Akshaya Mukul

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Akshaya Mukul



Average rating: 3.97 · 314 ratings · 50 reviews · 4 distinct worksSimilar authors
Gita Press and the Making o...

3.96 avg rating — 306 ratings — published 2015 — 8 editions
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Writer, Rebel, Soldier, Lov...

4.27 avg rating — 15 ratings3 editions
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Gita Press Aur Hindu Bharat...

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Writer Rebel Soldier Lover:...

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Quotes by Akshaya Mukul  (?)
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“Passionate and acerbic, Gupt would spare no one, not even his own community. On learning that the Calcutta Marwaris had opened a school that would impart education in English, Hindi and Sanskrit to their boys, Gupt, writing under the pseudonym Shiv Sambhu Sharma in Bharatmitra, the Calcutta journal he edited, hit out at the community telling them not to ‘dare come near knowledge’. Instead, he said, it would be better if they worshipped the camel that had brought them to Calcutta, and if possible bring a camel to the city zoo since it did not have one. He wrote, ‘Your wealth has been acquired through hard work and mental machinations. Whatever you have is yours and not related to knowledge. People who cannot digest your prosperity are whispering “vidya, vidya” (knowledge, knowledge) in your ears. Of what use is vidya? You cannot wear or eat it. If you have money hundreds of knowledgeable persons bow before you even if you are a fool. They praise your sad face . . . without education you have become Raja and Rai Bahadur and the future only knows what more is in store.’18”
Akshaya Mukul, Gita Press and the Making of Hindu India

“Bajaj, like Birla, a convert to Gandhian principles, raised social issues that most members of the community found unpalatable: inter-caste marriage, expressing concern over the extravagance of marriage celebrations, arguing against the practice of financial speculation, condemning child marriage and asking Marwari women to give up their traditional dress and jewellery.”
Akshaya Mukul, Gita Press and the Making of Hindu India

“Dwivedi—a one-time railway clerk, signaller and later clerk in the transport department—was mostly self-taught. His seventeen-year stint as editor of Saraswati is called the Dwivedi Yug (Dwivedi era) during which the Hindi language was successfully refined and beautified.11 A votary of Hindi as the national language, Dwivedi was in favour of letting regional languages flourish locally, and translating literary works in these languages into Hindi.12”
Akshaya Mukul, Gita Press and the Making of Hindu India



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