If you’re asked what is the coolest fact you know about #RabindranathTagore, tell them there is an elementary school located 15,000 KM away from Kolkata in the city of Rio de Janeiro that teaches diversity and inclusion, named after Kobiguru. A thread (1/14)
Just about half an hour drive from Brazil’s exotic Copacabana Beach, Escola Municipal Tagore (Municipal School Tagore) was founded in 1963. If you’re wondering what is Tagore doing in Brazil, the history is quite amazing (2/14)
Almost a century ago, in May 1924, Tagore received an invite to celebrate the centennial of Peru's independence. In September, he embarked on a ship named Haruna Maru at Colombo bound for Europe (3/14)
While sailing to South America from France, Tagore fell seriously ill. Days later when the ship docked at Buenos Aires, Argentina, the doctor advised him not to make the journey to Peru (4/14)
Although his South American voyage was reduced to a minimum due to health concerns, on his way back home, he was able to make a halt in Rio de Janeiro for a day. Tagore was not an unfamiliar name there (5/14)
Translation of Gitanjali ‘A Offerta lyrica’ was already published in Brazil in 1914, and the following year ‘A lua crescente’, a translation of The Crescent Moon was published with multiple editions to follow (6/14)
However, Tagore’s popularity in Brazil’s literary circle was due to unparalleled effort from Cecília Meireles - one of the finest Portuguese poets and a Tagore devotee who translated many poems of Tagore (7/14)
Another pioneering educator Lúcia Casasanta published an anthology ‘As mais belas histórias’ (The Most Beautiful Stories) which has been used in schools since 1950s. Stories from this book have been recounted for generations (8/14)
She followed the principles of “Escola Nova” (New School”) - a progressive movement that doesn’t discriminate against students based on race, religion or gender. Tagore’s vast secular body of work was a natural fit for the cause (9/14)
She included one of Tagore’s little poems “Sleep-stealer” (Ghumchora in Bengali) translated as ‘A ladra do Sono’ for intermediary reading and thus Tagore became a popular name among millions of Brazilian children (10/14)
Escola Municipal Tagore ( Municipal School Tagore) is one such elementary school in Brazil’s capital, founded to commemorate Tagore’s maiden trip to Rio and to embrace his principle of diversity and inclusion (11/14)
They embraced Tagore’s unique philosophy and teaches students from every race, class and creed without discrimination including kids suffering from Down syndrome and Autism, through events, exhibitions and activities (12/14)
In their own words “Children are like butterflies in the wind. Some fly fast, some fly slowly. But they all fly in their best way. Each one is different, each one is beautiful and each one is special." (13/14)
Today is his birth anniversary and Tagore couldn’t have celebrated it in any better way than this (14/14)
Source(s): Escola Municipal Tagore (Facebook Page), wikimedia, weblearn.ox.ac.uk ( Jose Paz Rodriguez), Tagore in South America : Some Perspective/Dr. Rajat Chanda
Corrigendum: In tweet #11 above, we have mentioned Brazil’s capital which is not right. We meant Rio de Janeiro, capital of the state of the same name, Brazil's third-most populous state. Aologies.
• • •
Missing some Tweet in this thread? You can try to
force a refresh
A history of the Tandoor and how migrants of the 1947 partition introduced Delhi to the celebrated culinary tradition, a thread (1/)
Tandoor has a fascinating history starting from the early civilizations. It is believed to have been invented in Central Asia for baking bread and the first remains of such a mechanism can be traced back to Harappa (2/)
During medieval times, the love for Tandoori food led Mughal emperor Jahangir to instruct his chefs to carry a Tandoor oven wherever he travelled. Thus the portable Tandoor was invented which had immense social importance for centuries to follow (3/)
On #MothersDay, we recount the inspirational story of Alleta Sullivan who despite losing five sons to war, went on stoically, undeterred to inspire people and serve her country (1/17)
The USS Juneau was a light cruiser of the US Navy in WWII. On November 13, 1942, during the Battle of Guadalcanal, Juneau went down after being hit twice by torpedoes from Japanese submarines (2/17)
A total of 587 men perished, only 10 survived. Among the 587, were 5 men: George, Frank, Joe, Matt and Al Sullivan -- five brothers. Against the rule of the Navy, the five brothers had insisted on being assigned to the same ship (3/17)
This scene from Gangubai Kathiawadi caught our fancy - not for the flamboyant Alia Bhatt, but for the public address system in front of her. A thread on how a patriotic visionary amplified India’s freedom movement through the Chicago Radio loudspeakers (1/13)
The story goes back to the 19th century, Sind. After his father’s early demise young Gianchand Motwani bound books, made kites and became a Railway Signaler before starting his own Electric equipment company with a meagre capital of Rs 300/- (2/13)
He prospered so well that he soon moved to Karachi and Bombay where he founded a company named Chicago Telephone & Radio in 1919. The man of rare vision, spirit and resolve became one of the first in India to embark on broadcasting (3/13)
Did you know about the town Bombay in the United States? A thread to trace its interesting history involving an Irish sailor and an Indian princess. 1/14
Driving down New York State Route 95 into Franklin County, just south of the US-Canadian Border, you might find yourself heading into the little town of Bombay. Yes, you heard it right, Bombay! 2/14
A name most of us should be familiar with, but this quaint little town sitting in the Western Hemisphere is nothing like its famous Indian namesake on the Arabian Sea shore. 3/14
Once an ordinary word became a ‘password’ used to identify and kill Tamil minorities in Sri Lanka. A thread on #WorldPasswordDay (1/11)
The month of July in 1983 was one of the bloodiest in world history - The Black July - when the Tamil minorities were targeted and mercilessly killed by the Sinhalese rioters in Sri Lanka (2/11)
After a deadly ambush on the Sri Lankan army by Tamil militants that killed 13 soldiers, violence broke out. Sinhalese mob rampaged on the streets and selectively attacked, looted, burned and killed Tamil civilians (3/11)
On Star Wars Day, we look back at how the daredevil women of the early 20th century Mexican Revolution inspired Princess Leia's iconic cinnamon hair buns. 1/13 #MayThe4thBeWithYou
The beginning of 20th century saw the monumental uprising of thousands of Mexicans against their federal government. During his 8th term as dictator, Porfirio Díaz Mori faced spirited resistance from his countrymen. 2/13
The surprise element in the Mexican Revolution came from the women soldiers - Las Adelitas or Las Soldaderas (women who sustained the Spanish army in the early 16th century during the Spanish conquest of Mexico) as they were commonly referred to. 3/13