Tagore (174K)
Rabindranath Tagore (seated centre) visited the West 2nd Avenue gurdwara in 1929.


AUG 9, 2013:
BENGALI POET, ESSAYIST, and songwriter Rabindranath Tagore was a literary giant of the early 20th century, becoming the first non-European ever to win the Nobel Prize in Literature.

tagore (1) (14K)

When Tagore visited the Temple for the first time, he'd been in Vacouver for three days already.

Tagore adored Sikhism - didn't he suggest that the point of unity for Hindus and Moslems in a united, free India should be a common admiration the Sikhs - so if he did sleep in the basement of the gurdwara, it was by choice, a great spiritual poet's gesture of faith and love, an act of inspiration, not oppression...

The real story is that this man, born to great wealth gave it all away, then used his world-wide fame to make more money, and gave that away, too. If there was a colour-bar at the Hotel Van, it didn't exist for Tagore. He had immense cultural influence, and carried a massive moral power in the Commonwealth & Empire. Yet, he took most of the day on April 11, 1929 to make his way to the Temple to express his solidarity with the Sikh community of B.C..

He didn't "drop by". He spent his childhood summers away from Bengal in Amritsar, and he went to Temple every night. On West Second, he was welcomed like family, and he spoke to the assembled as family. He envisioned a multi-cultural, multi-ethnic, democratic India. He knew that Sikhs got a raw deal in the Punjab and in Canada. He thought that the tenets of Guru Nanak provided the foundation, or a model for such a state.

Michael Puttonen
AUG 9-12, 2013

And according to local cultural historian Naveen Girn, he visited the West 2nd Avenue Sikh temple when he visited Vancouver in 1929.

Girn, research curator of the Surrey Art Gallery, told the Georgia Straight that while Tagore was at the temple (which is now on Ross Street), a photograph was taken of him surrounded by local admirers.

"The community knew he was coming," Girn revealed. "They brought together different community leaders—some from the island, and from Vancouver, and also Reverend [Charles Freer] Andrews."

Andrews, an Anglican priest, was a supporter of South Asians' right to vote and the Indian independence movement. He was a close friend of Mahatma Gandhi and was portrayed in Richard Attenborough's biopic of the Indian independence leader.

Tagore was aware of Ghadar activists

This year marks the centenary of Tagore winning the Nobel Prize in 1913.

It's also the 100th anniversary of the creation of the Ghadar party of Indian independence activists along the west coast of North America. Several went back to India to support an armed struggle to try to force the British out of India.

"They passed articles by Tagore, too," Girn said. "They were very proud of him because he was a Nobel laureate."

The following year, Canadian immigration officials refused to allow more than 350 South Asian passengers on the Komagata Maru to disembark in Vancouver. The ship was sent back to India, where several were shot by British soldiers.

Tagore renounced his knighthood in 1919 after British Brig.-Gen. Reginald Dyer oversaw the massacre of peaceful demonstrators at the Jallianwala Bagh Garden in Amritsar in 1919.

This official death toll was 379 and another 1,100 were reported wounded. To this day, Britain has refused to apologize for the mass shooting, which was depicted in Attenborough's film.

Nehru also dropped by the temple

The Hotel Vancouver hosted then-Indian prime minister Jawaharlal Nehru and his daughter Indira (a future prime minister) when they visited Vancouver in November 1949.

"He came to Vancouver because he knew about the community here," Girn said. "He knew about the Komagata Maru; he knew about the Ghadar party. They had been sending him updates about what was happening in the community."

Girn said that Nehru also spoke at the West 2nd Avenue gurdwara during his visit.

"He talks in the speech about the assassination of Gandhiji [Mahatma Gandhi], partition, and how South Asians living in Canada need to take an active life in Canadian life and not to ghettoize themselves. So before [Pierre] Trudeau, he’s talking about this idea of multiculturalism and how people should live together."

(For more on Rabindranath Tagore's visit to Vancouver, go here.)

 

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