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{{Short description|English activist of the Indian independence movement (1892–1982)}}
'''Madeleine Slade''' (? [[1892]] - [[July 20th]], [[1982]]) was a [[British]] woman who left her home in [[England]] to live and work under [[Mahatma Gandhi]], the leader of the [[Indian independence movement]]. She devoted her life to human development, the advancement of Gandhi's principles and the freedom struggle in [[India]].
{{EngvarB|date=August 2014}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=December 2018}}
{{Infobox person
| name =
| image = Madeleine Slade 1983 stamp of India.jpg
| alt =
| caption = Mirabehn on a 1983 stamp of India
| birth_name = Madeleine Slade
| birth_date = {{Birth date|1892|11|22|df=y}}
| birth_place =
| death_date = {{Death date and age|1982|07|20|1892|11|22|df=y}}
| death_place = [[Vienna, Austria]]
| nationality =
| other_names =
| occupation =
| years_active =
| known_for =
| notable_works =
}}


'''Madeleine Slade''' (22 November 1892 – 20 July 1982), also known as '''Mirabehn''' or '''Meera Behn''', was a British supporter of the [[Indian Independence Movement]]<!--There was no such thing as a British citizen until 1948 --> who in the 1920s left her home in England to live and work with [[Mahatma Gandhi]]. She devoted her life to human development and the advancement of [[Gandhism|Gandhi's principles]].
As she transformed her whole life out of devotion to Gandhi's teachings and his work, she was affectionately named ''Mirabehn'', after [[Mirabai]], the great devotee of Lord [[Krishna]].


She was the daughter of the British Rear-Admiral [[Edmond Slade|Sir Edmond Slade]] and Florence Madeleine, eldest daughter of Mr James Carr Saunders of Milton Heath, Dorking (but born in Reigate, Surrey in 1870). Sir Edmund and his wife also had another daughter, Madeline's sister Rhona.
==Early Life==


== Early life ==
Madeleine Slade was born in 1892. She has not given the date of her birth in her autobiography.
Mirabehn was born into a well connected British family in 1892. Her father, Sir Edmond Slade was an officer in the [[Royal Navy]] who was posted in Mirabehn's early years as the Commander-in-Chief of the East Indies Squadron, later becoming director of the [[Naval Intelligence Division (United Kingdom)|Naval Intelligence Division]].<ref name="independent.academia">{{cite web|last=Lindley|first=Mark|title=Mirabehn, Gandhi and Beethoven|url=https://independent.academia.edu/MLindley/Papers/1248421/Mirabehn_Gandhi_and_Beethoven|publisher=Academia.edu}}</ref> She spent much of her childhood with her maternal grandfather who owned a large country estate, and was from an early age a nature and animal lover,<ref name="indiaenvironmentportal">{{cite web|last=Gupta|first=Krishna Murti|title=Mira Behn: A friend of nature|url=http://www.indiaenvironmentportal.org.in/opinion/mira-behn-friend-nature|date=14 August 1993|publisher=India Environment Portal}}</ref> having developed a love for horses, and for riding them.<ref name=":4">{{Cite book |last=Guha |first=Ramchandra |title=Rebels Against the Raj, Western Fighters for India's Freedom |publisher=Alfred A. Knopf |year=2022 |isbn=9781101874837 |edition=1st |location=United States |pages=107–110, 112–113, 115–116, 121–122, 125–130, 250–251, 253–255, 257 |language=En}}</ref>


At the age of 15, Mirabehn developed a passion for [[Ludwig van Beethoven]]'s music.<ref name=":4" /><ref name=":0">{{Cite news |last=Sereny |first=Gitta |date=1982-11-14 |title=A LIFE WITH GANDHI |language=en-US |work=The New York Times |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1982/11/14/magazine/a-life-with-gandhi.html |access-date=2023-03-22 |issn=0362-4331}}</ref> She took to the piano and concerts and went on to become a concert manager. In 1921, she arranged for a German conductor to lead the [[London Symphony Orchestra|London Orchestra]] in concerts featuring Beethoven, and helped bring about an end to the British boycott of German musicians that followed the [[First World War]].<ref name="independent.academia" />
Her father was a British naval officer, and would rise to become an [[Admiral]]. She was reared in a wealthy and prosperous family. Owing to her father's postings away from home, she was raised on country farm houses.


She also visited [[Vienna]] and Germany to see where Beethoven had lived and composed his music and she read about him extensively. She read [[Romain Rolland]]'s books on Beethoven and later met with him at [[Villeneuve, Vaud|Villeneuve]], where he was living at the time. During this meeting, Rolland mentioned about a new book of his called [[Mahatma Gandhi]], which she had not yet read. Rolland described Gandhi as another Christ and as the greatest figure of the 20th century.<ref name="independent.academia" /><ref name="indiaenvironmentportal" /> On her return to England, she read Rolland's biography of Gandhi, which convinced her to become a disciple of the Mahatma. She later recalled in regards to the book, "I could not put it down...From that moment I knew that my life was dedicated to Gandhi." Rather than embarking for India right away, Mirabehn decided to prepare herself for the change by studying material on the [[Sabarmati Ashram|Sabarmarti Ashram]], sitting cross-legged, and adopting a [[Vegetarianism|vegetarian]] diet. In 1924, she wrote to Gandhi expressing her wish to join him, and also sending him 20 pounds. Gandhi replied, pleased with her patience and willingness to prepare herself first, and asked that she decide on whether or not to come in a year's time.<ref name=":4" /> She then continued training herself for all the demands of an ascetic's life in India, giving up all wine, beer, and spirits, eliminating meat from her diet, and learning to spin and weave wool.<ref name=":4" /> That year in England, she subscribed to [[Young India]] and spent a part of her time in Paris reading the [[Bhagvad Gita]] and part of the [[Rigveda]] in French.<ref name="mkgandhi">{{cite web|title=Associates of Mahatma Gandhi, Mirabehn|url=http://www.mkgandhi.org/associates/Mirabehn.htm|publisher=mkgandhi.org}}</ref>
From childhood, Madeleine had a deep interest in exploring the world and spirituality. She was deeply attached to the music of [[Beethoven]].


== Life in India and role in the independence movement ==
==Introduction to Gandhi==
In November 1925, she contacted Gandhi and requested to stay in his ashram.<ref name=":0" /><ref name=":1">{{Cite web |title=Mirabehn {{!}} Biography, Photograph, & History {{!}} Britannica |url=https://www.britannica.com/biography/Mirabehn |access-date=2023-01-02 |website=www.britannica.com |language=en}}</ref> She arrived in [[Mumbai|Bombay]] on 6 November 1925, and was met by followers of Gandhi as well as his son, [[Devdas Gandhi|Devdas]]. Declining to spend the day sightseeing, she set off to [[Ahmedabad]],<ref name=":4" /> where she was received by [[Mahadev Desai]], [[Vallabhbhai Patel]], and [[Swami Anand]] on 7 November 1925. This was the beginning of her stay in India that lasted almost 34 years.<ref name="mkgandhi" /> Upon meeting her, Gandhi said "You will be my daughter", and gave her the name Mirabehn, which represents the Hindu mystic [[Mirabai]].<ref name=":0" /><ref name=":1" /> Speaking about her name Mirabehn, she stated in the spring of 1982, <nowiki>''It is my name. If someone says 'Miss Slade' to me, I don't know who they are talking to.''</nowiki><ref name=":0" />


Mirabehn attended her first annual meeting of the [[Indian National Congress]] in December 1925. She spent most of 1926 in Sabarmati, where she spun and wove, cooked, and cleaned in the ashram. In December of that year, she travelled to [[Delhi]], where she stayed at a women's [[hostel]].<ref name=":4" />
Madeleine Slade was first introduced to [[Mahatma Gandhi]] when she met with [[Romain Rolland]], who had just completed a small book on the man. Rolland said that Gandhi was another [[Christ]], so deep was his impression of him. Madeleine later bought and read the book, and was deeply influenced by Rolland's description of the man, his teachings and philosophy.


After about a year into her stay in India, Mirabehn continued to struggle with the languages in North India such as Hindi and Gujarati, so Gandhi sent her to Gurukul Kanya and Gurukul Kangri to learn the languages.<ref name=":2">{{Cite book |last=Slade |first=Madeleine |title=The Spirit's Pilgrimage |publisher=Longmans Green and Co LTD |year=1960 |pages=63–92}}</ref> Mirabehn had hopes that Gandhi would take her with him after the Jubilee Celebration at Gurukul Kangri, but to her dismay he sent her to Bhagwadbhakti Ashram of Rewari for a better learning experience.<ref name="mkgandhi" /><ref name=":2" />
At this point Madeleine decided to go to [[India]], and began to prepare for the experience. Her family were surprised and reluctant, but supported her intentions. She subscribed to ''Young India'', a newspaper published and edited by Gandhi, read the French versions of the [[Bhagavad Gita]] and the [[Rig Veda]]. She also became a [[vegetarian]] and [[teetotaler]]. She also obtained cloth from which to spin and weave her own clothing.


She spent the early months of 1927 visiting ashrams across [[North India]]. During this time, she also worked on correcting the language and grammar of the English version of [[Gandhi's autobiography]], a special task given to her by Gandhi himself.<ref name=":4" /> After returning to Sabarmati, she decided to become a [[Celibacy|celibate]], began wearing a white [[sari]], and cut her hair short.<ref name=":1" />
But just as she was set to move, she heard news of Gandhi's 21-day fast for [[Hindu]]-[[Muslim]] unity. This period was an extremely anxious one for Gandhi's admirers worldwide, as Gandhi was an old man and his health began to deteriorate.


In September 1928, Gandhi asked her to travel through North, South, and East India alone with the hope of her gaining experience to start a training center for spinning and weaving in Sabarmati. In 1929, she visited [[Santiniketan]], a university founded by [[Rabindranath Tagore]], where she met Tagore himself.<ref name=":4" />
When the fast was successfully completed, Madeleine felt the need to express her thanks. She wrote a letter, and sold a diamond brooch, a gift from her grandfather on her 21st birthday, with the proceeds donated to Gandhi's fund. Gandhi replied to her letter, touched by her gesture. She wrote another letter to Gandhi, asking for his permission to join him at the [[Sabarmati Ashram]], in [[Ahmedabad]], [[Gujarat]]. After asking her to strongly consider the difficulties involved with her choice, Gandhi welcomed her.


[[File:Gandhi Greenfield.jpg|thumb|Mira Behn ''(far right)'' with Mahatma Gandhi at the Greenfield Mill, at [[Darwen]], Lancashire]]
Leaving for India, Romain Rolland congratulated her, and her family, somewhat anxious for her safety and health, nevertheless encouraged her.
Mirabehn's stay in India coincided with the zenith Gandhian phase of the [[Indian independence movement|freedom struggle]]. She accompanied Gandhi to the [[Round Table Conference]] in London in 1931. On their way back to India from London, Mirabehn and Gandhi visited Rolland, who gave her a book on Beethoven which he had written while she was in India. As she began to read it, it convinced her to move to Austria and spend her remaining days in the land of Beethoven's music.<ref name="independent.academia" />


Upon returning to Bombay from the conference, the new viceroy, [[Freeman Freeman-Thomas, 1st Marquess of Willingdon|Lord Willingdon]], arrested Gandhi. Mirabehn then took on the task of preparing weekly reports of who had been arrested, where, and why. This soon led to her arrest, and she was jailed at [[Mumbai Central Prison|Arthur Road Jail]] for three months, where she met [[Sarojini Naidu]] and [[Kamaladevi Chattopadhyay]]. Shortly after being released, she was arrested once again in 1932 for entering Bombay without permission,<ref>{{Cite news |date=1932-08-18 |title=Madeleine Slade Again Arrested |work=Barrier Miner |url=http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article46662603 |access-date=2023-04-02}}</ref> this time being jailed for a longer term. She was transferred to Sabarmati Jail in Ahmedabad, where she shared a cell with [[Kasturba Gandhi|Kasturba]], Gandhi's wife.<ref name=":4" /><ref>{{cite web|title=WOMEN AND INDIA'S INDEPENDENCE MOVEMENT|url=http://myproject22.tripod.com/women_and_india.htm|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131121061526/http://myproject22.tripod.com/women_and_india.htm|url-status=dead|archive-date=21 November 2013}}</ref>
==Arrival in India, and the Ashram==


In the summer of 1934, she asked Gandhi for permission to tour the [[Western world|West]] to promote the Indian independence movement. She spoke in [[London]], [[Wales]], [[Lancashire]], and [[Newcastle upon Tyne|Newcastle]], among other locations. The tour included a meeting with former British [[Prime Minister of the United Kingdom|Prime Minister]] [[David Lloyd George]], and a correspondence and eventual meeting with [[Winston Churchill]]. Throughout, she spoke about how Indians were more than capable of running the country on their own, the destruction British colonialism caused to the rural industry, and the high taxes being imposed upon Indians.<ref name=":4" /><ref name="mkgandhi" />
Madeleine Slade arrived in the port city of [[Bombay]] in 1925, and was taken by friends to the house of the great Indian statesman [[Dadabhai Naoroji]]. Although warmly welcomed, Madeleine wanted to leave for Ahmedabad immediately. She arrived in Ahmedabad on the morning of November 7, 1925, and was received by three great Indian nationalists: [[Vallabhbhai Patel]], [[Swami Anand]] and [[Mahadev Desai]], the latter being Gandhi's secretary.


She then travelled to the [[United States]] through her contact with Priest [[John Haynes Holmes]], and in her two-week tour she spoke to 22 gatherings, spoke on 5 radio broadcasts, and met [[First Lady of the United States|First Lady]] [[Eleanor Roosevelt]].<ref name=":4" /><ref name="mkgandhi" />
The scene where Vallabhbhai Patel brought her to the Ashram is depicted in the 1982 film ''Gandhi'', made by [[Richard Attenborough]]. As she entered, a brown figure rose up and came forward. Madeleine was conscious of nothing else but a sense of light. She fell on her knees. Two hands gently raised her up, and a voice said, ''"You shall be my daughter."''


Mirabehn also took an active interest in the establishment of the [[Sevagram|Sevagram Ashram]], and worked among the people of [[Orissa, India|Orissa]] to non-violently resist a potential Japanese invasion in the beginning of 1942.<ref name="mkgandhi" />
Madeleine, now addressed as ''Mirabehn'', a name Gandhi gave her, was instantly and spiritually attached to Gandhi and the Ashram life.


In August 1942, Mirabehn was arrested along with Gandhi and many Congress leaders as they launched the '[[Quit India Movement|Quit India]]' movement.<ref name=":4" /> They were jailed in [[Aga Khan Palace]], [[Pune]] until May 1944. Both [[Mahadev Desai]] and [[Kasturba Gandhi]] died while jailed at the palace.<ref name="mkgandhi" />
Here, in presence of Gandhi, a strict regimen began for her which lasted for almost thirty-four years of her stay in India. It included carding and spinning, cooking, cleaning, learning [[Hindi]], at times traveling with Bapu or otherwise living in the Ashram and doing her work. Adapting to the lifestyle was a hard experience for her, especially in the climate and culture of India, but she assiduously pressed on.


After her release from jail, with Gandhi's permission, she established the Kisan Ashram on a plot of land near [[Haridwar]].<ref name="mkgandhi" /> Here, the locals constructed a home and a cattle shed. Soon the ashram was home to cows and bullocks, a shed for [[khadi]], and a dispensary for basic medicine. She then moved to Pashulok in 1946, at the request of [[Govind Ballabh Pant]], who wanted to involve her in agriculture extension programs.<ref name=":4" />
Just about a year after coming to India, Mirabehn received a cable from her mother saying that her father had passed away. Gandhi suggested that she go to England if she wished to. But Mirabehn politely declined to go there. Her learning of [[Hindustani]] was not going very well. So she sought Gandhi's consent to go to the northern part of India and live among [[Hindi]]-speaking people. For this purpose she was sent to Kanya Gurukul, [[Delhi]], and thereafter to [[Kangri]] [[Gurukul]].


Despite living in an ashram, she maintained correspondence with Gandhi through 1947, and spent 3 months with him in Delhi after she fell ill towards the end of the year.<ref name=":4" />
==Experience in nationalist activities==


Throughout her life, she was a witness to the [[Simla Conference]], [[Cabinet Mission]], Interim Government, [[Constituent Assembly]], [[Partition of India]], and [[assassination of Mahatma Gandhi]].<ref>{{Cite web |title=Mirabehn - Madeleine Slade {{!}} Associates of Mahatma Gandhi |url=https://www.mkgandhi.org/associates/Mirabehn.htm |access-date=2023-01-01 |website=www.mkgandhi.org}}</ref>
Mirabehn lived in India during a most eventful period in which she saw in 1927 the [[Simon Commission]] facing black flags everywhere, the resolve of the people for complete independence in 1929, the [[Dandi March]] and the [[Salt Satyagraha]] in 1930-31 and the Gandhi-Irwin Pact in 1931; she accompanied Gandhi and others to the Round Table Conference in London in the autumn of 1931. She also helped prepare the people of [[Orissa]] to resist Japanese invasion non-violently in the beginning of 1942, and was arrested and kept in detention with Gandhi in the Aga Khan Palace, [[Pune]], in 1942 during the [[Quit India movement]] where she saw [[Mahadev Desai]] and Gandhi's wife, [[Kasturba Gandhi]] breathing their last.


== Post-independence life in India ==
===Contributions===
After [[Partition of India|Independence]], she established a settlement named Bapu Gram and the Gopal Ashram in Bhilangana in 1952.<ref name="mkgandhi" /> She took to dairying and farming experiments in these ashrams and also spent a while in Kashmir. During the time she spent in [[Kumaon division|Kumaon]] and [[Garhwal division|Garhwal]] she observed the destruction of the forests there and the impact it was having on floods in the plains. She wrote about it in an essay titled ''Something Wrong in the Himalaya'' but her advice was ignored by the Forest Department. In the 1980s, these areas witnessed a large Gandhian environmental campaign to save the forests called the [[Chipko Movement]].<ref>{{cite web|last=Langston|first=Nancy|title=Significant Women in Forestry|url=http://encyclopediaofforestry.org:80/index.php/Significant_Women_in_Foresty|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170429161857/http://encyclopediaofforestry.org/index.php/Significant_Women_in_Foresty|url-status=dead|archive-date=29 April 2017|date=22 April 2007|publisher=Society of American Foresters|access-date=9 July 2012}}</ref>


She returned to England in 1959, and relocated to Austria in 1960.<ref name=":3" /> Her long-time friend, India's [[Prime Minister of India|Prime Minister]] [[Indira Gandhi]], whom Mirabehn had known since Gandhi was a child, made sure she was taken care of even while in Austria. Gandhi had instructed the [[List of diplomatic missions of India|Indian Embassy]] in Austria to provide Mirabehn with whatever she needed. Throughout her years in Austria, four of her friends visited her daily. Nonetheless, she continued to voluntarily live a simple life, eating only natural foods and abstaining from using labor saving devices.<ref name=":0" /> She spent 22 years in small villages in the [[Vienna Woods]] (Baden, Hinterbrühl, Kracking), where she died in 1982.<ref name=":3">{{Cite web|url=https://feminisminindia.com/2018/05/02/mirabehn-contribution-freedom-struggle/|title=Mirabehn: A Key Player In The Indian Freedom Struggle|last=Ghosh|first=Ruchira|date=2018-05-01|website=Feminism In India|language=en-US|access-date=2019-10-15}}</ref>
Remaining in mid-stream she always had a role to play. As an inmate of Gandhi Ashram she traveled far and wide for the propagation of Khadi. She wrote over a hundred articles in Young India and Harijan, She also wrote articles for The Statesman, Calcutta, The Times of India, Bombay, and The Hindustan Times, Delhi. Without the least intention of taking part in the freedom movement, she courted imprisonment a couple of times in 1932-1933, and was kept first in Arthur Road Jail and later in Sabarmati Jail. Whenever she was with Mahatma Gandhi she looked after him in minutest detail. At times she went to the Viceroy as a personal emissary of Mahatma Gandhi and at other times to the Congress Presi­dent and the members of the Working Committee. To plead the case of India she went abroad-met Lloyd George, Lord Halifax, General Smuts, Sir Samuel Hoare and Winston Churchill, visited United States and went to New York, Philadelphia, West Chester, Boston, Harvard and Washing­ton, delivered a lecture at the Harvard University and met Mrs. Roosevelt at the White House in Washington. Mirabehn took keen interest in the formation of Sevagram Ashram and organised cleanliness campaigns in the surrounding villages. She was always unflinching in her service to Bapu and longed to be with him as long as possible. For such longing she earned reprimands more than once from Gandhi, Gradually she undertook independent activities with the help and blessings of Bapu.


She was awarded India's second highest civilian honour, the [[Padma Vibhushan]], in 1981.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.mkgandhi.org/associates/Mirabehn.htm|title=Associates of Mahatma Gandhi : Mirabehn|website=www.mkgandhi.org|access-date=2019-10-15}}</ref>
===Prithvi Singh===


== Books by Mirabehn ==
For some time her mind was infatuated with a weakness for Sardar Prithvi Singh and her emotions ran riot. When she spoke to Bapu about it, he looked at her with unexpected seriousness and said, ''"If you feel like that it means to my mind that you should marry,"'' and added, as if thinking aloud, ''"Perhaps marriage has been the unspoken word in your life."'' But Prithvi Singh wisely resisted all proposals whether from Bapu or others.
[[File:Gandhi at Darwen.jpg|thumb|Mirabehn with Gandhi at Darwen, Sharko, 1931]]
Mirabehn's autobiography is titled ''The Spiritual Pilgrimage''. She also published ''Bapu's Letters to Mira'' and ''New and Old Gleanings''.<ref>{{cite web|title=Mira Behn, disciple of Mahatma Gandhi|url=http://www.indiavideo.org/text/mira-behn-1225.php|publisher=indiavideo.org}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|title=Books by Mirabehn|url=https://www.amazon.com/s?ie=UTF8&rh=n%3A283155%2Ck%3AMirabehn%5Cc&page=1|publisher=amazon.com}}</ref> Mirabehn drafted a book called “Beethoven’s Mystical Vision” (not “The Spirit of Beethoven”). It was published in Madurai by Khadi Friends Forum in 1999, and then a second, digital edition in 2000 by MGM University.


== In popular culture ==
Then began the period of her self-chosen seclusion and penance for her mental aberration. She went to [[Haryana]] and then to [[Sivalik Hills]] and other places, read the [[Rig Veda]] and kept silence for a year. She came to live at Chorvad, in G[[ujarat]], near the sea-shore.
* Actress [[Geraldine James]] portrayed her in [[Richard Attenborough]]'s film, ''[[Gandhi (film)|Gandhi]]'', which premiered several months after Mirabehn's death in 1982.<ref>{{Citation |title=Gandhi (1982) - IMDb |url=http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0083987/characters/nm0416524 |access-date=2022-07-30}}</ref>
* In ''Mira and the Mahatma'', [[Sudhir Kakar]] provides a fictional account of Mirabehn's relationship with Gandhi as his disciple.<ref name="telegraphindia">{{cite news |last=Singh |first=Khushwant |date=1 October 2005 |title=IN LOVE WITH THE MAHATMA |newspaper=The Telegraph |url=http://www.telegraphindia.com/1051001/asp/opinion/story_5300910.asp |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070708225412/http://www.telegraphindia.com/1051001/asp/opinion/story_5300910.asp |archive-date=8 July 2007}}</ref>
* In his book, ''Rebels Against the Raj'', [[Ramachandra Guha|Ramchandra Guha]] tells the story of how Mirabehn and six other foreigners served India in its quest for independence from the [[British Raj]].<ref>{{Cite web |date=2022-01-20 |title=Ramachandra Guha: I haven't written Rebels Against the Raj to influence Indians on their political preferences |url=https://www.firstpost.com/art-and-culture/ramachandra-guha-i-havent-written-rebels-against-the-raj-to-influence-indians-on-their-political-preferences-10299041.html |access-date=2022-07-30 |website=Firstpost |language=en}}</ref>


==Bibliography==
===Establishing Ashrams===
* ''Spirits Pilgrimage'', by Mirabehn. Great River Books. 1984. {{ISBN|0-915556-13-8}}.
* ''New and old gleanings'', by Mirabehn. Navajivan Pub. House. 1964.


==See also==
In 1942, when she was in the Aga Khan Palace she expressed a desire to Gandhi that after her release from detention she would start some activities of her own, at a suitable place in northern India. Bapu agreed and gave money to plan out the whole thing herself. Accordingly, after her release from Aga Khan Palace, she started ''Kisan Ashram'' at Muldaspur, situated between Roorkee and [[Haridwar]]. Kisan Ashram developed rapidly.
*[[Gandhism]]
*[[Sarla Behn]]


==References==
In 1947 she started ''Ashram Pashulok'' near Hrishikesh and a settlement named ''Bapu Gram'', named after Mahatma Gandhi, who was popularly referred to as ''Bapu'' (''Father'').
{{reflist}}
===Food campaign===


==Further reading==
In 1946, Congress ministries were formed in various provinces. The United Provinces had also a strong Congress Government headed by the veteran leader Pandit [[Govind Ballabh Pant]]. In the new atmosphere there was a general urge to resuscitate the Province and make an all-out drive to increase food production. Quite a lot of good agricultural land had been requisitioned for military airfields and camps, and the sooner these were put back into cultivation the better. With this idea in her mind she went to Bapu and discussed the matter with him. He, in turn, had a talk with Pandit Pant, and Mirabehn was appointed as an Honorary Special Ad­viser to the U.P. Government in connection with the newly launched 'Grow More Food' campaign.
* ''Letters to Mirabehn'', by Mahatma Gandhi. # Greenleaf Books. 1983. {{ISBN|0-934676-53-4}}.


==External links==
==Life after Gandhi's death==
{{Commons category|Madeleine Slade}}
*[http://www.mkgandhi.org/associates/assoindex.htm Biography from mkgandhi.org]
*''[https://web.archive.org/web/20041027213453/http://www.telegraphindia.com/1041003/asp/look/story_3824566.asp In the company of Bapu: In the just-released Mira & the Mahatma, psychoanalyst Sudhir Kakar delves into the complex relationship between a remarkable Englishwoman and the man she worshiped]'' – ''[[The Telegraph (Kolkata)|The Telegraph]]''
*[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=33VkTWzzw5M Video interview with Mirabehn]. A description of the video is [https://web.archive.org/web/20081023171147/http://www.gandhiserve.org/footage/fopems.html here].


{{Gandhi|state=collapsed}}
On 30 January 1948 came the news of Bapu's assassination. It was simply stunning. Mirabehn stood silent and still. A ­vast emotion held her in a trance. In the early part of the night people came from Hrishikesh to take her to Delhi.
{{Padma Vibhushan Awards}}

Mirabehn stayed where she was and worked until 27 January 1959 before leaving for England. And in the interim period, Mirabehn founded ''Gopal Ashram'' in Bhilangana in 1952. From 1954 to 1957 she kept herself busy with experiments in breeding cows. Though she was intensely active during these years, she did not feel comfortable in an India without Gandhi, rapidly transforming after independence on its own terms.

After leaving India she went to England and lived there for some time, but she felt completely out of tune with an England which was not familiar to her. So, in search of a better and peaceful place, she went to [[Vienna]], [[Austria]] and settled there. In 1969, on the occasion of the Gandhi Centenary Celebrations, she was invited by [[Lord Louis Mountbatten]] to visit England and narrate her experiences and recollections of Mahatma Gandhi. The [[Albert Hall]] was full with nearly seven thousand people. The Prince of Wales, the Prime Minister and many other dignitaries were present. The talk that Mirabehn gave to the gathering was almost beyond the highest expectation of Lord Louis Mountbatten.

In 1981 the [[Government of India]] honoured Mirabehn with the [[Padma Vibhushan]] for her meritorious service to India and mankind. She died on July 20th, 1982 at the age of 90.

==See also==
*http://www.mkgandhi.org/associates/assoindex.htm
*[[Gandhism]]


{{Authority control}}
{{IndiaFreedom}}


[[Category:Indian freedom fighters]]
[[Category:Indian independence activists]]
[[Category:1892 births]]
[[Category:1982 deaths]]
[[Category:Recipients of the Padma Vibhushan in social work]]
[[Category:Indian spiritual writers]]
[[Category:Gandhians]]
[[Category:Women Indian independence activists]]
[[Category:Indian people of British descent]]
[[Category:20th-century Indian women writers]]
[[Category:20th-century Indian writers]]
[[Category:20th-century British writers]]

Latest revision as of 12:30, 6 February 2024

Mirabehn
Mirabehn on a 1983 stamp of India
Born
Madeleine Slade

(1892-11-22)22 November 1892
Died20 July 1982(1982-07-20) (aged 89)

Madeleine Slade (22 November 1892 – 20 July 1982), also known as Mirabehn or Meera Behn, was a British supporter of the Indian Independence Movement who in the 1920s left her home in England to live and work with Mahatma Gandhi. She devoted her life to human development and the advancement of Gandhi's principles.

She was the daughter of the British Rear-Admiral Sir Edmond Slade and Florence Madeleine, eldest daughter of Mr James Carr Saunders of Milton Heath, Dorking (but born in Reigate, Surrey in 1870). Sir Edmund and his wife also had another daughter, Madeline's sister Rhona.

Early life[edit]

Mirabehn was born into a well connected British family in 1892. Her father, Sir Edmond Slade was an officer in the Royal Navy who was posted in Mirabehn's early years as the Commander-in-Chief of the East Indies Squadron, later becoming director of the Naval Intelligence Division.[1] She spent much of her childhood with her maternal grandfather who owned a large country estate, and was from an early age a nature and animal lover,[2] having developed a love for horses, and for riding them.[3]

At the age of 15, Mirabehn developed a passion for Ludwig van Beethoven's music.[3][4] She took to the piano and concerts and went on to become a concert manager. In 1921, she arranged for a German conductor to lead the London Orchestra in concerts featuring Beethoven, and helped bring about an end to the British boycott of German musicians that followed the First World War.[1]

She also visited Vienna and Germany to see where Beethoven had lived and composed his music and she read about him extensively. She read Romain Rolland's books on Beethoven and later met with him at Villeneuve, where he was living at the time. During this meeting, Rolland mentioned about a new book of his called Mahatma Gandhi, which she had not yet read. Rolland described Gandhi as another Christ and as the greatest figure of the 20th century.[1][2] On her return to England, she read Rolland's biography of Gandhi, which convinced her to become a disciple of the Mahatma. She later recalled in regards to the book, "I could not put it down...From that moment I knew that my life was dedicated to Gandhi." Rather than embarking for India right away, Mirabehn decided to prepare herself for the change by studying material on the Sabarmarti Ashram, sitting cross-legged, and adopting a vegetarian diet. In 1924, she wrote to Gandhi expressing her wish to join him, and also sending him 20 pounds. Gandhi replied, pleased with her patience and willingness to prepare herself first, and asked that she decide on whether or not to come in a year's time.[3] She then continued training herself for all the demands of an ascetic's life in India, giving up all wine, beer, and spirits, eliminating meat from her diet, and learning to spin and weave wool.[3] That year in England, she subscribed to Young India and spent a part of her time in Paris reading the Bhagvad Gita and part of the Rigveda in French.[5]

Life in India and role in the independence movement[edit]

In November 1925, she contacted Gandhi and requested to stay in his ashram.[4][6] She arrived in Bombay on 6 November 1925, and was met by followers of Gandhi as well as his son, Devdas. Declining to spend the day sightseeing, she set off to Ahmedabad,[3] where she was received by Mahadev Desai, Vallabhbhai Patel, and Swami Anand on 7 November 1925. This was the beginning of her stay in India that lasted almost 34 years.[5] Upon meeting her, Gandhi said "You will be my daughter", and gave her the name Mirabehn, which represents the Hindu mystic Mirabai.[4][6] Speaking about her name Mirabehn, she stated in the spring of 1982, ''It is my name. If someone says 'Miss Slade' to me, I don't know who they are talking to.''[4]

Mirabehn attended her first annual meeting of the Indian National Congress in December 1925. She spent most of 1926 in Sabarmati, where she spun and wove, cooked, and cleaned in the ashram. In December of that year, she travelled to Delhi, where she stayed at a women's hostel.[3]

After about a year into her stay in India, Mirabehn continued to struggle with the languages in North India such as Hindi and Gujarati, so Gandhi sent her to Gurukul Kanya and Gurukul Kangri to learn the languages.[7] Mirabehn had hopes that Gandhi would take her with him after the Jubilee Celebration at Gurukul Kangri, but to her dismay he sent her to Bhagwadbhakti Ashram of Rewari for a better learning experience.[5][7]

She spent the early months of 1927 visiting ashrams across North India. During this time, she also worked on correcting the language and grammar of the English version of Gandhi's autobiography, a special task given to her by Gandhi himself.[3] After returning to Sabarmati, she decided to become a celibate, began wearing a white sari, and cut her hair short.[6]

In September 1928, Gandhi asked her to travel through North, South, and East India alone with the hope of her gaining experience to start a training center for spinning and weaving in Sabarmati. In 1929, she visited Santiniketan, a university founded by Rabindranath Tagore, where she met Tagore himself.[3]

Mira Behn (far right) with Mahatma Gandhi at the Greenfield Mill, at Darwen, Lancashire

Mirabehn's stay in India coincided with the zenith Gandhian phase of the freedom struggle. She accompanied Gandhi to the Round Table Conference in London in 1931. On their way back to India from London, Mirabehn and Gandhi visited Rolland, who gave her a book on Beethoven which he had written while she was in India. As she began to read it, it convinced her to move to Austria and spend her remaining days in the land of Beethoven's music.[1]

Upon returning to Bombay from the conference, the new viceroy, Lord Willingdon, arrested Gandhi. Mirabehn then took on the task of preparing weekly reports of who had been arrested, where, and why. This soon led to her arrest, and she was jailed at Arthur Road Jail for three months, where she met Sarojini Naidu and Kamaladevi Chattopadhyay. Shortly after being released, she was arrested once again in 1932 for entering Bombay without permission,[8] this time being jailed for a longer term. She was transferred to Sabarmati Jail in Ahmedabad, where she shared a cell with Kasturba, Gandhi's wife.[3][9]

In the summer of 1934, she asked Gandhi for permission to tour the West to promote the Indian independence movement. She spoke in London, Wales, Lancashire, and Newcastle, among other locations. The tour included a meeting with former British Prime Minister David Lloyd George, and a correspondence and eventual meeting with Winston Churchill. Throughout, she spoke about how Indians were more than capable of running the country on their own, the destruction British colonialism caused to the rural industry, and the high taxes being imposed upon Indians.[3][5]

She then travelled to the United States through her contact with Priest John Haynes Holmes, and in her two-week tour she spoke to 22 gatherings, spoke on 5 radio broadcasts, and met First Lady Eleanor Roosevelt.[3][5]

Mirabehn also took an active interest in the establishment of the Sevagram Ashram, and worked among the people of Orissa to non-violently resist a potential Japanese invasion in the beginning of 1942.[5]

In August 1942, Mirabehn was arrested along with Gandhi and many Congress leaders as they launched the 'Quit India' movement.[3] They were jailed in Aga Khan Palace, Pune until May 1944. Both Mahadev Desai and Kasturba Gandhi died while jailed at the palace.[5]

After her release from jail, with Gandhi's permission, she established the Kisan Ashram on a plot of land near Haridwar.[5] Here, the locals constructed a home and a cattle shed. Soon the ashram was home to cows and bullocks, a shed for khadi, and a dispensary for basic medicine. She then moved to Pashulok in 1946, at the request of Govind Ballabh Pant, who wanted to involve her in agriculture extension programs.[3]

Despite living in an ashram, she maintained correspondence with Gandhi through 1947, and spent 3 months with him in Delhi after she fell ill towards the end of the year.[3]

Throughout her life, she was a witness to the Simla Conference, Cabinet Mission, Interim Government, Constituent Assembly, Partition of India, and assassination of Mahatma Gandhi.[10]

Post-independence life in India[edit]

After Independence, she established a settlement named Bapu Gram and the Gopal Ashram in Bhilangana in 1952.[5] She took to dairying and farming experiments in these ashrams and also spent a while in Kashmir. During the time she spent in Kumaon and Garhwal she observed the destruction of the forests there and the impact it was having on floods in the plains. She wrote about it in an essay titled Something Wrong in the Himalaya but her advice was ignored by the Forest Department. In the 1980s, these areas witnessed a large Gandhian environmental campaign to save the forests called the Chipko Movement.[11]

She returned to England in 1959, and relocated to Austria in 1960.[12] Her long-time friend, India's Prime Minister Indira Gandhi, whom Mirabehn had known since Gandhi was a child, made sure she was taken care of even while in Austria. Gandhi had instructed the Indian Embassy in Austria to provide Mirabehn with whatever she needed. Throughout her years in Austria, four of her friends visited her daily. Nonetheless, she continued to voluntarily live a simple life, eating only natural foods and abstaining from using labor saving devices.[4] She spent 22 years in small villages in the Vienna Woods (Baden, Hinterbrühl, Kracking), where she died in 1982.[12]

She was awarded India's second highest civilian honour, the Padma Vibhushan, in 1981.[13]

Books by Mirabehn[edit]

Mirabehn with Gandhi at Darwen, Sharko, 1931

Mirabehn's autobiography is titled The Spiritual Pilgrimage. She also published Bapu's Letters to Mira and New and Old Gleanings.[14][15] Mirabehn drafted a book called “Beethoven’s Mystical Vision” (not “The Spirit of Beethoven”). It was published in Madurai by Khadi Friends Forum in 1999, and then a second, digital edition in 2000 by MGM University.

In popular culture[edit]

Bibliography[edit]

  • Spirits Pilgrimage, by Mirabehn. Great River Books. 1984. ISBN 0-915556-13-8.
  • New and old gleanings, by Mirabehn. Navajivan Pub. House. 1964.

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b c d Lindley, Mark. "Mirabehn, Gandhi and Beethoven". Academia.edu.
  2. ^ a b Gupta, Krishna Murti (14 August 1993). "Mira Behn: A friend of nature". India Environment Portal.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Guha, Ramchandra (2022). Rebels Against the Raj, Western Fighters for India's Freedom (1st ed.). United States: Alfred A. Knopf. pp. 107–110, 112–113, 115–116, 121–122, 125–130, 250–251, 253–255, 257. ISBN 9781101874837.
  4. ^ a b c d e Sereny, Gitta (14 November 1982). "A LIFE WITH GANDHI". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 22 March 2023.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h i "Associates of Mahatma Gandhi, Mirabehn". mkgandhi.org.
  6. ^ a b c "Mirabehn | Biography, Photograph, & History | Britannica". www.britannica.com. Retrieved 2 January 2023.
  7. ^ a b Slade, Madeleine (1960). The Spirit's Pilgrimage. Longmans Green and Co LTD. pp. 63–92.
  8. ^ "Madeleine Slade Again Arrested". Barrier Miner. 18 August 1932. Retrieved 2 April 2023.
  9. ^ "WOMEN AND INDIA'S INDEPENDENCE MOVEMENT". Archived from the original on 21 November 2013.
  10. ^ "Mirabehn - Madeleine Slade | Associates of Mahatma Gandhi". www.mkgandhi.org. Retrieved 1 January 2023.
  11. ^ Langston, Nancy (22 April 2007). "Significant Women in Forestry". Society of American Foresters. Archived from the original on 29 April 2017. Retrieved 9 July 2012.
  12. ^ a b Ghosh, Ruchira (1 May 2018). "Mirabehn: A Key Player In The Indian Freedom Struggle". Feminism In India. Retrieved 15 October 2019.
  13. ^ "Associates of Mahatma Gandhi : Mirabehn". www.mkgandhi.org. Retrieved 15 October 2019.
  14. ^ "Mira Behn, disciple of Mahatma Gandhi". indiavideo.org.
  15. ^ "Books by Mirabehn". amazon.com.
  16. ^ Gandhi (1982) - IMDb, retrieved 30 July 2022
  17. ^ Singh, Khushwant (1 October 2005). "IN LOVE WITH THE MAHATMA". The Telegraph. Archived from the original on 8 July 2007.
  18. ^ "Ramachandra Guha: I haven't written Rebels Against the Raj to influence Indians on their political preferences". Firstpost. 20 January 2022. Retrieved 30 July 2022.

Further reading[edit]

  • Letters to Mirabehn, by Mahatma Gandhi. # Greenleaf Books. 1983. ISBN 0-934676-53-4.

External links[edit]