Home » Great India

GREAT INDIA

 

Tagore's last four years have been marked by chronic pain and two long periods of sickness. They started when Tagore lost consciousness at the end of 1937, coma and remained near death for a long time. This was followed three years later by the end of 1940 by the same fate, which he never recovered. Poetry Tagore wrote in these years are among his best, and is characterised by its concern to death. After much suffering, Tagore died August 7, 1941 (22 Shravan 1348) in an upstairs room of the mansion Jorasanko in which he was raised; anniversary of his death is still mourning held public office in the world of Bengali language.



Tagore visited five continents

Because of his remarkable wanderlust, between 1878 and 1932, Tagore visited more than thirty countries on five continents, most of these trips were crucial to familiarize non-Indian audiences and for the dissemination of his work, his ideas policies. In 1912, he took a bundle of his works translated into England, where they impressed missionary protected Gandhi and Charles F. Andrews, the Anglo-Irish poet William Butler Yeats, Ezra Pound, Robert Bridges, Ernest Rhys, Thomas Sturge Moore, and others. Indeed, Yeats wrote the preface to the English translation of Gitanjali, while Tagore Andrews joined Santiniketan. On November 10, 1912, Tagore tour of the United States and the United Kingdom, staying in Butterton, Staffordshire with Andrews' church friends. With effect from May 3, 1916 until April 1917, Tagore went on to lecture circuit in Japan and the United States, during which he decried nationalism-especially Japanese and Americans . He is also the author of the essay "The nationalism in India", attracting both derision and praise (the second of pacifists, including Romain Rolland). Shortly after returning from India, 63 years, Tagore visited Peru at the invitation of the Peruvian government, and had the opportunity to visit Mexico as well. Both governments have pledged a gift of $ 100000 for the school Shantiniketan (Visva-Bharati) in commemoration of his visits. One week after November 6, 1924 arrival in Buenos Aires, Argentina, a bad Tagore moved into the villa on Miralrío around Victoria Ocampo. He left India in January 1925. On May 30, 1926, Tagore reached Naples, Italy, he met with the fascist dictator Benito Mussolini in Rome the next day. Their first report hot weather lasted until Tagore spoke out against Mussolini, July 20, 1926.

 

On July 14, 1927, Tagore and two companions began a four-month tour of Southeast Asia, visiting Bali, Java, Kuala Lumpur, Malacca, Penang, Thailand, and Singapore. Tagore's voyage of the tour were collected in the work "Jatri. In early 1930, he left Bengal for a one-year tour around Europe and the United States. Once he returned to the United Kingdom, while his paintings were exhibited in Paris and London, he remained a settlement of Friends in Birmingham. There he wrote his Hibbert Lectures at Oxford University (which deals with "the idea of humanity of our God or the divinity of man forever") and spoke at London Quaker annual gathering. Il (dealing with the relations between the British and Indians, it would be a subject to deal with the next two years), Tagore spoke of a "dark abyss of distancing." He then visited the Aga Khan III, remained at Dartington Hall, and then toured in Denmark, Switzerland and Germany, from June to mid-September 1930 and then the Soviet Union. Finally, in April 1932, Tagore, who has read the captions and works by the Persian mystic Hafez, has been invited as personal guests of Shah Reza Pahlavi, the Shah of Iran. These numerous trips Tagore allowed to interact with many notable contemporaries, including Henri Bergson, Albert Einstein, Robert Frost, Thomas Mann, George Bernard Shaw, HG Wells and Romain Rolland. Tagore's last trip abroad, including visits to Persia and Iraq (in 1932) and Ceylon in 1933, only sharpened his opinions with regard to the divisions of man and nationalism.

Tagore Restaurant Auckland

(Tagore Restaurant is named after the famous Indian poet, philosopher and Nobel laureate and founder of Shanti Niketan (ashram), Rabindranath Tagore.

These are the qualities that inspire us to present you with the best dining experience in Indian cuisine.

The menu has been prepared with the best ingredients, and is selected

From the most popular dishes from different regions of the Indian subcontinent.)

(Shanti Niketan Vidyapeeth (SNVP) located in the road Mawana Meerut (Uttar Pardesh) was founded in 2005 by Nageen Charitable Trust (NCT). The school is located in the 6th km. Meerut milestone on-Bijnore highway, away from pollution and the hubbub of city life. The school campus spreads over 15 acres of land.

The school is affiliated to CBSE NCERT and follows the curriculum based on CBSE curriculum. Education is the greatest asset that can have a child. Good parenting is preparing to become capable, competent and responsible member of society. Character building and the inculcation of moral values is an essential element of a good education system, SNVP. We try to provide such an education system.)

 
 
Copyright © 2007. All rights reserved.