Manilal Dwivedi


Manilal Nabhubhai Dwivedi was a Gujarati-language writer, poet, novelist, essayist, philosopher, editor and social reformer. Commonly referred to as Manilal in literary circles, he influenced 19th-century Gujarati literature. He was one of several Gujarati writers and educators, among them Narmad, Dalpatram, Karsandas Mulji, Govardhanram Tripathi, Mansukhram Tripathi and Navalram Pandya, who campaigned for reform and increased awareness of the problems the Gujurati community was facing.
Manilal belongs to the Scholar Era of Gujarati literature during which the largely religious writings of the previous era began to make room for contemporary topics such as social welfare, Western literary genres, and new-age thinking. His main works include Atmanimajjan, a collection of poems on the theme of love in the context of advaita philosophy; Kanta, a play combining Sanskrit and English dramatic techniques; Nrusinhavatar, a play based on Sanskrit dramatic traditions; Pranavinimaya, a study of yoga and mysticism; and Siddhantasara, a historical critique of the world's religious philosophies. His faith in Shankara's advaita philosophy was the fundamental underpinning of his philosophical thoughts. As he held Eastern civilisation in high esteem, he resisted the influence of Western civilisation and social reform.
Manilal's private life was inconsistent with his professions: he indulged in unrestrained eroticism and promiscuous relationships. He married at the age of thirteen and had two children. Due to his visits to brothels, he contracted syphilis and, after suffering from serious bouts of illness throughout his life, died at the age of 40. Narmad, the founder of modern Gujarati literature, considered Manilal his intellectual heir. Manilal elaborated upon Narmad's line of thinking through his writings in the monthlies Priyamvada and Sudarshan, which he edited from 1885 until his death.

Biography

Manilal Nabhubhai Dwivedi was born on 26September 1858 at Nadiad, Gujarat, to a Sathodara Nagar family. His father, Nabhubhai, was a moneylender and temple priest. The day after Manilal's birth, a local astrologer declared that he would have a brilliant career.
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Manilal completed his primary and secondary education in Nadiad. At the age of four, he began attending primary school; his dislike of arithmetic led him to be absent from that subject. He showed good progress at secondary school; he was ranked first in the annual examination of the second standard and won a prize. His teacher granted him promotion to the fourth standard as a special case, but Manilal was not happy with this favour and requested a demotion to the third standard. He was not proficient in Sanskrit and geometry, and failed Sanskrit in his matriculation examination in 1875. However, he was ranked second in examinations at Bombay University the following year, winning the James Taylor Prize.
He joined Elphinstone College in 1877 and graduated with a bachelor of arts in history and politics in 1880. Under pressure from his father to earn a wage, he left the college and completed his master of arts studies as an autodidact. He returned to Nadiad, and in July 1880, became an assistant teacher at the government high school. In 1881, he was transferred to Bombay as a deputy education inspector of girls' schools. He joined Shamaldas College in Bhavnagar as a professor of Sanskrit in 1885 but retired in 1889 due to health problems. From November 1892 to July 1893, he stayed at Patan, Gujarat, preparing a catalogue of more than two thousand manuscripts from Jain libraries. This resulted in the establishment of the Baroda State Archaeology Department, which he headed from December 1893 to July 1895.
Dhirubhai Thaker, a biographer of Manilal, noted that Manilal had an impressive personality and was tall and handsome in appearance. He habitually wore a long coat, a brahmin-style dhoti, a red turban and a long loose scarf hanging over his shoulders.

Personal life

At the age of 13, Manilal married Mahalaxmi, with whom he had an unhappy marriage. She gave birth to two sons, one in 1882 and the other in 1887, and separated from Manilal in 1890. Manilal had an obsession for love and formed close relationships with several women. As Thaker noted in his biography of Manilal, not all of these relationships were platonic: in several cases, Manilal tried to satisfy his sexual desires under the pretext of being in love. While he was in Bombay, he fell in love with the wife of an acquaintance, and composed poems addressed to her in a variety of moods. Another affair was with Diwalibai, a teacher in a Bombay girls' school, Manilal initially rejected her but she persisted, sending him a series of love letters, and he agreed to respond to her love, though refraining from a sexual relationship. Diwali's letters were first published by Ambalal Purani in the November 1936 issue of Kaumudi, a Gujarati monthly. They were reproduced in Manilal's autobiography Atmavrittanta as an appendix.
From 1891, Manilal began an affair with Ramlakshmi, the wife of his pupil Chhotu, which lasted two-and-a-half years. He also had a brief affair with Chhotu's mistress, Ladi. In his autobiography, he admitted to having had sexual relationships with a close friend's wife, his wife's aunt, a woman seeking a job, a local woman, several prostitutes, servants, and the daughter of a close friend.

Death

In his autobiography, Atmavrittanta, Manilal states that he visited brothels during his college years. As a result, he contracted syphilis, which developed into secondary and tertiary stages. Manilal recorded an abscess on his neck in July 1898. In September, he developed jaundice and pleurisy. He died on the morning of 1 October 1898 while writing at his home in Nadiad.

Works

Manilal's writings belong to the Pandit Yuga, an era in which Gujarati literature expanded beyond religious forms to address social welfare, Western literary genres, and new-age thinking. His writing career began in 1876 with the poem Shiksha Shatak and continued until his death. He contributed to almost all popular forms and published poems, plays, essays, an adaptation of an English novel, book reviews, literary criticism, research, edited works, translations, compilations, and an autobiography in manuscript form. He also wrote articles on philosophical and literary subjects, which have been collected in Sudarshan Gadyawali. He was an exponent of advaita philosophy; throughout his life, he interpreted all aspects of human life and civilisation in the context of Advaita Vedanta, writing several articles and books on the topic.

Literary works

In 1882, Manilal published his play Kanta. A fusion of Sanskrit drama and Shakespearean tragedy, the play had the first tragic hero in Gujarati drama. Manilal wrote another play, Nrusinhavatar, at the request of the Mumbai Gujarati Natak Company. It was based on Hindu mythological episodes, and was staged in 1899 after his death.
, a ghazal by Manilal Dwivedi, in his handwriting|left
Manilal based his poetry collection
Atmanimajjan on his own circumstances, with the theme of love. It largely consisted of ghazals in the style of Persian Sufis. Despite flaws of language, such as the misuse of Persian words, they were held to capture the spirit of ghazal according to critic Mansukhlal Jhaveri. Through them, Manilal illustrated the concepts of the Advaita Vedanta, and his disappointments and cravings for love were expressed. His ghazal "Amar Asha" is popular in Gujarati.
He adapted Edward Bulwer-Lytton's novel
Zanoni into Gujarati as Gulabsinh. According to Thaker, "Gulabsinh occupies an important place in Gujarati literature as a unique adaptation of an English novel, and as a novel of occult interest and a rare love-story of a human and a superhuman character." It was later adapted into the Gujarati plays Prataplakshmi by Mulshankar Mulani and Siddha Satyendra by Chhotalal Rukhdev Sharma.
His autobiography,
Atmavrittanta'', was published posthumously in 1979, eighty years after his death. It created a stir due to its outspoken nature and its unreserved accounts of his moral lapses.

Religious and philosophical writings

Manilal's philosophical position was grounded in Advaita Vedanta, a branch of Hindu philosophy which believes that the true self, or "atman", and the highest metaphysical reality of the universe, the "brahman", are identical. Manilal made Vedantic philosophy popular among the Gujarati community, examining the main features of Indian philosophy and of Hinduism. He imparted to Gujarati readers an awareness of the foundation of their religion and culture.
He believed that the root of all activities of human life can be traced to the principle of Advaita Vedanta and that the essence of Bhagavad Gita is the karma yoga. With this premise, he made tremendous efforts to establish the superiority of Indian culture in comparison to Western culture. He was recognised both in India and in abroad as a staunch proponent of ancient Hindu traditions and as a learned Indian philosopher.
Shortly after moving to Bhavnagar, Manilal published a book in English entitled Raja Yoga, in 1885. This reproduced a lecture he had delivered on the topic of 'The Logic of Commonsense', together with an introduction to theosophist Tookaram Tatya's English version of the Bhagavad Gita. The book also contained his English versions of the Vakyasudha and the Aparokshanubhuti. The English orientalist Edwin Arnold, who met with Manilal in Bhavnagar and conversed with him at length, admired the book for its content and clarity. Shortly after its publication, Manilal received a letter inviting him to speak in the 7th Oriental Congress in Vienna, which was to be held in December 1886. However, the political agent of Saurashtra decided to replace Manilal with another candidate, R. G. Bhandarkar. Manilal wrote two articles for later Oriental Congresses: the first on The Purans , which was written for the 8th Oriental Congress held in Stockholm in 1889; and another on Jain philosophy for the 9th Oriental Congress held in London in 1892. He was awarded a certificate of merit for the second article.
Manilal wrote two books in Gujarati. The first, Pranavinimaya, contained practical expressions of spiritualism according to Hindu philosophy. It was written from 2 August to 9 September 1888 and published in December. It addresses mesmerism and presents a study of yoga and mysticism; it attempts to establish a similarity between mesmerism and yoga, and to establish the superiority of spiritualism over materialism.
The second book, Siddhantasara, was a discourse on the theoretical aspects of Advaita philosophy in the context of other world religions. Manilal began writing it shortly after Pranavinimaya, though his work was delayed by illness. It was completed in March 1889 and published in June. It outlines the development of Indian philosophy and makes a case for the superiority of Advaita philosophy over all other religious philosophies. It created prolonged controversy; many were particularly critical of what they regarded as logical lapses and inconsistencies in Manilal's arguments.
He was invited to present a paper at the first Parliament of World Religions, held in Chicago in 1893, but he could not afford to go. His paper on Hinduism was read there by Virchand Gandhi. Manilal wrote several books in English which were well received in India, Europe and America, including Monism or Advaitism? and Advaita Philosophy. He published an anthology of the aphorisms of Vedanta under the title The Imitation of Shankara, and simultaneously published its Gujarati version entitled Panchashati.

Social reform and educational writings

Manilal was one of several Gujarati writers and educators, among them Narmad, Dalpatram Dahyabhai Travadi, Karsandas Mulji, Govardhanram Tripathi, Mansukhram Tripathi and Navalram Pandya, who campaigned for reforms and awareness of the problems their community was facing.
During his school years, Manilal was a member of an association known as Swa-Sudharak. At the age of 15, he, along with his friends, started a local group of Prarthana Samaj in Nadiad. However, its activities did not extend beyond a small group. In Bombay, he was associated with the Gujarat Social Union, an association of Gujarati graduates. He took a keen interest in mesmerism and occultism. He came into contact with Colonel Henry Steel Olcott, the first President of the Theosophical Society, and became a member in 1882, writing a series of articles on theosophy.
Around 1882, Mansukhram Suryaram Tripathi encouraged Manilal to revive the Buddhi Vardhak Sabha, a social and literary group. Thereafter, Manilal acted as its secretary and discussion on various topics took place under its auspices. Here, he came in contact with Narmad, who was much impressed by Manilal's scholarship and his writings on Indian cultural tradition. Later, Narmad, on his death-bed, expressed the hope that Manilal would carry forward the reform activities he had expounded.
In 1885, Manilal founded and edited a magazine called Priyamvada to discuss the problems faced by Indian womanhood. In 1890, when he found that it was difficult and premature to run an exclusive women's magazine, he renamed it Sudarshan, and made it wider in scope. He elaborated upon Narmad's line of thinking through his writings in these magazines which he edited until his death. Sudarshan Gadyawali is a collection of his articles published in these magazines. These articles cover many subjects, such as religion, education, sociology, economics, politics, literature and music. According to Jhaveri, with these magazines, Manilal emerged as the acknowledged master of Gujarati prose. Bal Vilas is a collection of Manilal's essays on religion and morality, written for schoolgirls.

Translations

Manilal translated the Sanskrit plays Malatimadhava and Uttararamacarita by Bhavabhuti into Gujarati. Of these, Uttararamacarita was considered an excellent translation by Jhaveri. He also translated Samuel Smiles's Character as Charitra, and Samuel Neil's Culture and Self-Culture as Shikhsna ane Svashikshan into Gujarati. He translated the Bhagavad Gita with commentary into Gujarati. He prepared with translation and notes the English editions of Patanjali's Yogadarshan and Mandukya Upanishad for the Theosophical Societies of India and America respectively.

Controversies

Manilal's tirades against modern reformers and his message of "no surrender to the West" created a stir in Gujarati society. He criticised reformers who advocated modernity at the cost of Indian tradition. As a result, reformers such as Ramanbhai Neelkanth, who was also a writer and intellectual, spoke out against Manilal's conservatism. Manilal criticised the Prarthana Samaj for importing the concept of God as a transcendental creator from Christianity, which, according to him, was "the fifth edition of Aryadharma ". On behalf of the Prarthana Samaj, Neelkanth entered into a seven-year dispute with Manilal on numerous topics related to religion, philosophy, social reform, education and literature. Their public debates, carried on in the pages of Manilal's Sudarashan and Neelkanth's Jnanasudha, are considered unparalleled in Gujarat's history of reflective literature.
In 1884, Manilal published Nari Pratishtha in eight instalments in the weekly periodical Gujarati. In this essay, he opposed widow-marriage and argued that if a woman was correctly and morally educated, she would cultivate the temperament of not wishing to remarry should she become a widow. It was republished, with additions, in book form in 1885. He entered into a public disagreement with Behramji Malabari on the issue of widow-remarriage, which continued for six months in the pages of Advocate of India and The Indian Spectator. Malabari was attempting to move the government to legislate in favour of widow-remarriage, and tried to persuade Manilal to give up his opposition to this; Manilal refused.

Reception

Manilal, along with his fellow Gujarati writer Govardhanram Tripathi, significantly contributed to Gujarati literature. The period of their activity is recognised as the Mani-Govardhan Era rather than by a general terms such as Sakshar Yuga or Pandit Yuga. The scholar Anandshankar Dhruv publicly described Manilal as a Brahmanishtha.
Manilal occupies a distinctive place in Gujarati literature. Throughout his life, he struggled at both a personal and public level to live up to the practical principles he elicited from his reading of the Advaita Vedanta tradition. His vision combined an ardent advocacy of Aryan philosophy with a Hindu worldview. He endeavoured to publicise his opinions to counteract what he saw as the blind enthusiasm of his fellow Indians for Western culture. Manilal thought that the non-dualistic philosophy of Advaita Vedanta, despite its complexity, contained important values which could inspire people to lead practical lives while remaining faithful to its ideals.
Mahatma Gandhi, during his first stint in gaol in South Africa in January 1908, read widely in the literature of Western writers such as Tolstoy, Thoreau and Emerson to enlarge his vision and, among the masters of Indian philosophy, he turned to Manilal's book on Raja Yoga and his commentary on Bhagavad Gita.

Footnotes

Citations