SSC Modern History Socio Religious Reform PPT (LEC #26)

Welcome to the new Lecture 26 (SSC Modern History Socio Religious Reform PPT (LEC #26) of the Complete Foundation Batch for All SSC Exams – PPT Series by SlidesharePPT. This lecture covers Modern Indian History: Socio-Religious Reform Movements in India (सामाजिक-धार्मिक सुधार) – one of the most consistently asked chapters in SSC CGL, SSC CHSL, SSC MTS, SSC GD Constable, and RRB Group D exams, with 8 to 12 direct MCQs appearing in almost every paper.

In this article, you will find a complete study guide built around the 124-slide PPT – including a full reform era timeline, all major Hindu reform movements, all major Muslim reform movements, a complete reformers quick-reference table, special topics on Brahmo Samaj splits and women’s reform legislation, a Podcast-style Q&A on the most confused topics, and 30 practice MCQs with answers.

The PPT slides are embedded below – self-made, regularly updated, and fully ready for online and offline classroom use. Whether you are a teacher taking a regular batch or running a full marathon revision session before exams, or a student doing last-minute preparation, you can view and use all 124 slides directly on any device – no download needed.

Section 1: PPT Resource Overview

PPT RESOURCE OVERVIEW – LEC #26
Complete Foundation Batch for All SSC Exams  |  History PPT Series  |  Socio-Religious Reform Movements
Lecture TitleSocio-Religious Reform Movements in India (सामाजिक-धार्मिक सुधार)
Lecture NumberLecture 26  (LEC #26)
Serial Number#51 in the Complete Foundation Batch PPT Series
Total Slides124 High-Quality PPT Slides
File Size21 MB
SubjectModern Indian History
Series NameComplete Foundation Batch for All SSC and Other Competitive Exams (PPT SERIES)
Target ExamsSSC CGL | SSC CHSL | SSC MTS | SSC GD Constable | RRB Group D | UPSC Prelims | State PSC
Topics CoveredBrahmo Samaj → Arya Samaj → Ramakrishna Mission → Theosophical Society → Prarthana Samaj → Young Bengal → Aligarh Movement → Deoband → Wahabi → Faraizi → Satyashodhak Samaj → Self-Respect Movement → SNDP → and more
Key PersonalitiesRaja Ram Mohan Roy, Swami Dayananda Saraswati, Swami Vivekananda, Sir Syed Ahmad Khan, Annie Besant, Jyotirao Phule, E.V. Ramasamy Periyar, Sri Narayana Guru, Ishwar Chandra Vidyasagar
Difficulty LevelModerate – large number of movements but very pattern-based; same MCQs repeat
Recommended Study2 to 3 days (first read) | 1 day (revision using tables)
PPT Sourceslideshareppt.net
Best Combined WithLEC #24 (Education) + LEC #25 (G-G & Viceroy) – all three together cover the social reform era completely
Exam Tip: 8–12 direct MCQs from Reform Movements appear in every SSC CGL & CHSL exam

SSC Modern History Socio Religious Reform PPT (LEC #26) – (iframe and html combination)

Note: If you wish to download the entire SSC series (PPT slides), simply visit this redirect page. –REDIRECT PAGE

Section 2: Master Timeline – Socio-Religious Reform Era (1806–1936)

Every key reform movement and milestone in chronological order with SSC significance.

YearMovement / EventSSC Significance
1806Vellore Mutiny – reform contextFirst military mutiny; soldiers protested changes to dress codes; shows existing tensions before reform era
1815Atmiya Sabha – Raja Ram Mohan RoyRoy’s first reform organization in Calcutta; opposed idol worship, caste, Sati; predecessor to Brahmo Samaj
1817Hindu College, CalcuttaDavid Hare + Roy; English education; modern rational thinking enters Bengal; Young Bengal movement seeds planted
1820Raja Ram Mohan Roy – The Precepts of JesusRoy’s analysis of Christianity; showed respect for Jesus’s ethics; caused controversy with missionaries
1828Brahmo Samaj founded – Raja Ram Mohan RoyFirst major Hindu reform organization; opposed Sati, child marriage, idol worship, caste; monotheism; English education; ‘Father of Modern India’
1829Sati abolished – Lord BentinckRoy’s campaign directly led to official abolition; Roy used press (Sambad Kaumudi) and petitions
1830Roy visits EnglandFirst Indian intellectual to visit England; died in Bristol (1833); showed reformers’ global vision
1833Death of Raja Ram Mohan RoyDied in Bristol, England; left Brahmo Samaj to successors
1839Debendranath Tagore joins Brahmo SamajRabindranath Tagore’s father; gave Brahmo Samaj new spiritual direction; founded Tattvabodhini Sabha
1843Henry Louis Vivian Derozio – Young Bengal legacyDerozio (1809–1831) had already died young; his rationalist, anti-tradition students called ‘Derozians’ or Young Bengal – challenged Hindu orthodoxy
1851Paramahansa Mandali – MaharashtraSecret reform society; Maharashtra; opposed caste and idol worship; precursor to Prarthana Samaj
1856Widow Remarriage ActIshwar Chandra Vidyasagar’s campaign succeeds; Lord Dalhousie signs the act; major reform for Hindu widows
1863Swami Vivekananda bornNarendranath Datta; disciple of Ramakrishna; founded Ramakrishna Mission (1897); Chicago speech (1893)
1863Deoband Movement contextDarul Uloom Deoband founded 1867 by Mohammad Qasim Nanautavi + Rashid Ahmad Gangohi; Islamic conservatism + anti-British
1865Keshab Chandra Sen – Brahmo Samaj of IndiaSplit from Debendranath’s Adi Brahmo Samaj; more radical reforms; Keshab pushed inter-caste marriage, women’s education
1867Darul Uloom Deoband foundedSaharanpur, UP; Islamic education in traditional style; later produced ulema who opposed both British and INC
1867Prarthana Samaj founded – BombayM.G. Ranade, R.G. Bhandarkar, K.T. Telang; Maharashtra’s answer to Brahmo Samaj; opposed caste, child marriage, promoted widow remarriage
1869Mahatma Gandhi bornContext: reform era produces India’s greatest leader
1871Keshab Chandra Sen – Brahmo Marriage ActInter-caste and inter-religious marriages legalized through his advocacy
1872Satyashodhak Samaj – Jyotirao PhulePune; first major Dalit/OBC reform movement; opposed Brahmin domination; ‘Truth-Seeking Society’; education for lower castes and women
1875Arya Samaj – Swami Dayananda SaraswatiBombay (then shifted to north India); ‘Back to the Vedas’; opposed idol worship, caste by birth, child marriage; Shuddhi (reconversion) movement; Hindi promotion; ‘Most radical Hindu reform’
1875Theosophical Society founded – USAMadame H.P. Blavatsky + Colonel H.S. Olcott; later HQ shifted to Adyar, Madras (1886); promoted Hindu/Buddhist philosophy to the West
1875Muhammadan Anglo-Oriental College, AligarhSir Syed Ahmad Khan; Aligarh Movement; English + Islamic education for Muslims; ‘Two-Nation Theory’ seeds
1878Arya Samaj – Lahore branchMost active branch; Dayananda Anglo-Vedic (DAV) schools network; Lala Lajpat Rai, Lala Hansraj associated
1881Ramakrishna Paramahamsa’s influence peaksMystic saint of Dakshineswar, Calcutta; Kali devotee; taught unity of all religions; Vivekananda his main disciple
1882Anjuman-i-Islam – BombayIslamic reform organization; Badruddin Tyabji associated; moderate Islamic modernism
1886Theosophical Society HQ – Adyar, MadrasAnnie Besant later becomes president (1907); promotes Indian culture + nationalism
1893Swami Vivekananda – Chicago Parliament of ReligionsSeptember 11, 1893; ‘Sisters and Brothers of America’ opening; Vedanta philosophy to the world; India’s soft power moment
1897Ramakrishna Mission founded – VivekanandaBelur Math, Howrah; combines spiritual practice with social service; education, hospitals, disaster relief
1900Ahmadiyya Movement – Mirza Ghulam AhmadQadian, Punjab; claimed prophethood; controversial in mainstream Islam; British-friendly; declared non-Muslim in Pakistan 1974
1905Annie Besant – active in IndiaJoins INC; Theosophical Society; Home Rule League (1916); first woman INC President (1917)
1906Muslim League foundedAll India Muslim League; Dhaka; Nawab Salimullah; Aga Khan; separate Muslim political identity – outcome of Aligarh Movement’s separatist strand
1917Annie Besant – first woman INC PresidentPeak of her Indian political influence
1920Non-Brahmin Movement – Maharashtra/Tamil NaduPeriyar (E.V. Ramasamy) + B.R. Ambedkar challenge caste; Satya Shodhak / Self-Respect movements grow
1925Self-Respect Movement – E.V. Ramasamy PeriyarTamil Nadu; rejected Hindu religious texts as tools of Brahmin domination; promoted rationalism; marriages without priests (‘Self-Respect marriages’)
1927Dr. Ambedkar – Mahad SatyagrahaMahad, Maharashtra; Dalits assert right to use public water tank; first organized Dalit civil rights action
1932Poona Pact – Gandhi and AmbedkarSeparate Dalit electorates (Communal Award) vs. Gandhi’s fast; compromise: reserved seats in joint electorates
1936SNDP – Sri Narayana Guru’s legacySree Narayana Dharma Paripalana Yogam; Kerala; Ezhava community; ‘One Caste, One Religion, One God for Man’

Section 3: Why Reform Movements Happened – Context

Understanding WHY the reform era occurred helps answer ’cause’ type SSC questions and gives context for every movement.

Root Causes of the Reform Era

  • British rule exposed Indians to Western Enlightenment ideas – rationalism, equality, individual rights, scientific thinking
  • English education produced a new generation of Indians who questioned traditional practices through a rational lens
  • Social evils like Sati, child marriage, untouchability, purdah, and caste discrimination were deeply entrenched and harmful
  • Christian missionaries criticized Hindu practices – reformers felt pressure to clean house from within
  • Economic changes under British rule disrupted traditional social structures – new middle class emerged with different values
  • Printing press + newspapers allowed reformers to reach large audiences for the first time – Roy used Sambad Kaumudi; Tilak used Kesari

Two Types of Reform Responses

  • Reform from within (Brahmo Samaj, Prarthana Samaj): Modernize Hinduism/Islam by removing its ‘corruptions’; keep core faith, discard harmful practices
  • Revival of classical roots (Arya Samaj, Deoband): Return to pure original texts – Vedas or early Islam – and reject all later ‘corruptions’ including idol worship, saint veneration

Section 4: Hindu Reform Movements – Complete Table

All major Hindu reform and revival movements with founder, base, principles, and SSC significance.

MovementYearFounderBaseKey PrinciplesSSC Key Facts
Brahmo Samaj1828Raja Ram Mohan RoyCalcutta, BengalMonotheism; opposed Sati, idol worship, caste, child marriage; English education; social equality; widow remarriage‘Father of Modern India’; ‘Father of Indian Renaissance’; Roy used press (Sambad Kaumudi) to fight Sati; First major Hindu reform org
Adi Brahmo Samaj1843 (reorganized)Debendranath TagoreCalcuttaSpiritual reform; Tattvabodhini Sabha; opposed Christian missionaries; Upanishads focusRabindranath Tagore’s father; gave Brahmo Samaj strong spiritual foundation after Roy’s death
Brahmo Samaj of India1866Keshab Chandra SenCalcuttaMore radical social reforms; inter-caste marriage advocacy; women’s education; Brahmo Marriage Act (1872)Split from Debendranath; Keshab’s reforms were more socially aggressive; later founded ‘New Dispensation’ (1880)
Young Bengal Movement1820s–30sHenry Louis Vivian DerozioCalcutta (Hindu College)Rationalism; anti-tradition; free thought; challenged Hindu orthodoxy; inspired by French Revolution ideasDerozio died at 22 (1831); his students called ‘Derozians’; questioned everything including religion – ‘Young Bengal’
Arya Samaj1875Swami Dayananda SaraswatiBombay → north India‘Back to the Vedas’; opposed idol worship, caste by birth, child marriage, Sati; Shuddhi (reconversion); Hindi medium; DAV schoolsMost radical Hindu reform; slogan ‘India for Indians’; Shuddhi = bringing Muslims/Christians back to Hinduism; DAV school network across north India
Ramakrishna Mission1897Swami VivekanandaBelur Math, HowrahVedanta philosophy + social service; education, hospitals, disaster relief; unity of all religionsChicago Parliament 1893 = most famous speech; ‘Arise, awake, stop not till the goal is reached’; combines spirituality + nationalism
Prarthana Samaj1867M.G. Ranade, R.G. BhandarkarBombay, MaharashtraMaharashtra’s Brahmo Samaj; opposed caste, child marriage; widow remarriage; women’s education; monotheismM.G. Ranade = ‘Mahadev Govind Ranade’; also an economic nationalist (Drain of Wealth theory supporter)
Theosophical Society1875 (USA); 1886 India HQH.P. Blavatsky + H.S. Olcott; Annie Besant laterAdyar, Madras (India HQ)Universal Brotherhood; Hindu and Buddhist philosophy promotion; no caste or race distinctionAnnie Besant became president 1907; first woman INC president 1917; HQ at Adyar, Chennai still active
Satyashodhak Samaj1873Jyotirao Phule (Mahatma Phule)Pune, MaharashtraTruth-Seeking Society; opposed Brahmin domination; education for Dalits + women; rejected Brahmin priests; rational social reformFirst school for girls in Pune – by Phule and wife Savitribai Phule; called ‘Mahatma’; wife Savitribai = first female teacher in modern India
Self-Respect Movement1925E.V. Ramasamy PeriyarTamil NaduRejected Hindu religious texts as Brahmin tools of oppression; rationalism; self-respect marriages (without priests); anti-casteCalled ‘Periyar’ (Great Man); DK (Dravidar Kazhagam) party; strong influence on Tamil politics; opposed Hindi imposition
SNDP Yogam1903Sri Narayana GuruKeralaEzhava community reform; ‘One Caste, One Religion, One God for Man’; temples open to all; education; opposed untouchabilitySri Narayana Guru’s famous quote = one of SSC’s most asked; built temples accessible to all castes; Kerala’s greatest social reformer
Veerasalingam Movement1878Kandukuri Veerasalingam PantuluAndhra Pradesh (Rajahmundry)Widow remarriage; women’s education; opposed child marriage; first widow remarriage in Andhra (1881)‘Father of Telugu Renaissance’; Andhra’s social reform equivalent of Roy; organized first widow remarriage in Andhra

Section 5: Muslim Reform Movements – Complete Table

All major Islamic reform movements in India – from Wahabi to Aligarh to Deoband – with key distinctions for SSC.

MovementYearFounderBaseKey PrinciplesSSC Key Facts
Wahabi Movement1820sSyed Ahmad Barelvi (Rai Bareilly)Rae Bareli, UP → northwest IndiaReturn to pure Islam (as in Prophet’s time); opposed un-Islamic practices (saint worship, shrines); Pan-Islamic; anti-British; jihad against Sikh rule in Punjab + later BritishSyed Ahmad Barelvi killed in Battle of Balakot (1831) fighting Sikhs; Wahabi = ‘puritan’ Islam; strongly anti-British – contrasts with Aligarh movement
Faraizi Movement1838Haji ShariatullahBengal (East Bengal / Bangladesh)‘Faraiz’ = obligatory Islamic duties; opposed Hindu landlords (zamindars) and British; no Friday prayers (as Bengal under non-Muslim rule); agrarian reform for Muslim peasantsStrongly anti-British; supported by Muslim peasantry of Bengal; his son Dudu Mian continued movement; distinct from Wahabi but similar in Islamic purification goal
Aligarh Movement1875Sir Syed Ahmad KhanAligarh, UPEnglish + modern education for Muslims; cooperation with British; MAO College 1875 → AMU 1920; ‘Two-Nation Theory’ seeds; opposed INCPro-British; believed Muslims must get English education to compete in new India; Scientific Society (1863) translated Western works; most influential Muslim reform for SSC
Deoband Movement1867Mohammad Qasim Nanautavi + Rashid Ahmad GangohiDarul Uloom Deoband, SaharanpurTraditional Islamic education (Arabic, Hadith, Fiqh); anti-British in culture (no English); opposed Western influence; later produced ulema divided on independenceMost important Islamic seminary in South Asia; still active; graduates called ‘Deobandis’; some ulema later supported Indian nationalism (Maulana Hussain Ahmad Madani, Maulana Azad)
Ahmadiyya Movement1889Mirza Ghulam AhmadQadian, PunjabClaimed to be promised Messiah and prophet; British-friendly; opposed jihad against British; emphasized peaceControversial – mainstream Islam rejects his claim of prophethood; declared non-Muslim in Pakistan (1974); legally persecuted in Pakistan today; SSC asks about founder + location
Anjuman-i-Islam1876Badruddin Tyabji + othersBombayModerate Islamic modernism; English education + Islamic values; supported INC (unlike Aligarh)Badruddin Tyabji = first Muslim President of INC (1887); represents the Congress-Muslim cooperation strand
Mohammedan Literary Society1863Nawab Abdul LatifCalcuttaEnglish education for Bengali Muslims; moderate modernism; precursor to later Muslim intellectual movementsEarlier than Aligarh; focused on Bengali Muslims; Nawab Abdul Latif = pioneer of Muslim modernism in Bengal

Section 6: Key Reformers – Complete Quick Reference

Every major reformer with their titles, works, and the SSC-critical facts linked to their name.

ReformerLivedRegionAssociated WithKey Contribution & SSC Titles/Facts
Raja Ram Mohan Roy1772–1833BengalBrahmo Samaj (1828)‘Father of Modern India’ + ‘Father of Indian Renaissance’ + ‘Father of Indian Nationalism (sometimes)’; campaigned against Sati (abolished 1829); Sambad Kaumudi + Mirat-ul-Akhbar; first Indian to visit England
Ishwar Chandra Vidyasagar1820–1891Bengal‘Father of Bengali Prose’; Widow Remarriage Act 1856; campaigned against child marriage; simplified Bengali script; organized first widow remarriage in Bengal
Swami Dayananda Saraswati1824–1883Gujarat → all-IndiaArya Samaj (1875)Real name Mool Shankar; ‘Back to the Vedas’; Satyarth Prakash (his book); Shuddhi movement; opposed idol worship, caste by birth, child marriage
Swami Vivekananda1863–1902BengalRamakrishna Mission (1897)Real name Narendranath Datta; Chicago Parliament 1893; Belur Math; blended Vedanta + social service; ‘Arise, awake’ quote; disciple of Ramakrishna
Ramakrishna Paramahamsa1836–1886BengalMystic of Dakshineswar; Kali devotee; ‘All paths lead to God’ philosophy; Vivekananda’s guru; his followers founded the Mission
Jyotirao (Mahatma) Phule1827–1890MaharashtraSatyashodhak Samaj (1873)First girls’ school in Pune (with wife Savitribai); opposed Brahmin dominance; title ‘Mahatma’ given by his followers; Gulamgiri (book)
Savitribai Phule1831–1897MaharashtraFirst female teacher in modern India; wife of Jyotirao Phule; ran schools for girls and Dalits; pelted with stones for going to school; poet
Sir Syed Ahmad Khan1817–1898UPAligarh Movement; MAO College (1875)‘Father of Muslim Modernism’; Scientific Society 1863; believed Muslims must cooperate with British; warned against INC; seeds of Two-Nation Theory
Keshab Chandra Sen1838–1884BengalBrahmo Samaj of India (1866)Split Brahmo Samaj from Debendranath; radical social reforms; New Dispensation (1880) – blended Hindu, Christian, Islamic ideas; advocated inter-caste marriage
M.G. Ranade1842–1901MaharashtraPrarthana Samaj (1867)‘Mahadev Govind Ranade’; judge + reformer; widow remarriage advocate; economic nationalist (criticized Drain of Wealth); mentor of Gokhale
E.V. Ramasamy Periyar1879–1973Tamil NaduSelf-Respect Movement (1925)‘Periyar’ (Great Man); DK party; opposed Hindu caste texts; rationalist; anti-Brahmin; self-respect marriages; opposed Hindi imposition; lived to 94
Sri Narayana Guru1856–1928KeralaSNDP YogamFamous quote: ‘One Caste, One Religion, One God for Man’; built temples open to all castes; Ezhava community uplift; opposed untouchability; met Vivekananda
Annie Besant1847–1933Ireland/UK → IndiaTheosophical Society; INCIrish; came to India 1893; Theosophical Society president 1907; New India newspaper; Home Rule League 1916; first woman INC President 1917; arrested briefly
Henry Derozio1809–1831CalcuttaYoung Bengal MovementEurasian teacher at Hindu College; rationalist; anti-tradition; died at 22; his students (Derozians) carried on; radical free thinkers of Bengal
Debendranath Tagore1817–1905BengalAdi Brahmo SamajRabindranath’s father; spiritual reformer; Tattvabodhini Sabha (1839); gave Brahmo Samaj strong philosophical foundation; called ‘Maharshi’
Kandukuri Veerasalingam1848–1919Andhra‘Father of Telugu Renaissance’; widow remarriage; first widow remarriage in Andhra (1881); women’s education; Rajamahendravaram (Rajahmundry) base

Section 7: Special Topics – Highest-Frequency SSC Areas

Brahmo Samaj – Three Splits (Important for SSC)

  • Original Brahmo Samaj (1828): Raja Ram Mohan Roy – monotheistic reform; Sati campaign
  • Adi Brahmo Samaj (1865): Debendranath Tagore – spiritual direction; Upanishads; separated from Keshab
  • Brahmo Samaj of India (1866): Keshab Chandra Sen – radical social reform; inter-caste marriage; later ‘New Dispensation’ (1880)
  • SSC asks: ‘Who split Brahmo Samaj?’ → Keshab Chandra Sen (1866)

Ramakrishna–Vivekananda Connection

  • Ramakrishna Paramahamsa: Mystic saint, Dakshineswar (Calcutta); Kali devotee; taught all religions lead to same God; barely literate but supremely wise
  • Vivekananda: His brightest disciple; took Ramakrishna’s spiritual message to the world; founded Ramakrishna Mission (1897) to combine spirituality with social service
  • Chicago Speech (Sept 11, 1893): ‘Sisters and Brothers of America’ – audience of 7,000 gave a standing ovation; introduced Vedanta philosophy globally
  • Famous Vivekananda quotes asked in SSC: ‘Arise, awake, stop not till the goal is reached’ and ‘Each soul is potentially divine’

Social Reforms for Women – Legislative Milestones

  • 1829: Sati abolished – Bengal (Roy’s campaign + Lord Bentinck)
  • 1856: Widow Remarriage Act – Vidyasagar’s campaign; Lord Dalhousie signs
  • 1861: Female Infanticide Prevention Act
  • 1872: Brahmo Marriage Act (Keshab Chandra Sen) – inter-caste marriage legalized
  • 1891: Age of Consent Act – minimum age of consent for girls raised to 12 (was 10)
  • 1929: Child Marriage Restraint Act (Sarda Act) – minimum age: girls 14, boys 18
SSC Modern History Socio Religious Reform PPT (LEC #26)
SSC Modern History Socio Religious Reform PPT (LEC #26)

Section 8: Podcast Q&A – Most Frequently Confused Topics

#QuestionExpert Answer – Exam-Focused
Q1What are the key differences between Arya Samaj and Brahmo Samaj? SSC often asks to distinguish them.Both opposed idol worship and caste but had fundamental differences: Brahmo Samaj (Roy, 1828): monotheistic but not specifically Vedic; Roy accepted value in all religions including Christianity; moderate tone; based in Bengal; English education strongly supported; did not advocate reconversion. Arya Samaj (Dayananda, 1875): strictly Vedic – ‘Back to the Vedas’; rejected all religious texts except the Vedas (including Puranas, which Roy respected); advocated Shuddhi (reconversion of Muslims and Christians back to Hinduism); strongly pro-Hindi; more militant in opposing caste and idol worship; spread mainly in Punjab and UP; founded DAV schools. SSC tip: Roy = gentle reformer, accepts multiple traditions. Dayananda = radical, only Vedas are valid, Shuddhi reconversion.
Q2Who were the founders of the Theosophical Society and what was their connection to India?The Theosophical Society was founded in New York, USA in 1875 by Madame Helena Petrovna Blavatsky (Russian-American) and Colonel Henry Steel Olcott (American). Its India HQ was established at Adyar, Madras (Chennai) in 1882. The Society promoted Hindu and Buddhist philosophy to Western audiences and respected Indian spiritual traditions. Annie Besant (Irish) became its President in 1907 and made it a base for Indian nationalism – she founded the Home Rule League (1916) and became the first woman President of the Indian National Congress (1917). SSC MCQ patterns: ‘Theosophical Society founded by?’ → Blavatsky + Olcott. ‘India HQ?’ → Adyar, Madras. ‘First woman INC president?’ → Annie Besant.
Q3What was the Aligarh Movement and how is it different from the Deoband Movement?Aligarh Movement (Sir Syed Ahmad Khan, 1875): Pro-British; believed Muslims must get English + modern education to succeed in British India; founded MAO College at Aligarh (1875) which became AMU in 1920; warned Muslims against joining INC; emphasized Hindu-Muslim differences; laid seeds of Two-Nation Theory. Deoband Movement (1867): Anti-British culturally; traditional Islamic education in Arabic; Darul Uloom Deoband seminary at Saharanpur; no English; produced Islamic scholars (ulema); some Deobandi ulema later supported Indian nationalism (Maulana Hussain Ahmad Madani led Jamiat Ulema-i-Hind, which opposed partition). Key SSC distinction: Aligarh = English + cooperate with British. Deoband = Arabic traditional + anti-Western culture.
Q4What made Raja Ram Mohan Roy the ‘Father of Modern India’? What were his actual achievements?Raja Ram Mohan Roy earned this title through concrete actions, not just ideas: (1) Sati campaign: Used his newspapers (Sambad Kaumudi in Bengali, Mirat-ul-Akhbar in Persian) to write against Sati; submitted petitions to the Governor-General; result: Sati abolished by Lord Bentinck in 1829; (2) English education: Supported English education as a path to modernity; co-founded Hindu College (1817); opposed the Orientalists in the 1823 controversy; (3) Press freedom: Founded Indian-owned newspapers; protested the 1823 Licensing Act by shutting his own paper; (4) Religious reform: Founded Brahmo Samaj (1828) – monotheistic, rational; opposed idol worship; (5) Social reform: Opposed child marriage, caste discrimination, purdah; (6) International exposure: Visited England in 1830 – first major Indian intellectual to do so. Roy demonstrated that tradition could be challenged through rational argument, not violent revolution.
Q5What is the Shuddhi movement of Arya Samaj and why was it controversial?Shuddhi (purification) was a program initiated by Arya Samaj under Swami Dayananda Saraswati to reconvert Muslims and Christians (who were originally Hindus or whose ancestors were converted) back to Hinduism through a purification ceremony. Why controversial: (1) Traditional Hindu orthodoxy did not accept reconversion – once a person left Hinduism, they could not re-enter; Arya Samaj rejected this exclusivity; (2) Muslim community was deeply offended; Hindu-Muslim tensions increased; (3) Critics said it was communally provocative; (4) However, Arya Samaj defended it as restoring social equality – those converted by force or coercion deserved a path back. The Shuddhi movement peaked in the 1920s under Swami Shraddhanand and was linked to growing communal tensions of that era.
Q6How did the Socio-Religious Reform movements contribute to Indian nationalism?The reform movements were the intellectual and organizational nursery of Indian nationalism in four ways: (1) Rationalism: Movements like Young Bengal and Brahmo Samaj taught Indians to question authority – the same questioning that was later applied to British rule; (2) Pride in Indian civilization: Arya Samaj, Ramakrishna Mission, and Theosophical Society (paradoxically, a Western organization) revived pride in Indian philosophy and culture – essential for anti-colonial nationalism; (3) Social solidarity: By fighting caste, untouchability, and gender discrimination, reformers tried to create a unified Indian society capable of collective political action; (4) Organizational skills: Societies like Brahmo Samaj, Arya Samaj, and Satyashodhak Samaj taught Indians how to organize meetings, publish newspapers, petition governments, and build national networks – the same skills used by INC from 1885 onwards. Swami Vivekananda’s nationalism was explicitly spiritual: ‘Serve man as God’ became ‘Serve India as Mother.’

Section 9: 30 High-Frequency MCQs with Answers

Based on previous SSC CGL, CHSL, MTS, and GD Constable papers. Target: 27+ correct.

#QuestionAnswer
01Who founded the Brahmo Samaj and in which year?Raja Ram Mohan Roy (1828, Calcutta)
02What titles is Raja Ram Mohan Roy known by?Father of Modern India, Father of Indian Renaissance, Father of Bengal Renaissance
03Sati was abolished in 1829 due to whose campaign?Raja Ram Mohan Roy – Lord Bentinck signed the act
04Who founded Arya Samaj and in which year?Swami Dayananda Saraswati (1875, Bombay)
05What is the slogan of Arya Samaj?‘Back to the Vedas’ (Vedas are the only authority)
06What is Shuddhi movement?Reconversion of Muslims/Christians back to Hinduism – Arya Samaj initiative
07Who founded the Ramakrishna Mission?Swami Vivekananda (1897, Belur Math, Howrah)
08Swami Vivekananda’s famous speech was at?Parliament of World Religions, Chicago – September 11, 1893
09Real name of Swami Vivekananda?Narendranath Datta
10Who was Vivekananda’s spiritual guru?Ramakrishna Paramahamsa (Dakshineswar, Calcutta)
11Theosophical Society was founded by?Madame H.P. Blavatsky and Colonel H.S. Olcott (1875, New York)
12India HQ of Theosophical Society is at?Adyar, Madras (Chennai) – established 1882
13First woman President of Indian National Congress?Annie Besant (1917) – also head of Theosophical Society
14Prarthana Samaj was founded by?M.G. Ranade and R.G. Bhandarkar (1867, Bombay)
15Young Bengal Movement was associated with?Henry Louis Vivian Derozio – Hindu College, Calcutta
16Widow Remarriage Act (1856) was campaigned for by?Ishwar Chandra Vidyasagar
17‘Father of Bengali Prose’ is?Ishwar Chandra Vidyasagar
18Satyashodhak Samaj was founded by?Jyotirao (Mahatma) Phule (1873, Pune)
19First girls’ school in Pune was started by?Jyotirao Phule and Savitribai Phule
20Self-Respect Movement was started by?E.V. Ramasamy Periyar (1925, Tamil Nadu)
21Famous quote of Sri Narayana Guru?‘One Caste, One Religion, One God for Man’
22SNDP Yogam is associated with which community and reformer?Ezhava community, Kerala – Sri Narayana Guru
23Aligarh Movement was started by?Sir Syed Ahmad Khan – MAO College 1875 → AMU 1920
24Deoband Movement / Darul Uloom Deoband was founded in which year?1867 – Mohammad Qasim Nanautavi + Rashid Ahmad Gangohi, Saharanpur
25Wahabi Movement in India was led by?Syed Ahmad Barelvi – killed at Battle of Balakot (1831)
26Faraizi Movement was founded by?Haji Shariatullah (Bengal) – agrarian + Islamic reform
27Ahmadiyya Movement was founded by?Mirza Ghulam Ahmad (1889, Qadian, Punjab)
28First Muslim President of INC (1887)?Badruddin Tyabji – associated with Anjuman-i-Islam, Bombay
29‘Father of Telugu Renaissance’?Kandukuri Veerasalingam Pantulu – first widow remarriage in Andhra (1881)
30Savitribai Phule’s significance?First female teacher in modern India; wife of Jyotirao Phule; ran schools for girls and Dalits

also read: SSC Modern History Gov GG and Viceroy PPT Slides (LEC #25)

Section 10: Rapid Revision – Last-Day Cheat Sheet

Movement → Founder → Year → Base

  • Brahmo Samaj → Raja Ram Mohan Roy → 1828 → Calcutta
  • Arya Samaj → Swami Dayananda Saraswati → 1875 → Bombay (Punjab stronghold)
  • Ramakrishna Mission → Swami Vivekananda → 1897 → Belur Math, Howrah
  • Theosophical Society → Blavatsky + Olcott → 1875 USA; Adyar HQ 1882
  • Prarthana Samaj → M.G. Ranade → 1867 → Bombay
  • Young Bengal → Henry Derozio → 1820s → Calcutta (Hindu College)
  • Satyashodhak Samaj → Jyotirao Phule → 1873 → Pune
  • Self-Respect Movement → E.V. Ramasamy Periyar → 1925 → Tamil Nadu
  • SNDP Yogam → Sri Narayana Guru → 1903 → Kerala
  • Aligarh Movement → Sir Syed Ahmad Khan → 1875 → Aligarh
  • Deoband → Nanautavi + Gangohi → 1867 → Saharanpur
  • Wahabi Movement → Syed Ahmad Barelvi → 1820s → Rae Bareli
  • Faraizi Movement → Haji Shariatullah → 1838 → Bengal
  • Ahmadiyya → Mirza Ghulam Ahmad → 1889 → Qadian, Punjab

Famous Titles – SSC Direct Questions

  • Father of Modern India = Raja Ram Mohan Roy
  • Father of Bengali Prose = Ishwar Chandra Vidyasagar
  • Father of Muslim Modernism = Sir Syed Ahmad Khan
  • Father of Telugu Renaissance = Kandukuri Veerasalingam
  • Periyar (Great Man) = E.V. Ramasamy (Tamil Nadu)
  • Maharshi = Debendranath Tagore
  • First female teacher in modern India = Savitribai Phule
  • First woman INC President = Annie Besant (1917)
  • First Muslim INC President = Badruddin Tyabji (1887)

Conclusion

Socio-Religious Reform Movements (LEC #26) is one of the richest and most rewarding chapters in SSC Modern Indian History. The 124-slide PPT gives a comprehensive visual foundation; this guide organizes all movements into clear, exam-ready tables. Master the Hindu reforms table, Muslim reforms table, reformers reference, and the 30 MCQs – and this chapter will consistently deliver marks in every SSC exam.

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