|
|
Alexander
Duff (1806-1878)
Scottish
missionary in India, was born on the 26th of April 1806, in
the parish of Moulin, Perthshire. At St Andrews University he
came under the influence of Dr Chalmers. He then accepted an
offer made by the foreign mission committee of the general assembly
to become their first missionary to India. He was ordained in
August 1829, and started at once for India, but was twice shipwrecked
before he reached Calcutta in May 1830, and lost all his books
and other property. Making Calcutta the base of his operations,
he at once identified himself with a policy which had far-reaching
results. Up to this time Protestant missions in India had been
successful only in reaching low-caste and outcaste peoples,
particularly in Tinevelly and south Travancore. The Hindu and
Mahommedan communities had been practically untouched. Duff
saw that, to reach these communities, educational must take
the place of evangelizing methods, and he devised the policy
of an educational mission.
The
success of his work had the effect of altering the policy of
the government of India in matters of education, of securing
the recognition of education as a missionary agency by Christian
churches at home, and of securing entrance for Christian ideas
into the minds of high-caste Hindus. He first opened an English
school in which the Bible was the centre of the school work,
and along with it all kinds of secular knowledge were taught
from the rudiments upwards to a university standard. The English
language was used on the ground that it was destined to be the
great instrument of higher education in India, and also as giving
the Hindu the key of Western knowledge.
The
school soon began to expand into a missionary college, and a
government minute was adopted on the 7th of March 1835, to the
effect that in higher education the object of the British government
should be the promotion of European science and literature among
the natives of India, and that all funds appropriated for purposes
of education would be best employed on English education alone.
Duff wrote a pamphlet on the question, entitled A New Era of
the English Language and Literature in India. He returned home
in 1834 broken in health, but succeeded in securing the approval
of his church for his educational plans, and also in arousing
much interest in the work of foreign missions.
In 1840 he returned to India. In the previous year the earl
of Auckland, governor-general, had yielded to the Orientalists
who opposed Duff, and adopted a policy which was a compromise
between the two. At the Disruption of 1843 Duff sided with the
Free Church, gave up the college buildings, with all their effects,
and with unabated courage set to work to provide a new institution.
He had the support of Sir James Outram and Sir Henry Lawrence,
and the encouragement of seeing a new band of converts, including
several young men of high caste. In 1844 Viscount Hardinge opened
government appointments to all who had studied in institutions
similar to Duffs foundation. In the same year Duff took part
in founding the Calcutta Review, of which from 1845 to 1849
he was editor. In 1849 he returned home. He was moderator of
the Free Church assembly in 1851. He gave evidence before various
Indian committees of parliament on matters of education. This
led to an important despatch by Viscount Halifax, president
of the board of control, to the marquess of Dalhousie, the governor-general,
authorizing an educational advance in primary and secondary
schools, the provision of technical and scientific teaching,
and the establishment, of schools for girls.
In
1854 Duff visited the United States, where what is now New York
University gave him the degree of LL.D.; he was already D.D.
of Aberdeen. In 1856 he returned to India, where the mutiny
soon broke out; his descriptive letters were collected in a
volume entitled The Indian Mutiny, its Causes and Results (1858).
Duff gave much thought and time to the university of Calcutta,
which owes its examination system and the prominence given to
physical sciences to his influence. In 1863 Sir Charles Trevelyan
offered him the post of vice-chancellor of the University, but
his health compelled him to leave India.
As
a memorial of his work the Duff Hall was erected in the centre
of the educational buildings of Calcutta; and a fund was raised
for his disposal, the capital of which: was afterwards to be
used for Invalided missionaries of his own. church. In 1864
Duff visited South Africa, and on his return became convener
of the foreign missions committee of the Free Church. He raised
funds to endow a missionary chair at New College, Edinburgh,
and himself became first professor. Among other missionary labors
of his later years, he helped the Free Church mission on Lake
Nyassa, travelled to Syria to inspect a mission at Lebanon,
and assisted Lady Aberdeen and Lord Polwarth to establish the
Gordon Memorial Mission in Natal. In 1873 the Free Church was
threatened with a schism owing to negotiations for union with
the United Presbyterian Church. Duff was called to the chair,
and guided the church happily through this crisis. He also took
part in forming the alliance, of Reformed Churches holding the
Presbyterian system. He died on the 12th of February I878.
Return
To Famous Folks From Perthshire
|
|