home and denied her rightful place in society?”[5]

Works

Selected works include:

Further reading

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Kamini Roy: Poet, Teacher And The First Woman Honours Graduate In British India. Sarna. Jasveen Kaur. 7 July 2017. Feminist India. https://web.archive.org/web/20180924131145/https://feminisminindia.com/2017/07/07/kamini-roy-essay/. 24 September 2018. live. 24 September 2018.
  2. Sengupta, Subodh Chandra and Bose, Anjali (editors), 1976/1998, Sansad Bangali Charitabhidhan (Biographical dictionary) Vol I,, p83,
  3. Ray . Sharmita . 2014 . Women Doctors' Masterful Manoeuverings: Colonial Bengal, Late Nineteenth and Early Twentieth Centuries . Social Scientist . 42 . 3/4 . 59–76 . 0970-0293.
  4. Book: Ray, Bharati . Bharati Ray . Women in Calcutta: the Years of Change . 1990 . Chaudhuri . Sukanta . Sukanta Chaudhuri . Calcutta: The Living City . II: The Present and Future . Oxford University Press . 36–37 . 978-0-19-563697-0.
  5. Web site: Kamini Roy's 155th Birthday . Google. 12 October 2019. 12 October 2019.