Saturday 25 August, 2 – 3pm
St John’s (Venue 127); St John's Church, Princes Street, Edinburgh EH2 4BJ 
Part of Festival of Spirituality, Edinburgh


The Tagore Centre UK is proud to present a unique afternoon of music featuring a young talented set of artists, trained under Smt Chandrima Misra, a Hindustani classical vocalist and Pt Rajkumar Misra, one of the most prolific Tabla maestros in the world.  

Rabindranath Tagore, the great poet laurette, combined ancient Indian Raagas in his poetry.
This blend of spirituality and musical excellence will be explored with vocal melodies showcasing improvisations of the rhythmic cycles.


Ticket details to follow
 
 
We had a fantastic day out at Gordon Square this afternoon- and though it rained, our spirits were not dampened at all! 

About 100 good friends braved the weather and turned up for an afternoon of singing, dancing, poetry-readings, music and songs – that featured a lot of audience participation. 

Even the bust of Rabindranath Tagore looked on in appreciation… as he seemed to enjoy his 151st Birth Anniversary!

Join our Facebook page to see the photos from the day  
 
 
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5pm, 19 May 2012 
Stapleford Community Primary School
Bar Lane, Stapleford
Cambridge CB22 5BJ 
(Parking Available) 
 Tickets: £5.00 

A Tagore Centre UK Collaboration 


A play in English, based on life and times of Rabindranath Tagore and his famous essay, ’Crisis of Civilisation’. The piece carries a message of hope for mankind struggling to regain its dignity lost in the imperialist maelstrom and post-colonial carnage that followed both world wars at the turn of the century.

This performance intends to inspire and motivate its audience to rediscover Tagore within their own terms and in the present context of the threat of global terrorism and all that encompasses it.  Its aim is to rekindle the spirit of freedom of mind and expression. 

A true performing arts extravaganza featuring music, song, narration, drama and audiovisual presentations that complement the entire performance.

Please note this is a touring play, available for additional performances

Written, devised and performed by Ranjon Ghoshal, dramatist and Tagore academic and researcher.

Directed by: Jagdish Raja, veteran thespian and director.
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Programme on the night

Rabindranath Tagore - A Creator Unbounded 
Talk by Dr Kalyan Kundu, Chairperson, The Tagore Centre UK

Crisis of Civilisation – A journey with Tagore – by Ranjon Ghoshal  Performance piece by Ranjon Ghoshal


 With book sale of publications produced by The Tagore Centre UK, London.

For details email: Ujjwal Das (cricivtagore@gmail.com 
Mobile 07936323548 (Please Text) 


 
 
Join us for an evening of drama, Rabindrasangeet (songs of Tagore) and readings from Tagore, to celebrate 151st birth anniversary of the poet. 

This special evening is being presented by The Tagore Centre UK: 
Programme

GITANJALI in THE WEST
( A Tribute from The Tagore Centre UK on the Centenary of Gitanjali )
Script and Narration : Amalendu Biswas
Singers:   Sunit Ghatak, Susmita Bhattacharya, Mamata Lahiri
 
STREER PATRA (The Wife’s Epistle)
By Nibedita Sengupta as Mrinal
Created, conceived and compiled: Ansuman Biswas and Nibedita Sengupta
Vocal : Tanusree Guha
 
TOMAR PREME DHANYA
Script : Amalendu Biswas    
Narration :  Sumana Bhattacharya (Kolkata Doordarsan)
Singers :     Ruby Bunker, Malabika Ghosh and Tunu Paul
 
SHRUTI NATAK
Charade from Tagore’s  Hasyakoutuk
Actors: Satyen Barua, Lalit Chatterjee, Bijoy Chakravarti, Dipen Mukhopadhyay  and Kalyan Kundu
 
SOLO RABINDRA SANGEET
Amit Dey  ( Bangladesh )

Tickets £8 (including snacks)
6.30pm, 26 May 2012 
Bharatiya Vidya Bhava
4A Castletown Road, London W14 9HQ
(nearest Underground West Kensington)  

Contacts 
07775 944120
020 8441 0370
020 8368 4302  
 
 
Please note this event is still on and we look forward to seeing you all there later today! It shall be a very fun afternoon indeed!
Posted 7 May 2012, by Tagore Centre
Nearest Tube: Russell Square.
(but do bring an umbrella just in case)

Featuring music, dance, poetry readings and more!
In celebration of the 151st Birth Anniversary of Tagore and 100 years celebration of Gitanjali.
Join us for an afternoon of songs, music, poetry readings and dance, led by schools and professional individuals/ groups performing Rabindrasangeet (songs of Tagore) from all over London.
These performances reflect on the translations of Tagore’s work in various languages.
In addition we are keen for this event to be held in similar fashion to those Tagore held himself in Santiniketan – outdoors, in the open air, with friends and family free to join in. 

Please do come along, all are welcome.  The event begins at 2pm and is totally free. 
 
If you’d like to be an Event Partner for the 7 May, please contact:
Raka Mukhopadhyay raka_chhandam@hotmail.com  07957 657 001
Other contact numbers
020 8368 4302 (evenings)
020 8444 6751 (weekends 12 – 4pm)      


Photos: photos and © Monish Sengupta
 
 
A Celebration of the 150th Anniversary of the Poet's Birth
Wednesday 2 May 2012 
Cumberland Lodge, The Great Park, Windsor


Rabindranath Tagore's contributions to religious and educational thought, to politics and social reform, to moral regeneration and economic thought are as great as his contribution to world literature.  In the final days of the 150th Anniversary year of Tagore's birth, Cumberland Lodge is running a day of reflection on the life of Tagore, with particular focus on his work as an educationalist.

"What we now call a school in this country is really a factory, and the
teachers are part of it. At half past ten in the morning the factory opens
with the ringing of a bell; then, as the teachers start talking, the
machines start working. The teachers stop talking at four in the afternoon
when the factory closes, and the pupils then go home carrying with them a
few pages of machine-made learning. Later this learning is tested at
examinations and labelled."

Tagore, The Problem of Education

Speakers Include: 

William Radice is a poet and an internationally known translator of Bengali and scholar of Tagore

Ketaki Kushari Dyson is a Bengali writer of poetry, fiction and drama. She is a translator of Tagore and has authored novels and scholarly books on Tagore's writing and visual art, including Rabindranath o Victoria Ocampor Sandhane; In Your Blossoming Flower-Garden: Rabindranath Tagore and Victoria Ocampo; I Won't Let You Go: Selected Poems of Rabindranath Tagore and Ronger Rabindranath

Professor Ursula King is Professor Emerita of Theology and Religious Studies at the University of Bristol

Dr Indibar Mukherjee is in the Postgraduate Department of English at the University of Patna, India

Dr Michael Collins is Lecturer in History at University College London. He is the author of Empire, Nationalism and the Postcolonial World: Rabindranath Tagore's Writings on History, Politics and Society

Dr Alastair Niven, OBE is Principal of Cumberland Lodge and the author of four books and over fifty articles on aspects of Commonwealth and post-colonial literature

Registration:

Standard Rate: £40

For all registration inquiries, please email Janis Reeves, Conference Co-ordinator: 

Janis@CumberlandLodge.ac.uk  |  www.cumberlandlodge.ac.uk/programme/Forthcoming+Events/Tagore 

 
 
 
 
The Indian government has created an international award in memory of Rabindranath Tagore with Rs. 10 million as prize money for the promotion of values for universal brotherhood.

For commemorating the 150th birth anniversary of Tagore in 2011, a National Committee (NC) was brougt together under the Prime Minister with 36 other eminent figures.

The idea of launching an award in Tagore’s name was raised in the first meeting of the NC held on May 20, 2010. The NC authorised the National Implementation Committee (NIC) constituted under the Chairmanship of the Union Finance Minister Pranab Mukherjee to decide on its implementation.

The NIC met on September 14, 2010, and approved the proposal for creation of the awards and advised the Ministry of Culture to work out operational details including the selection process which would be transparent and involve an eminent jury.

Thereafter discussions were held with experts and various cultural organisations and it was decided that since Tagore had, through his writings and other artistic creations, contributed immensely to the promotion of universal brotherhood, the award too should be given to those that promote this ethos.

It was decided that the nominations would be drawn globally and these may be sifted by the selection committee for final consideration by the jury for the award.

The amount of the award (Rs. 10 million) should be the same as that for the Gandhi Peace Prize and Jawharlal Nehru Award for International Understanding.

It is hoped that this award would foster international brotherhood as Tagore was one of the most passionate believers in universal peace, brotherhood and unity.

The prize is to be given annually to individuals, associations, institutions or organisations for promoting values of universal brotherhood and nominations would be drawn globally and will be announced every year on 7 May.

Source: India Digest, November, 2011
 
 
Edinburgh Napier University in partnership with the Indian Council for Cultural Relations (ICCR) has established a Visiting Chair in Tagore Studies at the University.

The ICCR will also fund two PhD fellowships dedicated to researching the works of the influential Indian author, poet and songwriter whose 150th birth anniversary was celebrated across the world in 2011.
The University said the signing was a “significant step” towards opening a Scottish Centre for Tagore Studies, which it hopes will also become an international hub for promoting Indian culture, education, philosophy, art and literature.

His connection with Scotland was primarily his lasting friendship with Sir Patrick Geddes, the pioneering Scottish town planer.

In addition, Tagore’s grandfather, the industrialist and entrepreneur Dwarkanath Tagore, was also honoured with the Freedom of the City of Edinburgh in 1845.

Professor Dame Joan Stringer, Principal & Vice-Chancellor of Edinburgh Napier University, said:
“The spirit of Rabindranath Tagore continues to inspire the entire world and it is with great honour that we sign this MoU with the Indian Council for Cultural Relations.
“It represents a significant step towards the opening of Scotland’s first centre for Tagore Studies at Edinburgh Napier, which we hope will attract research interest from both near and far and, in the spirit of the man himself, will be outward looking, inclusive and visionary.”

Mr. Suresh Goel, Director General of the Indian Council for Cultural Relations (ICCR), said:
“The ICCR considers this collaboration with the University to be of great importance since it will promote an academic exchange between India and Edinburgh Napier.
“It has been the philosophy of the ICCR that this kind of co-operation contributes to the civilisation of dialogue and understanding on a much more durable basis.”

 
 
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_Normal 0 On 13 December 2011, Sotheby’s of New York - one of the largest auction houses in the world - will auction a rare notebook, which once belonged to Rabindranath Tagore, containing Tagore’s hand written draft manuscripts of many poems dated from the autumn of 1928. 

The notebook was given by Tagore himself to a patron for his generous financial support to the establishment of his university at Santiniketan. 

A descendant of the original patron has now offered to auction this item. The notebook is estimated to fetch between $150K-$250K

About Lot 94
© and courtesy Sothebys:

An unknown manuscript notebook of poems and songs some being heavily amended drafts of subsequently published works.

The present notebook constitutes a microcosm of the genius of India's Rabindranath Tagore, the first Asian Nobel Laureate and one of the modern world's most profound and prolific writers. Tagore's writing achievements span no less than ten genres: poetry, songs, prose, novels, short stories, plays, autobiographical works, travel writings, plays and humorous essays. Though Tagore found writing poetry to be "kind of secret and forbidden delight" (letter #92 in Chhinnapatra (Torn Leaves)), he predicted that he would be best remembered through his songs. Stunning examples of both are contained in Tagore's notebook from the autumn of 1928.

Each poem and song in the notebook is a draft manuscript of a work published in a variant form. Twelve of the manuscript poems were published in a collection entitled Mohua in 1929. Mohua is a tree with flowers of the same name containing intoxicating nectar, and Tagore's poems included in this collection celebrate nature, love and life.

Two of the song lyrics in the notebook were later included in the dance drama Chitranggada, first performed in 1892 and then modified and extended in 1936. Seven of the song lyrics in the notebook were later incorporated in the musical drama Tapati published in 1929. The remaining three song lyrics in the notebook in his three-volume song collection entitled Gitabitan (Garden of Songs), published in 1931.

Heavily emended and containing Tagore's inimitable artistic deletions, one of these songs, "Mon je bale chini chini," is of particular significance:

Click here for full details on the manuscript and how to bid

Sotheby's acknowledges the generous assistance of Dr. Asok Chaudhuri in the research and cataloguing of this lot.