Thursday, December 27, 2018

Dayaram Gidumal Shahani: The Honorable Poet and Social Reformer of Sindh

Dayaram Gidumal Shahani: The Honorable Poet and Social Reformer of Sindh


Dayaram Gidumal Shahani (1857-1927) or Rishi Dayaram, was a renowned social reformer, judge, poet, and scholar in British India.
Born in the Sindh province, Dayaram acquired his early education in Persian at home from Akhoond Noor Mahammed. He after that studied at the institute of Elphinstone College in Bombay and joined the Civil Service. He rose to the position of Judicial Commissioner in Sindh province but chose not to accept a position as High Court Judge.
He assisted to develop the D.J. Sind College in Karachi city and supported education for women. He was a scholar of Arabic, Persian, and Sanskrit. He retired in the year of 1911 to Bombay where he lived in a “Blue Bungalow” on the beach. He founded the Seva Sadan along with Behramji Malabari. He released several books involving Sata saheliyun (Seven girl-friends, 1906) and Chabak mana lai ain rihan (Lashes for the mind, 1923–29). Works in English involve The History of a Humble Soul (a biography of Sadhu Hiranand), Something about Sindh (1882) and a biography of Malabari with an introduction by Florence Nightingale. He wrote on religion and spirituality under the pen-names of Zero, Bijal and Sigma.
Dayaram Gidumal Shahani married young to Yashoda and had 2 sons and 3 daughters. His 2nd marriage was at the age of 56 to a young girl Urmila aged 26 in his Ashram in the year of 1913. He withdrew himself from society after this but it was apparently to secure the girl who had become pregnant after a relationship with another boy in the ashram.

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