Susie Sorabji: Difference between revisions
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==Career== |
==Career== |
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Susie Sorabji followed her mother into educational work, and (despite lifelong frail health) traveled internationally to raise awareness and funding for the girls' school in Pune.<ref name="Pearson" /> She started a [[kindergarten]], and trained kindergarten teachers for work in other Indian schools. "I had to fight against the government inspector when I first started the kindergarten," she recalled, "but now the system has been made compulsory in the government schools."<ref name="Brilliant" /> She also did literacy and missionary work among Indian women living in [[zenana]] spaces.<ref>Jessie A. Fowler, [https://books.google.com/books?id=0qvNAAAAMAAJ&lpg=PA312&ots=uM6RD5rat2&dq=Susie%20Sorabji&pg=PA313#v=onepage&q=Susie%20Sorabji&f=false "A Mental Photograph of Miss Susie Sorabji, of India"] ''The Phrenological Journal and Science of Health'' (October 1905): 312-317.</ref> She supported the temperance movement and, along with other members of her family, opposed the struggle for Indian independence.<ref>Tim Allender, [https://books.google.com/books?id=ZlEUCwAAQBAJ&lpg=PA260&ots=aplvLIAnTp&dq=Susie%20Sorabji&pg=PA260#v=onepage&q=Susie%20Sorabji&f=false ''Learning Femininity in Colonial India, 1820-1932''] (Oxford University Press 2016): 260. {{ISBN|9781784996987}}</ref> |
Susie Sorabji followed her mother into educational work, and (despite lifelong frail health) traveled internationally, lecturing and meeting with potential donors, to raise awareness and funding for the girls' school in Pune.<ref name="Pearson" /> She started a [[kindergarten]], and trained kindergarten teachers for work in other Indian schools. "I had to fight against the government inspector when I first started the kindergarten," she recalled, "but now the system has been made compulsory in the government schools."<ref name="Brilliant" /> She also did literacy and missionary work among Indian women living in [[zenana]] spaces.<ref>Jessie A. Fowler, [https://books.google.com/books?id=0qvNAAAAMAAJ&lpg=PA312&ots=uM6RD5rat2&dq=Susie%20Sorabji&pg=PA313#v=onepage&q=Susie%20Sorabji&f=false "A Mental Photograph of Miss Susie Sorabji, of India"] ''The Phrenological Journal and Science of Health'' (October 1905): 312-317.</ref> She supported the temperance movement and, along with other members of her family, opposed the struggle for Indian independence.<ref>Tim Allender, [https://books.google.com/books?id=ZlEUCwAAQBAJ&lpg=PA260&ots=aplvLIAnTp&dq=Susie%20Sorabji&pg=PA260#v=onepage&q=Susie%20Sorabji&f=false ''Learning Femininity in Colonial India, 1820-1932''] (Oxford University Press 2016): 260. {{ISBN|9781784996987}}</ref> |
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==Personal life== |
==Personal life== |
Revision as of 17:56, 11 November 2017
Susie Sorabji (1868 – March 15, 1931) was an Indian educator and Christian missionary.
Early life
Sorabji was born in Sholapur,[1] one of the seven daughters of Reverend Sorabji Karsedji, a Parsi Christian missionary, and Francina Ford, a Parsi who had been adopted and raised by a British couple. Her mother established several girls' schools at Pune.[2] Susie Sorabji was educated at Bombay University.[3]
Career
Susie Sorabji followed her mother into educational work, and (despite lifelong frail health) traveled internationally, lecturing and meeting with potential donors, to raise awareness and funding for the girls' school in Pune.[3] She started a kindergarten, and trained kindergarten teachers for work in other Indian schools. "I had to fight against the government inspector when I first started the kindergarten," she recalled, "but now the system has been made compulsory in the government schools."[2] She also did literacy and missionary work among Indian women living in zenana spaces.[4] She supported the temperance movement and, along with other members of her family, opposed the struggle for Indian independence.[5]
Personal life
Susie Sorabji died in 1931, aged 63 years. Her sister Cornelia Sorabji wrote a biographical memoir, Susie Sorabji, Christian-Parsee Educationist of Western India: A Memoir (London: Oxford University Press 1932).[6] A street in Pune was named for Susie Sorabji in 1932.[7]
There is a Susie Sorabji Auditorium at St. Helena High School in Pune, named in her memory.[8] The school marks her death date (March 15) as its "Founder's Day", performing a play about her life and distributing food to local charity organizations.[9]
There is a chapter of the Imperial Order Daughters of the Empire in Uxbridge, Ontario, named for Susie Sorabji.[10]
References
- ^ Eunice De Souza, Lindsay Pereira, eds., Women's Voices: Selections from Nineteenth and Early-Twentieth Century Indian Writing in English (Oxford University Press 2004): 95. ISBN 9780195667851
- ^ a b "A Group of Brilliant Women" The Westminster (June 24, 1905): 17.
- ^ a b Delevan L. Pearson, "Some Modern Indian Idealists" The Chautauquan (October 1905): 149-152.
- ^ Jessie A. Fowler, "A Mental Photograph of Miss Susie Sorabji, of India" The Phrenological Journal and Science of Health (October 1905): 312-317.
- ^ Tim Allender, Learning Femininity in Colonial India, 1820-1932 (Oxford University Press 2016): 260. ISBN 9781784996987
- ^ Cornelia Sorabji, Susie Sorabji, Christian-Parsee Educationist of Western India: A Memoir (Oxford University Press 1932).
- ^ Richard Sorabji,Opening Doors: The Untold Story of Cornelia Sorabji, Reformer, Lawyer and Champion of Women's Rights in India (Penguin Books India 2010): 400. ISBN 9781848853751
- ^ The Susie Sorabji Auditorium (St. Helena School) Pune, Venues, Eventful.com.
- ^ "St Helena's High School Celebrates Founder's Day" Times of India (March 21, 2011).
- ^ "Uxbridge Pays Tribute to 75-year Organization" Durham Region (May 24, 2009).