A Clear Star: C.F. Andrews and India 1904-1914

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Charles Freer Andrews first came to India in 1904 and even in his lifetime he was being turned into a saint, a fate similar to that of this greatest friend, Gandhi. This book gets behind that obfuscation. Others have studied the story of his later development but this is the first closely researched account of the period between 1904 and 1914, which traces Andrews’ transformation into a significant player in modern Indian history. Arriving as a young missionary to teach at. St. Stephen’s College Delhi, at the high noon of the Empire, Andrews underwent a profound transformation. His Christianity was challenged and changed in the process, as he entered into deep relationships with Gandhi and Tagore and other Hindu and Muslim friends and committed himself to Indian freedom. In all this, we see the emergence of what Gandhi called ‘the pattern of the ideal missionary’, in an intercultural context between Raj and Swaraj.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR Daniel O'Connor

Daniel O'Connor was born and bruoght up in northern England, with a grammar-school education. His first two degrees are from Durham Unviersity, and he subsequently did a Ph.D. at St. andrews in Scotland. he trained at Oxford for priesthood in the Church of England, and married Juliet, a school-teacher, before coming to India. After their 'interesting times' there, they returned to a life combining priestly and educational work in England and Scotland. They retired to St. Andrews, to be relatively close to their family, where he writes and is assistant gardener.

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Bibliographic information

Title
A Clear Star: C.F. Andrews and India 1904-1914
Author
Edition
1st ed.
Publisher
ISBN
8180280233
Length
xii+300p., Notes; Bibliography; Index; 22cm.
Subjects