INDIAN EDUCATION WAS WELL ESTABLISHED AND VIDE Spread to all castes.
Christian British introduced English Education - Why?
The Administrator who brought this was T.B.Macaulay
To Zachary Macaulay, 12 October 1836
My dear Father,
....In a few months, I hope indeed in a few weeks, we shall send up the penal code to government. We have got rid of the punishment of death except in cases of aggravated treason and wilful murder. We shall also get rid indirectly of everything that can properly be called slavery in India. There will remain civil claims on particular people for particular services, which claims may be enforced by civil action. But no person will be entitled, on the plea of being the master of another, to do anything to that other which it would be an offence to do to a freeman.
Our English schools are flourishing wonderfully. We find it difficult, indeed at some places impossible, to provide instruction for all who want it. At the single town of Hoogley fourteen hundred boys are learning English. The effect of this education on the Hindoos is prodigious. No Hindoo who has received an English education ever continues to be sincerely attached to his religion. Some continue to profess it as a matter of policy. But many profess themselves pure Deists, and some embrace Christianity. The case with Mahometans is very different. The best-educated Mahometan often continues to be a Mahometan still. The reason is plain. The Hindoo religion is so extravagantly absurd that it is impossible to teach a boy astronomy, geography, natural history, without completely destroying the hold which that religion has on his mind. But the Mahometan religion belongs to a better family. It has very much in common with Christianity; and even where it is most absurd, it is reasonable when compared with Hindooism. It is my firm belief that, if our plans of education are followed up, there will not be a single idolater among the respectable classes in Bengal thirty years hence. And this will be effected without any efforts to proselytise, without the smallest interference with religious liberty, merely by the natural operation of knowledge and reglection. I heartily rejoice in this prospect....
Oxford University - Boden Sanskrit Chair was misused to Mistranslate VEDAS As
Mercenary-Missionary fraud William Carey's attempt to Convert Shri.Raja Ram Mohan Rai backfired, with Rev.Adams quitting Church and became Brahmo. Maxmuller the Translator's letter to his Wife.
Oxford University - Boden Sanskrit Chair was misused to Mistranslate VEDAS As
Mercenary-Missionary fraud William Carey's attempt to Convert Shri.Raja Ram Mohan Rai backfired, with Rev.Adams quitting Church and became Brahmo. Maxmuller the Translator's letter to his Wife.
1. TO HIS WIFE, OXFORD, December 9, 1867.
“…I feel convinced, though I shall not live to see it, that this edition of mine and the translation of the Veda will hereafter tell to a great extent on the fate of India, and on the growth of millions of souls in that country. It is the root of their religion, and to show them what that root is, I feel sure, the only way of uprooting all that has sprung from it during the last 3,000 years.”
Monier Williams (Oxford Professor who published Sanskrit Dictionary is:
“When the walls of the mighty fortress of Brahmanism are encircled, undermined & finally stormed by the soldiers of the cross, the victory of Christianity must be signal and complete” (Modern India and Indians, p.247).
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