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Where the Mind is Without Fear…

Rabindranath Tagore (1861-1941)
Where the mind is without fear and the head is held high
Where knowledge is free
Where the world has not been broken up into fragments
By narrow domestic walls
Where words come out from the depth of truth
Where tireless striving stretches its arms towards perfection...

Where The Mind Is Without Fear by Rabindranath Tagore, written in 1910 in Bengali as Chitto Jetha Bhoy Shunno and translated by the poet himself in 1912.

We celebrate Rabindranath Tagore(1861-1941) on his 165th birth anniversary with translations of his works by contemporary writers. We hope to woo our readers into experiencing Tagore as a visionary and a thinker who used his writing to showcase his convictions transcending divisive human constructs. Most are aware he was much more than just a poet or writer with his pet projects of Santiniketan and Sriniketan, that continue to flourish, even today — eighty-five years after his death.

He wrote a birthday poem every year. The last one was drafted as he lay sick on his bed in 1941. We have the lyrics translated by Aruna Chakravarti in her book, Daughters of Jorasanko with an imagined description of his last birthday celebrations.

The outlay includes stories translated by Somdatta Mandal and Chakravarti; essays brought to us in English by Himadri Lahiri and Mandal. And our piece de resistance is Professor Fakrul Alam’s translation of his full length ‘dance-drama’, Roktokorobi (Red Oleanders), with songs and theatre brought together, somewhat like in a musical. What absolutely amazes is that all his work can be read as comments on contemporary life. Enjoy the translations!

Birthday Poems & Lyrics

Bhoy Hote Tobo is the first Birthday Song by Tagore, a poem written in 1899. Click here to read the translation.

Pochishe Boisakh (25th of Boisakh, 1922). Click here to read the translation.

Pochishe Boisakh Cholechhe (The Twenty-fifth of Boisakh Draws Close, 1935). Click here to read the translation.

Jonmodin (Birthday, 1940). Click here to read the translation.  

Tagore’s Last Birthday Celebration: This has been excerpted from Aruna Chakravarti’s Daughters of Jorasanko. It includes has her translation of the last birthday song he wrote in 1941 a few months before he died. Click here to read.

Short Stories

Daliya, a story by Tagore, has been translated from Bengali by Somdatta Mandal. Click here to read.

Aparichita  has been translated as The Stranger by Aruna Chakravarti. Click here to read. 

Essays

Baraf Pora (Snowfall) : This narrative gives a glimpse of Tagore’s first experience of snowfall in Brighton and published in the Tagore family journal, Balak (Children), has been translated by Somdatta Mandal . Click here to read.

 Raja O Praja or The King and His Subjects, an essay by Tagore, has been translated by Himadri Lahiri. Click here to read.

Dance Drama

Roktokorbi (Red Oleanders), a full length dance drama by Tagore, has been translated from Bengali by Professor Fakrul Alam. Click here to read.

Scene from a recent performance of Roktokorobi (Red Oleander). From Public Domain

For more content from Tagore, visit our Tagore section homing more translations and writings on him and by him by clicking here.