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Annie Besant was born of Irish parents in the city of London, in the year 1847.

At the very early age


of sixteen, she had a keen desire to wage war against sin and misery. By the time she was of the age of
eighteen she became a well known leader of militant atheism.

In the year 1855 she left home to be educated at the feet of Ellen Marryat and after her education she
returned home after a long spell of eight years. In 1867, she married a clergyman of the name of
Frank Besant.

She also joined the Theosophical Society and became its leader for Europe and India, in 1891. In the
year 1893, Annie Besant came on a visit to India and she never looked back. India became her home,
as; she loved the country of India and its inhabitants, the Indians.

As the President of the Theosophical Society Annie Besant founded several schools in India it was
she who started the Central Hindu College. This same college, in later years became the very well
known Hindu University of Banares. Education was not the only interest of Annie Besant.

She also had a keen interest in politics of the times, and she joined the National Movement of
Indian., against the British regime in India, by joining the erstwhile party, the Indian National
Congress.

As a member of the Commonwealth, she demanded full and complete freedom for India, from the
bondage of the British. In the year 1917, she became the President of the Indian National Congress
but, later on she had to resign from the Congress due to her differences with Mahatma Gandhi.

Inspite of being an Irish by birth, Annie Besant loved India so much that, once she came here she
never looked back to her country. It is not only that she married an Indian to show her love for the
country and its people; she also actively participated in activities of the countrymen.

She adopted India as her motherland and worked with devotion for the country, in all important
spheres of its existence. She worked for education, for society, and for politics.

Thus it may be said that, though Annie Besant was a foreigner, she did a lot of work for the Indians
she loved, and so earned a name for herself in this country, by sheer hard work and complete
participation in the local affairs of the country. She lived in India, worked for Indians, and died here
in the year 1933.

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