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Resource name: /E-Library/Disciples/Sujata Nahar/English/Mother^s Chronicles Book Six/Social Customs.htm
47
Social Customs
My brother Noren was telling us tales from his school days at Santiniketan. All my five brothers were students there. I was too young to join it. In those days there were no nursery schools for children. Besides, the then prevailing custom was that at the age of five, not before, ceremonies were performed on a Saraswati Puja day, and the child was initiated in the art of learning.
Well, Noren told us that once a month, in the school kitchen, all the students and teachers too, even the day students like him, would be invited to have lunch there. That was a special day because the sweepers-cum-scavengers would do the cooking. Of course the
Resource name: /E-Library/Disciples/Sujata Nahar/English/Mother^s Chronicles Book Six/In Pondicherry the Election is Done.htm
51
In Pondicherry the Election is Done
Sri Aurobindo was there.
This time he took an active part in the elections. Specially on behalf of Paul Richard. He kept Motilal Roy of Chandernagore—the French enclave in Bengal—abreast of the unfolding scenario. Some of those letters have survived. A few selected extracts from them will help the readers to draw their own conclusions.
"Dear M." wrote Sri Aurobindo in April, 1914.
"I send you today the electoral declaration of M. Paul Richard, one of the candidates at the approaching election for the French Chamber. This election is of some importance to us; for there are two of the can
Title:
View All Highlighted Matches
Resource name: /E-Library/Disciples/Sujata Nahar/English/Mother^s Chronicles Book Six/The Tamil Bard.htm
Resource name: /E-Library/Disciples/Sujata Nahar/English/Mother^s Chronicles Book Six/The Anglo-Indian Press.htm
31
The Anglo-Indian Press
Such then was the fixed idea of all British Police, of the entire
administration, I dare say, from top to bottom, that 'Aurobindo Ghose' was a dangerous man plotting terrorism against Europeans and their assassination.
The Anglo-Indian press spread that idea with utmost enthusiasm, for, were those papers not the mouthpiece of the government? So, like a circle of foxes howling at the moon, those newspapers howled at the Nationalists.
We shall never really measure the extent of influence the media wielded. On the one side were Nationalist papers like Kesari of Maharashtra, Bande Mataram and Yugantar of Bengal, India
Resource name: /E-Library/Disciples/Sujata Nahar/English/Mother^s Chronicles Book Two/precontent.htm
MOTHER'S CHRONICLES
Mother's Chronicles
book two
MIRRA
THE ARTIST
by
Sujata Nahar
INSTITUT DE RECHERCHES ÉVOLUTIVES
32, avenue de I'Observatoire, 75014 Paris
Already published in the series:
Book One: MIRRA
To be published:
Book Three: MIRRA THE OCCULTIST
Book Four: MIRRA AND SRI AUROBINDO
Book Five: MIRRA IN JAPAN
Book Six: MIRRA THE MOTHER
Mother's Chronicles - Book Two: MIRRA THE ARTIST. © 1986 by Sujata Nahar. All rights reserved. No part of this book may be used or reprod
Prologue
The Fish.
Manu, the Father of men, opened his eyes and saw the little Fish. It was being chased by a very big fish.
A faint sound had stirred Manu's deep meditation. It was the cry for help of the little Fish.
Manu took the tiny little Fish in his palms and put it in a small pot.
To Manu's astonishment, the next day, the little Fish had grown too big for the little pot. So he put it in a small pond.
To Manu's amazement, the Fish grew too large for the small pond.
Manu put the Fish in a great big lake. The Fish grew bigger than the big lake.
Manu put it in the Ganges. The Fish outgrew the Ganges.
So finally, Manu took the Fish to the Ocean.
Resource name: /E-Library/Disciples/Sujata Nahar/English/Mother^s Chronicles Book Two/Table of Illustrations.htm
Table of Illustrations
Page
Frontispiece Mirra at the turn of the century
45 Rabindranath Tagore; autographed in March,
1930 (courtesy Abhay Nahar)
48 Abanindranath Tagore, detail of a dry-point by Mukul Dey
55 A sketch by Nandalal Bose, from Abhay's autograph
book
58 Nandalal Bose (courtesy Mrs Jamuna Sen)
67 Sujata, around four
74 From Abhay's autograph book
75 'Progress' bush (courtesy Patrice Marot) 81 Vasudha, a sketch by Mother
87 Rodin in 1906 (courtesy Musee Rodin, Paris)
124 A Brasier car in 1905
135 A mural in St James church at Pau (courtesy Patrice
Marot)
138 Pavitra driving Mothe
Resource name: /E-Library/Disciples/Sujata Nahar/English/Mother^s Chronicles Book Two/A Word With You, Please!.htm
To pull her out of that tomb
was somehow our ambition.
Sujata — Satprem
April 30, 1984
A Word With You, Please!
Greetings, friends! It is a pleasure to have you join me for another stretch of Mother's road.
I imagine we have already met and you know me. But just in case this is our first meeting, let me say that I am now an 'elderberry' lady, as a friend of mine wants me known, with a score of sixty runs. Yet I was only nine when I first saw Sri Aurobindo and Mother.
And I was but four years old when my father P.S. Nahar took his family to Santiniketan, the educational establishment of the Poet Tagore.
The Nahars' a
Resource name: /E-Library/Disciples/Sujata Nahar/English/Mother^s Chronicles Book One/precontent.htm
Mother's Chronicles
book one
MIRRA
by
Sujata Nahar
INSTITUT DE RECHERCHES EVOLUTIVES
32, avenue de I'Observatoire, 75014 Paris
To be published in the series:
Book Two: MIRRA THE ARTIST
Book Three: MIRRA THE OCCULTIST
Book Four: MIRRA AND SRI AUROBINDO
Book Five : MIRRA IN JAPAN
Book Six: MIRRA THE MOTHER
Mother's Chronicles- Book One: MIRRA. © 1985 by Sujata Nahar. All rights
reserved. No part of this book may be used or reproduced in any manner
whatsoever without written permission except in the case of brief quotations
embodied in critical arti
Resource name: /E-Library/Disciples/Sujata Nahar/English/Mother^s Chronicles Book One/Birth Certificate.htm
MIRRA'S BIRTH CERTIFICATE
(translation)
This Sunday 24 February 1878 at 10 a.m., birth certificate of BLANCHE RACHEL MlRRA,
of female sex, surname as under, born the 21st of this month at 10:15 a.m., at the home of her father and mother, 41 Boulevard Haussmann, daughter of: Maurice ALFASSA, banker, aged thirty-five, and Mathilde ISMALUN, his spouse, housewife, aged twenty-one, married at Alexandria (Egypt) on 18 June 1874. Under notification of the father, in the presence of the witnesses Aristide Sorel, employee, aged sixty-two, residing at Paris, 47 Rue Rochechouart, and Edouard Biscara, employee, aged thirty-nine, residing at Paris, 11 Rue Vintimille, who hav