Sarojini Naidu was born on 13 February 1879 in Hyderabad, Hyderabad State, India & died on 2 March 1949 in Lucknow, Uttar Pradesh, India, also known by the sobriquet The Nightingale of India, was a child prodigy, Indian independence activist and poet. Naidu was the first Indian woman to become the President of the Indian National Congress and the first woman to become the Governor of Uttar Pradesh state.
She was the daughter of
Aghorenath Chattopadhyaya. He was a scientist and philosopher. He was
the founder of the Nizam College, Hyderabad. Sarojini Naidu’s mother
Barada Sundari Devi was a poetess baji and used to write poetry in
Bengali. Sarojini Naidu was the eldest among the eight siblings. One of
her brothers Birendranath was a revolutionary and her other brother
Harindranath was a poet, dramatist, and actor.
Sarojini Naidu was a brilliant student. She was proficient in Urdu,
Telugu, English, Bengali, and Persian. At the age of twelve, Sarojini
Naidu attained national fame when she topped the matriculation
examination at Madras University. Her father wanted her to become a
mathematician or scientist but Sarojini Naidu was interested in poetry.
She started writing poems in English. Impressed by her poetry, Nizam of
Hyderabad, gave her scholarship to study abroad.
At the age of 16, she traveled to England to study first at King’s
College London and later at Girton College, Cambridge. There she met famous
laureates of her time such as Arthur Simon and Edmond Gausse. It was
Gausse who convinced Sarojini to stick to Indian themes-India’s great
mountains, rivers, temples, social milieu, to express her poetry. She
depicted contemporary Indian life and events. Her collections “The
golden threshold (1905)”, “The bird of time (1912)”, and “The broken
wing (1912)” attracted huge Indian and English readership.
At the age of 15, she met Dr. Govindarajulu Naidu and fell in love with him.
a non-Brahmin, and a doctor by profession. After finishing her studies
at the age of 19, she married him during the time when inter-caste
marriages were not allowed. It was a revolutionary step but Sarojini’s
father fully supported her in her endeavour. Sarojini Naidu had a happy
married life and had four children: Jayasurya, Padmaj, Randheer, and
Leilamani.
Sarojini Naidu joined the Indian national movement in the wake of partition of Bengal in 1905. She came into contact with
Gopal Krishna Gokhale, Rabindranath Tagore, Muhammad Ali Jinnah, Annie
Besant, C.P.Rama Swami Iyer, Mahatma Gandhi and Jawaharlal Nehru. She
awakened the women of India. She brought them out of the kitchen. She
traveled from state to state, city after city and asked for the rights
of the women. She re-established self-esteem within the women of India.
In 1925, Sarojini Naidu presided over the annual session of Indian National Congress
at Kanpur. Sarojini Naidu played a leading role during the Civil
Disobedience Movement and was jailed along with Gandhiji and other
leaders. In 1942, Sarojini Naidu was arrested during the “Quit India”
movement and was jailed for 21 months with Gandhiji. She shared a very
warm relationship with Gandhiji and used to call him “Mickey Mouse”.
After Independence, Sarojini Naidu became the Governor of Uttar Pradesh. She was India’s first woman governor. Sarojini Naidu died in office on March 2, 1949.
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