SAVITRIBAI PHULE....
SAVITRIBAI PHULE
THE COUNTRY'S FIRST FEMALE TEACHER AND THE FIRST LEADER OF THE WOMEN'S LIBERATION MOVEMENT.......

SAVITRIBAI PHULE
BORN; 3 JANUARY 1831
But a woman who worked with her husband in the nineteenth century against the evils of touching, fingering, satipratha, child marriage and window-marrage prohibition but she was forgotten by hindustan.....

BORN; 3 JANUARY 1831
she played an important and vital role in improving women's rights in India. She is regarded as the mother of Indian feminism.
Savitribai Phule was born on 3 January 1831 in the village of Naigaon in Satara District, Maharashtra. Her birthplace was about five km (3.1 mi) from Shirval and about 50 km (31 mi) from Pune.
Savitribai Phule was also a prolific author and poet. She published Kavya Phule in 1854 and Bavan Kashi Subodh Ratnakar in 1892, and also a poem entitled "Go, Get Education" in which she encouraged those who are oppressed to free themselves by obtaining an education. As a result of her experience and work, she became an ardent feminist. She established the Mahila Seva Mandal to raise awareness for issues concerning women's rights. She also called for a gathering place for women that was free of caste discrimination or differentiation of any kind. Symbolic of this was that all the women that attended were to sit on the same mat. She was also an anti-infanticide activist. She opened a women's shelter called the Home for the Prevention of Infanticide, where Brahmin widows could safely deliver their children and leave them there to be adopted if they so desired. She also campaigned against child marriage and was an advocate of widow remarriage. Savitribai and Jyotirao strongly opposed Sati Pratha, and they started a home for widows and forlorn children.
Her adopted son Yashwantrao served the people of his area as a doctor. When the worldwide Third Pandemic of the bubonic plague badly affected the area around Nallaspora, Maharastra in 1897, the courageous Savitribai and Yashwantrao opened a clinic at outskirts of Pune to treat the patients infected by the disease. She brought the patients to the clinic where her son treated them while she took care of them. In course of time, she contracted the disease while serving the patients and succumbed to it on March 10, 1897
Go, Get Education
Be self-reliant, be industrious
Work—gather wisdom and riches,

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