*in the 1890's*
THE STRUGGLE FOR AN EDUCATION Born in 1891, the young Ambedkar had (for his caste, for his time and place) a relatively comfortable upbringing. But his mother died when he was only five, and his early childhood brought other painful experiences as well, as he began to experience the full degradation of his place in the sub-basement of the caste system. |
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==1891, April 14== Bhimrao Ramji Ambavadekar was born in the British-founded town of Mhow (*Imperial Gazetteer*; *Imperial Gazetteer map*), an important military center near Indore, Madhya Pradesh. He was the fourteenth and last child of Ramji Sakpal and Bhimabai Murbadkar Sakpal. The family's ancestral town was Ambavade (in the Ratnagiri District of Maharashtra. "Of the fourteen children, some died in infancy and some as young children. This is the only history we know of seven of the children. Of the other seven, three were boys and four were girls. In chronological order their names were Balaram, Ganga, Ramabai, Anandrao, Manjula, Tulasa, and "Bhiva" (Bhimrao)." (*Khairmode*, p. I:28.) |
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==1894== The activist Gopal Baba Walangkar retired and living in Dapoli, created the first public petition of the Untouchable movement: it requested the British colonial army to resume its recruitment from the Untouchable castes. (*Zelliot 1*, pp. 42-44.) |
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==1894-1896==
When
Bhimrao's father retired from his career with the
British Army in 1894, he settled for a time in Dapoli (in Ratnagiri
District: *Imperial Gazetteer*; *Imperial Gazetteer map*). The
young Bhimrao had his earliest education there:
"At Dapoli in Bombay Presidency, however, there was a government-aided school, and the elder Ambedkar insisted his boys be allowed to attend on the ground that he was an army officer. It was finally arranged that they and four other "untouchables" might go to the school on the condition that they stay in a room by themselves and never come in contact with the caste children, and above all that they never take a drink from the school water supply. Those terms were accepted, and the future Doctor of Philosophy of Morningside Heights had his first conscious experience in ostracism and in learning at the same time. He was then 6 years old. |
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==1896== The family moved to Satara (*Imperial Gazetteer*; *Imperial Gazetteer map*), where Ramji Sakpal found a job with the Public Works Department in Goregaon; Bhimrao was enrolled in school in Satara. |
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==1896== Bhimabai Sakpal died; of her fourteen children, only three sons (Balaram, Anandrao, Bhimrao) and two daughters (Manjula, Tulasa) survived her. The children were cared for by their paternal aunt Mira, who had a disabling hunchback but did her best to look after them. |
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== Cricket! == As a boy, Bhimrao was
lively and very sports-minded. His favorite sport
was cricket... |
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== Handwriting... == "Subhedar's
[=Bhimrao's father] English, Marathi, and Modi (*site*) handwriting was very nice.
While in Satara, he had taken care from the very
beginning that his son's handwriting too would be
perfect. He would beat Bhiva with a cane from a tamarind
tree, and make him practice. Because of that, Bhiva's
English handwriting had an ideal form." (*Khairmode*, p.
I:63) |
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== on to the 1900's == |
-- TIMELINE page -- Dr. Ambedkar index page -- FWP's main page --