Alexander
Duff
1806-1878
Alexander
Duff was born in Moulin, Perthshire in Scotland. His father
was a crofter or small farmer and Alexanders early years
from 1806 were spent in the family home a small cottage on open
ground, flanked by mountain streams and with woodland of birch,
ash, larch and oak as background. It was attractive and impressive
countryside.
The visit of Charles Simeon of Cambridge to that area in 1796
had had a profound effect on many in the area. Duffs father
and the parish minister were amongst them and the religious
life of the district was strengthened. Alexander Duff was introduced
to the teachings of the Scriptures, to the life histories of
those who had suffered persecution and to the Gaelic poetry
of Dugald Buchanan, known as the John Bunyan of the Highlands.
Three
experiences influenced Duff deeply. The reading of one of Buchanans
poems, the Day of Judgement had a profound effect
on young Alexander Duff and from the impact of the experience
he came to assurance of peace with God through the death of
Christ.
Almost
drowned in a stream near his home, he shortly afterwards had
a vision that confirmed his understanding of special service
in which he would be engaged.
A
third experience illumined Gods loving, providential care
for him. As a boy of thirteen, he was returning from school
in Perth one winter weekend, accompanied by a school friend.
Darkness fell when they were some distance from home; snow was
falling and there was no sign of habitation. Exhausted, they
tried to remain awake and prayed for help. Suddenly in the darkness
they saw a light. Making their way towards where it had been,
they discovered a garden wall and soon found warmth and shelter
in a hospitable cottage.
In
1821 he went to St Andrews University, having been dux of Perth
Grammar School. He was energetic and enthusiastic. Research
carried out by Stuart Piggin and John Roxborogh for their book,
The St Andrews Seven shows that Duff was a most assiduous reader.
From the University Library during his years at university he
borrowed more books than any other student - 334 titles (413
volumes) quite apart from those he may have consulted in the
Library. He was an outstanding student, one of those who were
enthused by Thomas Chalmers when he took up the position of
Professor of Moral Philosophy there in 1823. He and other students
of that time were to have great influence in Scotland, but extraordinary
impact in India.
In
1843, after years of difficult labour there was in Calcutta
an educational work and associated church development that was
a credit to the Church of Scotland. Far from the scene of activity
in Scotland and the commotion surrounding the Disruption, Alexander
Duff had established principles for working amongst the 130
million people of India and means that were effective in opening
Indian thought to an intelligent understanding of Christianity.
In August 1843, Duff and the four other missionaries with him
in Bengal indicated their adherence to the Free Protesting
Presbyterian Church of Scotland.
In
May 1829 Duff had been formally appointed as its first missionary
by the General Assembly of the Church of Scotland. In September
the missionary and his wife left Leith for London and sailed
from Portsmouth on the East India Companys ship Lady
Holland a month later. In February of the following year,
the 22 passengers and the crew were shipwrecked on Dassen Island
near Cape Town in South Africa. All survived the disaster, but
the cargo was lost. Duff had taken with him a library of 800
books, his journals, notes, memoranda and essays, of which 40
books were washed up in very poor state - only his Bible and
Psalter surviving in reasonable condition. The second part of
the voyage from South Africa to the Bay of Bengal ended in a
second shipwreck in the estuary of the Hooghly. A May cyclone
drove the ship aground and again the Duffs and other passengers
reached safety, sheltering in the village temple until they
were rescued. Help was sent from Calcutta and the passengers
were conveyed to the city. The ship was later refloated and
its cargo safely disembarked.
Duff
had been charged to set up an educational institution, but not
to do so in Calcutta. He resolved to ignore the advice in view
of the advantages that he saw in Calcutta as a centre in Bengal
from which to reach 500,000 people.
The
difficulties of missionary work were exemplified by the lack
of Christian converts after many years of labour. Those that
existed were often of the lower classes and did not form a lively
Christian witness. Duff chose to work amongst young people and
his aim had a future as well as present purpose.
While
you engage in directly separating as many precious atoms from
the mass as the stubborn resistance to ordinary appliances can
admit, we shall, with the blessing of God, devote our time and
strength to the preparing of a mine, and the setting of a train
which shall one day explode and tear up the whole from its lowest
depths.
Education,
saturated with the teaching of the Scriptures, was the means
to be used in bringing change. While religious instruction was
of special significance, he aimed to teach every branch of useful
knowledge - elementary forms at first, advancing to the highest
levels of study in history, literature, logic, mental and moral
philosophy, mathematics, biology, physics and other sciences.
These aims were very different from those of other Christian
educational institutions.
After
consulting with a wise Indian adviser, Duff resolved not to
teach in Bengali, Persian, Arabic or Sanskrit but to use English
as the medium of teaching. This meant that students using these
other languages were all learning English on an equal basis,
were taught the Scriptures in English, were introduced to English
literature - much of which was permeated with the spirit of
Christianity - and studied the sciences in English, freed from
the focus of the ideas that permeate Hindu thought.
Duff,
with the assistance of a young untrained Eurasian spent six
hours a day teaching 300 Bengali youths the English alphabet.
His evenings were spent preparing a series of graduated school-books
called Instructors. The first books dealt with interesting
everyday subjects, the second with Biblical themes, especially
those which were historical.
Word
study was a key to discussion of the properties and uses of
objects, drawing on information known to the boys and stimulating
their powers of observation. The boys were encouraged to think.
Their delight in gaining understanding was infectious and the
school acquired a very favourable reputation in the community.
His pedagogical style was in very marked contrast to the mechanical
and monotonous style of teaching prevalent in India.
Within
the first year the size of the school was expanded, as also
its scope, in that no student was allowed to begin to learn
English until he could read with ease in Bengali. These students
were enriched with vocabulary and spiritual ideas derived from
English literature. Alexander Duff was able to carry forward
his own studies in Bengali in friendly rivalry with his students.
Since
Duffs approach had been rejected out of hand by the European
community, he tested the results of his first years work
through a publicly-announced examination of his students in
the Freemasons Hall. He invited an Anglican Archdeacon to preside.
The boys responded with such effect that reports in the three
daily English newspapers of Calcutta were totally favourable
to the new venture.
In
the second year hundreds of students had to be turned away because
of lack of space. Saturdays were set aside for European visitors
to view the school since they came in such numbers during the
week as to interrupt classes. Visitors from all parts of India
came to review what was being accomplished and returned home
to establish educational centres on the same principles.
Duff
also concerned himself with the education of girls, supported
those who were involved in it and encouraged the younger generation
to consider the importance of the education of women and girls.
After
3 years of labour the work of the school was fully recognised.
In correspondence, Dr Duff wrote, The school continues
greatly to flourish. You may form some notion of what has been
done, when I state that the highest class read and understand
any English book with the greatest ease; write and speak English
with tolerable fluency; have finished a course of Geography
and Ancient History; have studied the greater part of the New
Testament and portions of the Old; have mastered the evidence
from prophecy and miracles; have, in addition, gone through
the common rules of Algebra, three books of Euclid, Plane Geometry
and logarithms. And I venture to say that, on all these subjects,
the youths that compose the first class would stand no unequal
comparison with youths of the same standing in any seminary
in Scotland.
Work
of a similar sort was set up in Bombay and Madras.
After
the Disruption, preliminary letters from Dr Brunton of the Church
of Scotland and Dr Charles Brown of the Free Church of Scotland
reached the missionaries in India declaring that each church
would continue Foreign and Jewish Missions. In contrast to the
East India Companys Presbyterian chaplains, all fourteen
missionaries to India gave their support to the Free Church
of Scotland. They well understood that they might forfeit the
College provided for them, with its library, its apparatus and
other furnishings. Morally and in equity these were the fruit
of personal legacies and gifts made to Dr Duff. The honourable
solution would have been to make these available for the missionaries
of the Free Church of Scotland to continue their work and allow
for the purchase of these buildings from the Established Church
in as far as that was deemed necessary.
The
committee of the Established Church rejected their approach.
The work, however, had to continue and search was made for new
premises in the vacation of 1843-1844. From all sides,
Hindus as well as Christian, Anglican and Congregationalist
as well as Presbyterian, in America no less than in Asia and
Europe, came expressions of indignant sympathy. By early
1844 £3,400 had been received as spontaneous gifts.
The
second College having been organised Dr Duff set about establishing
branch schools in Baranuggui, Bansberia, Chinsurah, and Mahanad.
Culna was retained. Some ten years later Dr Duff was invited
to answer a question posed by Lord Stanley of Alderley.
Will
you state what you would propose the Government should do towards
the further improvement and extension of education in India.
Duff responded by recommending:
1.
The gradual abolition of oriental colleges for the educational
training of natives, liberating funds for the purposes of sound
and healthful education.
2.
The relinquishing of pecuniary control over primary or elementary
education by the Government, thus achieving considerable saving.
3.
That lectureships on high professional subjects such as law
and civil engineering should be established on a free and unrestricted
basis allowing attendance of qualified students from all other
institutions and that, in Calcutta, a university might be established
on the general model of London University, with a sufficient
number of faculties in such a way as to stimulate and foster
studies in Government and non-Government institutions.
4.
The use of the Bible as a class-book in English classes in Government
institutions, under the express and positive proviso that attendance
on any class, at the hour when it was taught, should be left
entirely optional.
5.
The Government ought to extend its aid to all other institutions
where sound general education is communicated.
These
ideas formed the basis of the Educational Despatch of 9th July,
1854 signed by 10 directors of the East India Company and sent
out to the Marquis of Dalhousie.
The
College continued to grow. New buildings were provided and the
school roll reached about 1,200, the students receiving instruction
in literature, science and the Christian religion.
Duff
was nominated by the Governor General to be one of those who
drew up the constitution for Calcutta University. For the first
six years of its history, Dr Duff led the senate. Of his leadership
Dr Banerjea wrote, To his gigantic mind the successive
Vice-Chancellors paid due deference, and he was the virtual
governor of the University. The curriculum he promoted for the
university was broad in its extent. Against the trend of the
time, Dr Duff insisted on education in the physical sciences
and urged the establishment of a professorship of physical sciences
for the University.
Sir
Charles Trevelyan strongly recommended that Dr Duff be appointed
Vice-Chancellor of the University. In a letter to him he stated,
It is yours by right, because you have borne without rest
or refreshment the burden and heat of the long day, which I
hope is not yet near its close. However, at the age of
57, it became obvious that the ill- health that had limited
his activities from time to time required him to return to Britain.
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