Poet and Plowman

Poet and Plowman

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Book Specification

Item Code: NAY473
Author: Leonard K. Elmhirst
Publisher: Visva-Bharati, Kolkata
Language: English
Edition: 2008
ISBN: 9788175224216
Pages: 171 (10 B/W Illustrations)
Cover: PAPERBACK
Other Details 8.50 X 5.50 inch
Weight 270 gm

Book Description

Foreword
Rabindranath Tagore was fortunate in his many foreign friends, English, European and American. Some of them came to be closely associated with his now famous experimental centres of education and rural reconstruction at Santiniketan and Santiniketan. The memory of Charlie Andrews, Willie Pearson and Sylvian Levy, each with his unique contribution, are now part of the history of Santiniketan and Visva-Bharati. In the same way, and indeed more basically and vividly, the contribution of Leonard Elmhirst is an integral part of the history of Santiniketan. One can hardly think of Santiniketan without recalling the debt it owes to Elmhirst's dynamic zeal, devotion and initiative. He did the spade work (literally, too) and helped Rabindranath lay the foundation of a complex of activities, seemingly rustic and lowly but in the long run vital for national regeneration.

For Rabindranath, the two experiments, pedagogic and agricultural, cultural and rural, were vitally linked. The very difference in their setting made the link more vital. What he tried to work out, at Santiniketan and at Surul, was an integrated programme in which culture of the mind and culture of the soil went hand in hand. That Santiniketan should grow as a cultural oasis in the midst of an arid waste of decaying humanity had never seemed right to him. How to build a living and fruitful network of communication between the two had long troubled him.

In early 1921 when the Poet was in New York he learnt of Leonard Elmhirst, a young Englishman, son of a Yorkshire Curate, who having done History at Cambridge was then learning Agriculture at Cornell. Having been invalided out of Mesopotamia during the first world war, Elmhirst had spent some months in India where he had got keenly interested in the problem of agricultural and rural development. Here was a young idealist with the right passion and the right scientific training which Tagore needed. He sent him a telegram to meet him in New York and promptly invited him to join him in India and help launch his experiment at Surul. The young man agreed, and a few months later, in November of the same year, duly arrived at Bolpur, true to his word.

Introduction
Early in 1921 while Gurudeva was in America, some American friends told him of a young Englishman from Cambridge, who was then studying Agriculture and doing part-time teaching at Cornell University. He was further told that this young man, Mr. Leonard Elmhirst, was anxious to come to India to study its village problems at first hand. The Poet was delighted and wanted immediately to meet the young man. Mr. Elmhirst, who was already full of admiration for Tagore and his Santiniketan promptly, responded to the Poet's invitation. The two met at New York. The Poet was greatly impressed by the young man's sincerity, his enthusiasm and above all, his sane outlook. The Poet said, he had an institution at Santiniketan which was mainly academic, but it was surrounded by villages which were decaying and dying. He wanted somebody to come and help him to find out why. Would Mr. Elmhirst be prepared to go and live in a village? The young man readily agreed.

Mr. Elmhirst arrived at Santiniketan in November 1921. The Poet asked him to go and see for himself the state of things in the villages. He placed at his disposal a few young men whom, the Poet said; he might train up as workers in village reconstruction. This, in brief, is the genesis of the Rural Reconstruction Department at Santiniketan. Elmhirst's initial difficulties were, indeed, very great. He had to fight against numerous obstacles in the shape of ignorance, lethargy, suspicion and social inhibitions of various kinds all of which he overcame with love and sympathy, patience and hard work. He went to the very root of the problem in so far as he attempted to break down the age-old social walls and infuse in the villagers a feeling of mutual respect and self-help. His devotion to work was an inspiration to the villagers as well as to the young band of workers for whom to work with Leonard had all the thrill of a big adventure. Mr. Elmhirst is the chief architect of Santiniketan which he built up with his own labour and later gave financial stability to the project with funds from his own resources.

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