Sri Anirvan (8 July 1896 – 31 May 1978), born Narendra Chandra Dhar, was an Indian Hindumonk, writer and philosopher.[1] Widely known as a scholar,[1][2] his principal works were a Bengali translation of Sri Aurobindo's The Life Divine[1] and the three-volume treatise Veda Mimamsa.[1]
Early life and sannyas
Sri Anirvan was born on 8 July 1896 in the town of Mymensingh, then a part of British India and now in Bangladesh.[1] His birth name was Narendrachandra Dhar. He was the son of Rajchandra Dhar, a doctor, and Sushila Devi.[3] He was a spiritually and intellectually inclined child, who by age 11 had memorised the Astadhyayi of Pāṇini and the Bhagavad Gita.[1] He was named Baroda Brahmachari after going through the sacred thread ceremony. He also won a state scholarship as a teen and completed university IA and BA degrees at the University of Dhaka and an MA from the Sanskrit College of the University of Calcutta.[1]
Some time after 1930, Nirvanananda changed his name to Anirvan and ceased to wear the ochre swami's robes.[1] He travelled widely in North India,[1] eventually returning to Assam and establishing an ashram in Kamakhya near Guwahati.[1] However, he continued to travel. In the 1940s, he lived in Lohaghat and Almora. Madame Lizelle Reymond documented some of this period in My Life with a Brahmin Family (1958) and To Live Within (1971).[1][2] During this time, Sri Anirvan translated Sri Aurobindo's The Life Divine into Bengali (as Divya Jeevan Prasanga); this book, his first, was published in two volumes between 1948 and 1951.[1]
In 1953, Sri Anirvan moved to Shillong in Assam.[1] His reputation as a Vedic scholar grew;[1][2] and he wrote both in Bengali (chiefly) and in English (he was also fluent in French) on various aspects of Hindu philosophy (particularly Samkhya, the Upanishads, the Gita and Vedanta) and the parallels between Rigvedic, Puranic, Tantric and Buddhist thought.[1][2] His magnum opus, Veda Mimamsa, was published in three volumes in 1961, 1965 and 1970.[1] This work won him the Rabindra award.
Buddhi Yoga Of The Gita And Other essays.(Original in English.) Biblia Impex Pvt. Ltd. 1991, Madras, Samata Books.
Dakshinamurti (Bengali: দক্ষিণামূর্তি). 1969. Sreerampore, Hooghly: Sri Rabindranath Bandyopadhyay,.
Divya Jeevan (Translation Into Bengali Of "The Life Divine" by Sri Aurobindo. দিব্য জীবন প্রসঙ্গ).Pondicherry: Sri Aurobindo Ashram (Originally published 1948–51).
Divya Jeevan Prasanga (Bengali: দিব্য জীবন প্রসঙ্গ). Kolkata: Sri Aurobindo Pathamandir, 2000 (fourth edition). (Originally published 1958).
Gayatri Mandala Volumes 1–6. (Bengali). Undated.
Gitanuvachan (Bengali: গীতানুবচন). Vol I – 1968, Vol II – 1969, Vol III – 1970. Sreerampore, Hooghly: Sri Rabindranath Bandyopadhyay.
Inner Yoga (English) Translated by Simanta Narayan Chatterjee from "Antar Yoga." New Delhi: Voice of India.
Kaveri (Collection Of Poems) (Bengali: কাবেরী).1976. Kolkata: Sri Aurobindo Pathamandir
Lecture On the Immortality Of the Body in Sri Aurobindo's Yoga (Bengali:).1970. Kolkata: Sri Aurobindo Pathamandir
Letters From A Baul, Life Within Life. (original in English). 1983. Kolkata: Sri Aurobindo Pathamandir.
Vedamimamsa (Bengali: বেদ মীমাংসা). Vol I – 1961, Vol II – 1965, Vol III – 1970. Winner of Rabindra Puraskar award. Kolkata: Government Sanskrit College.
Vedanta Jijnasa (Bengali: বেদান্ত জিজ্ঞাসা). Sreerampore, Hooghly: Sri Rabindranath Bandyopadhyay, 1965 (Bengali year 1372).
Yogasamanvaya Prasanga (Bengali: যোগসমন্বয় প্রসঙ্গ). 1967. Kolkata: Sri Aurobindo Pathamandir.
Biographies
Section on Sri Anirvan in "Adhyatmavada Samskritite Acarya Satyananda" by Prof. Gita Haldar in Bengali. Undated.
Kathaprasange Sri Anirvan by Ayacaka in Bengali. Undated.
Mahajana Samvada by Prof. Govindagopal Mukherjee in Bengali. Undated.
Rishi Anirvan, biography of Sri Anirvan by Prof. Gita Haldar in Bengali. Published 2008.
5. Smriticarane Mahayogi Anirvan by Dilip Kumar Roy in Bengali. Undated.
Books on Sri Anirvan and his philosophy
Akasabrahma by Ayacaka in Bengali. Undated.
My Life In A Brahmin Family by Lizelle Reymond. Translated from the French by Lucy Norton. Rider and Co. London. 1958.
To Live Within by Sri Anirvan and Lizelle Reymond, introduction by Jacob Needleman. Morninglight Press. 2007.
^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s tBuddhiyoga of the Gita and other Essays. by Anirvan. Samata Books, 1984 (paperback 1991). ISBN978-0-8364-1120-1. at Bagchee.com, accessed 1 June 2008 and Buddhiyoga jacket copy, accessed June 1, 2008 at the Wayback Machine (archived 9 February 2011)
^ a b c d eTo Live Within: A Woman's Spiritual Pilgrimage in a Himalayan Hermitage. By Lizelle Reymond. (Translated from the French original La Vie dans la vie by Nancy Pearson and Stanley Spiegelberg.) Morning Light Press, 2007. ISBN1-59675-016-2. Gurdjieff-internet.com, accessed 1 June 2008
^Antaryoga (Bengali: অন্তর্যোগ). Kolkata: Sri Goutam Dharmapal, Haimavati Prakashani, 1997 (Bengali year 1404), 3rd edition.
External links
Wikiquote has quotations related to Anirvan.
Banik, Nandadulal (2012). "Anirvan". In Islam, Sirajul; Jamal, Ahmed A. (eds.). Banglapedia: National Encyclopedia of Bangladesh (Second ed.). Asiatic Society of Bangladesh.
Assam Bangiya Saraswat Matha
J.L. Mehta on Heidegger, Hermeneutics, and Indian Tradition. By Jarava Lal Mehta, William J. Jackson (editor). Brill Academic Publishers, 1992. ISBN978-90-04-09488-8. Google books version, accessed 1 June 2008
Sri Anirvan Rachanavali ( Complete Works ) : http://www.haimavati-anirvan.org. Online e-library (Bengali) including most important works : Veda Mimamsa, Rig-Veda Samhita, Upanishad Prasanga
Sri Anirvan Rachanavali ( Internet Archive Community texts ) : https://archive.org/details/@shri_anirvan_rachanavali