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The Print on MSNDadabhai Naoroji started a newspaper to push for reform in Bombay. It was called Truth TellerDadabhai Naoroji was part of the 'Young Bombay' reformist clique group, which had progressive views on women’s education and rationalisation of religious practices.
If there were many befuddled people who said “Dadabhai who?” at the time, there will be far fewer who will say so now, given the publication of “Naoroji,” by Dinyar Patel, an absorbing ...
Dadabhai was born in Bombay (now Mumbai) on September 4, 1825 in a priestly Parsi family, being the only child of his mother Manekbai and father, Naoroji Palaji Dordi who had migrated from Navsari ...
Dadabhai Naoroji influenced many young leaders through his progressive nationalist ideas, including Mohammed Ali Jinnah. How do you view the change ...
Dadabhai Naoroji, a leader who served India and Britain. By Gopalkrishna Gandhi. Updated on: Nov 05, 2022 11:33 PM IST . Share Via. Copy Link. This year, 2022, marks the 130th anniversary of the ...
Dadabhai Naoroji reached Bombay (now Mumbai) from London on the afternoon of 3 December 1893. An estimated half a million people thronged the streets to welcome him.
If Dadabhai Naoroji were around, he'd coax leaders to implement far-reaching economic reforms, says Dinyar Patel whose biography won the 2021 NIF book prize. Subscribe Sign in.
Dadabhai Naoroji, who propounded the “drain of wealth” theory to describe the loot by the British imperialists, was the force behind the nascent Make in India movement in the 19th century.
Dadabhai Naoroji aka the (Grand Old Man of India) was born on 4 September 1825 in Bombay in a Parsi family. Naoroji pursued his higher studies from Elphinstone College in Mumbai, where he excelled ...
Commemorating 100 years of the death of Dadabhai Naoroji — observed on 30 June — we take stock of a collection of letters the Grand Old Man of India exchanged with his contemporaries ...
The south London home where Dadabhai Naoroji, a prominent member of the Indian freedom struggle and Britain's first Indian parliamentarian, lived for around eight years at the end of the 19th ...
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