http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/city/goa/End-of-a-spectacular-intellectual-dynasty/articleshow/46388751.cms

Sad news of the death of prominent sociologist, writer, and translator
Meera Kosambi, in Pune on February 26, was received as
a double blow in her ancestral Goa. Many friends and admirers did not
know she was ailing. The news was a shock.

There was also immediate recognition that an era had
passed—76-year-old Meera Kosambi was the last living link to the
prodigious intellectual legacy of her father, D D Kosambi, and her
grandfather, Dharmanand Kosambi, who set out on foot from Sancoale in
Goa in 1899 to found one of the greatest intellectual dynasties of the
20th century.

Every Indian schoolchild learns about the Tagores, but very few are
taught about the Kosambis, despite three generations of truly
exceptional achievement backed by pioneering work in multiple fields
of research and scholarship. This 'recognition gap' can be attributed
to the fact that the Kosambis stood alone, usually far ahead of their
contemporaries.

Meera's description of her grandfather aptly summarizes the family
character: "solitary thinker(s)... refusal to court public adulation,
coupled with plain-speaking and unwillingness to compromise."

The combined story of the Kosambis is almost unbelievable.

Dharmanand's powerful thirst for knowledge—first, about Buddhism—led
him to leave his wife and infant daughter and walk out from Sancoale
across the border of Portuguese India to Pune, then Varanasi, where he
learned Sanskrit while subsisting like a mendicant.

He trudged to Nepal to study Pali, then to Sri Lanka where he was
ordained a Buddhist monk. By 1910, he was working at Harvard
University in the USA. After learning Russian, this intrepid Goan
scholar went on to teach at Leningrad University as well.

Dharmanand returned to India to participate in the freedom struggle
against the British. He was imprisoned for six years for his key role
in the salt satyagraha. But he continued to write and teach about
Buddhism—his influence led B R Ambedkar to convert.

When he sought to give up his life through voluntary fasting just
before independence, Mahatma Gandhi prevailed upon him to reconsider,
but Dharmanand was steadfast. He died at Sevagram in June 1947.

In the introduction to her masterly translations of 'the essential
writings' of Dharmanand, Meera acknowledged: "I did not
know my grandfather", but sought to "claim him as an intellectual ancestor".

She did meet him as a child, and her rigorous, sensitive approach to
translating his writings from Marathi —especially the spellbinding
autobiographical 'Nivedan' —more than demonstrates a powerful
connection.

Even stronger ties bound the adamantine scholar D D Kosambi to his
devoted daughter.

Her last book 'Unsettling the Past: Unknown Aspects and Scholarly
Assessments of D D Kosambi', was released at the Goa Arts and Literary
Festival (GALF) in December 2013.

Meera's father was a spectacular polymath with major contributions to
the study of ancient history, mathematics, Sanskrit literature,
numismatics, and energy policy.

He graduated Phi Beta Kappa from Harvard in 1929, before returning to
India and writing a long series of highly original papers—backed by
painstaking, innovative fieldwork—that define the meaning of
'Renaissance Man'.

Just as Meera's terrific translations of her grandfather's work have
proven integral to Dharmanand Kosambi's continuing relevance, her
collection of D D Kosambi's writings secured her father's place in
history.

The three essays she included on solar energy alone illustrate how far
ahead he was of his time. If India had heeded him instead of his
some-time nemesis Homi Bhabha, there is no doubt the country would be
far ahead today.

The youngest link in the Kosambi intellectual chain was much more than
merely the champion of her father and grandfather.

Meera was a strikingly distinctive feminist thinker and writer, as
well as one of the most meticulous scholars and translators
of her generation.

Her books on urbanization, on media analysis, on social history and
social ecology are formidable contributions, as are her books about
the intriguing transnational trail-blazer, Pandita Ramabai.

Meera loved Goa, and enjoyed her last visits - to deliver a Kosambi
Lecture when the series was inaugurated, and to GALF in 2012 and 2013
2 where she made many good friends. Like her amazing father and
grandfather, she was surprisingly shy and reticent at first meeting,
but then crackled with humour and phenomenal intelligence.

On her first day back in Goa in 2012, Meera startled a young Kashmiri
delegate to the Goa Arts + Literary Festival by fluently reading the
couplet from 'Faiz' that was written in Urdu on his T-shirt, and
quoting the rest of the verse from memory.

Then the septuagenarian insisted on accompanying the young Kashmiri to
see the ocean for the first time, walking the length of Miramar beach
with a happy smile on her face, lit up by the last rays of a glorious
sunset.

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