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  1. 10. Dwarkanath Gangopadhyay (also known as Dwarkanath Ganguly, 20 April 1844 – 27 June 1898) was a Brahmo reformer in Bengal, British India. He made substantial contributions towards societal enlightenment and the emancipation of women. Ganguly dedicated his life to the latter cause, encouraging women to participate in politics and the social ...

  2. Nov 21, 2017 · However, while Roy who is famous for his role in this movement, few people know the story of how another great Brahmo radical of the era exposed the British exploitation of ‘coolies’. This forgotten legend was Dwarkanath Ganguli. Photo Source. A schoolteacher in British-ruled Bengal of the late 19th century, Dwarkanath was born in April ...

  3. Aug 31, 2017 · Kadambini & Dwarkanath Ganguly. Apart from education, she challenged everything the society deemed acceptable at every step. She married her teacher, Dwarakanath Ganguly, a prominent Brahmo Samaj leader from the Banga Mahila Vidyalaya, who was 20 years older to her. File Photo of Dwarkanath Ganguly. Not one Bramho member accepted their wedding ...

  4. Sep 8, 2022 · Dwarkanath Ganguly was a schoolteacher and a Brahmo reformer who published Abalabandhab, the first magazine devoted to women's rights in the world. He supported his wife Kadambini Ganguly, one of the first female graduates and doctors of India, in her education and faced social and legal challenges.

  5. Dwarkanath Ganguly was born on a Bengali New Year’s Day. He was born on 20 April 1844 in Magurkhanda, Bikrampur, now a part of Bangladesh. His mother hailed from a rich family. Yet her concepts of life, independent nature and simple ways of life influenced young Dwarkanath a lot. His early education was done in his village school.

  6. Dwarakanath Ganguly took his early education in his village Pathsala (school). Later, when he expressed the desire to learn English he joined the English school in nearby Kalipara in spite of severe physical difficulties. He studied up to the entrance class but failed to clear the examination and was surely a self-taught man.

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  8. Jun 13, 2018 · The issue of female education led to a split in Brahmo Samaj in 1866. Dwarkanath Ganguly led the progressive faction of the Samaj and Keshub Chandra Sen remained the leader of the mainstream Brahmo Samaj. See David Kopf, The Brahmo Samaj and the Shaping of the Modern Indian Mind (New Delhi: Archives Publishers, 1979).