The life and writings of Dharmanand Kosambi (18761947), pioneering scholar of Pali and Buddhist Studies, comprise the substance of this book.Born in rural Goa, Dharmanand came under the spell of the Buddhas teachings during his adolescence. As described in his long autobiographical memoir (included here), at an early age he set off on an incredible journey of austere self-training across the length and breadth of Britains Indian Empire, halting to educate himself at places connected with Buddhism. His sojourns included living in Sri Lanka to master Pali as a novitiate-scholar, in a Burmese cave as a bhikshu, and in some viharas of North Indiabegging for monastic sustenanceas well as in Nepal and Sikkim which he reached after arduous, sometimes barefoot, treks. Over these itinerant years Dharmanand acquired such mastery of the Buddhist canon that he was variously appointed to teach and research at Calcutta, Baroda, Harvard, and Leningrad.As a thinker Dharmanand blended Buddhist ethics, Mahatma Gandhis philosophy of truth and non-violence, and the ideals of socialism. He exchanged letters with the Mahatma, worked for his causes, and died in the approved Buddhist/Jain manner by voluntary starvation at Sevagram ashram. Arguably, no Indian scholars life has been as exemplary as Dharmanands, or has approximated as closely to the nobility and saintliness of the Mahatmas.Despite his mastery of several languages, Dharmanand chose to write in Marathi because of his strong region-specific commitment. Consequently, very few today are familiar with his copious output in Buddhist Studies, and fewer still with his contribution to social and political thought.By translating and marshalling his most significant writings, Meera Kosambi shows the manifold dimensions of Dharmanands personality, and the profoundly moral character of his intellectual journeys. Her Introduction also contextualizes the life, career, and achievement of one of modern Indias greatest scholar-savants.
The life and writings of Dharmanand Kosambi (18761947), pioneering scholar of Pali and Buddhist Studies, comprise the substance of this book.Born in rural Goa, Dharmanand came under the spell of the Buddhas teachings during his adolescence. As described in his long autobiographical memoir (included here), at an early age he set off on an incredible journey of austere self-training across the length and breadth of Britains Indian Empire, halting to educate himself at places connected with Buddhism. His sojourns included living in Sri Lanka to master Pali as a novitiate-scholar, in a Burmese cave as a bhikshu, and in some viharas of North Indiabegging for monastic sustenanceas well as in Nepal and Sikkim which he reached after arduous, sometimes barefoot, treks. Over these itinerant years Dharmanand acquired such mastery of the Buddhist canon that he was variously appointed to teach and research at Calcutta, Baroda, Harvard, and Leningrad.As a thinker Dharmanand blended Buddhist ethics, Mahatma Gandhis philosophy of truth and non-violence, and the ideals of socialism. He exchanged letters with the Mahatma, worked for his causes, and died in the approved Buddhist/Jain manner by voluntary starvation at Sevagram ashram. Arguably, no Indian scholars life has been as exemplary as Dharmanands, or has approximated as closely to the nobility and saintliness of the Mahatmas.Despite his mastery of several languages, Dharmanand chose to write in Marathi because of his strong region-specific commitment. Consequently, very few today are familiar with his copious output in Buddhist Studies, and fewer still with his contribution to social and political thought.By translating and marshalling his most significant writings, Meera Kosambi shows the manifold dimensions of Dharmanands personality, and the profoundly moral character of his intellectual journeys. Her Introduction also contextualizes the life, career, and achievement of one of modern Indias greatest scholar-savants.