 Born:
Born: August 15, 1872       
Died: December 5, 1950       
Achievements: He was a freedom fighter, poet, scholar, yogi and         philosopher. Worked towards the cause of India’s freedom, and for         further evolution of life on earth.      
        Aurobindo Ghose was a multifaceted person. He was a freedom fighter,         poet, scholar, yogi and philosopher. He spent his life working towards         the cause of India’s freedom, and for further evolution of life on         earth.      
        Sri Aurobindo Ghosh was born on August 15, 1872 at Calcutta. His father         was Krishnadhan and his mother was Swamalata. Aurobindo Ghose had an         impressive lineage. Raj Narayan Bose, an acknowledged leader in Bengali         literature, and the grandfather of Indian nationalism was Sri Aurobindo’s         maternal grandfather. Aurobindo Ghosh owes not only his rich spiritual         nature, but even his very superior literary capacity, to his mother’s         line. His father was an M.D. from England.      
        When Sri Aurobindo was five years old, he was sent to Loretto Convent         School at Darjeeling. Two years later in 1879, Aurobindo Ghose, was sent         to England along with his brothers for higher studies. Aurobindo         completed his schooling from St. Paul's in London. In 1890, at the age         of eighteen, Sri Aurobindo got admission into Cambridge. Here, he         distinguished himself as a student of European classics. To comply with         the wish of his father, Sri Aurobindo Ghose also applied for the ICS         while at Cambridge. He passed the Indian Civil Service Examination with         great credit in 1890. He, however, failed to stand the required test in         horsemanship and hence was not allowed to enter the Covenantal Service         of the Indian Government.      
        In 1893, Aurobindo Ghose, returned to India, and became the         Vice-principal of the State college in Baroda. He drew a salary of         Rs.750/-. He was held in great respect by the Maharaja of Baroda.         Aurobindo was an accomplished scholar in Greek and Latin. From 1893 to         1906 he extensively studied Sanskrit, Bengali literature, Philosophy and         Political Science.      
        In 1906, in the wake of partition of Bengal, resigned his job and         joined the Bengal National College on a salary of Rs.150/-. He plunged         headlong into the revolutionary movement. Aurobindo Ghose played a         leading role in India’s freedom struggle from 1908. Sri Aurobindo         Ghosh was one of the pioneers of political awakening in India. He edited         the English daily Bande Mataram and wrote fearless and pointed         editorials. He openly advocated the boycott of British goods, British         courts and everything British. He asked the people to prepare themselves         for passive resistance.      
        The famous Alipore Bomb Case proved to be a turning point in Sri         Aurobindo Ghosh’s life. For a year Aurobindo was an undertrial         prisoner in solitary confinement in the Alipore Central Jail. It was in         a dingy cell of the Alipore Jail that he dreamt the dream of his future         life, the divine mission ordained for him by God. He utilized this         period of incarceration for an intense study and practice of the         teachings of the Bhagavad Gita. Chittaranjan Das defended Sri Aurobindo,         who was acquitted after a memorable trial.      
        During his time in prison, Aurobindo Ghosh, had developed interest in         yoga and meditation. After his release he started practicing pranayama         and meditation. Sri Aurobindo Ghose migrated from Calcutta to         Pondicherry in 1910. At Pondicherry, he stayed at a friend’s place.         At first, he lived there with four or five companions. Gradually the         number of members increased and an Ashram was founded.      
        In 1914 after four years of concentrated yoga at Pondicherry, Sri         Aurobindo launched Arya, a 64 page monthly review. For the next six and         a half years this became the vehicle for most of his most important         writings, which appeared in serialised form. These included Essays on         The Gita, The Secret of The Veda, Hymns to the Mystic Fire, The         Upanishads, The Foundations of Indian Culture, War and         Self-determination, The Human Cycle, The Ideal of Human Unity, and The         Future Poetry. In 1926, Sri Aurobindo Ghose retired from public life.      
        Sri Aurobindo’s philosophy is based on facts, experience and         personal realisations and on having the vision of a seer or Rishi.         Aurobindo’s spirituality was inseparably united with reason. The         goal of Sri Aurobindo was not merely the liberation of the individual         from the chain that fetters him and realization of the self, but to work         out the will of the Divine in the world, to effect a spiritual         transformation and to bring down the divine nature and a divine life         into the mental, vital and physical nature and life of humanity.      
        Sri Aurobindo passed away on December 5, 1950 at Pondicherry at the age         of 78.