The
Bharat Scouts and Guides
The Bharat Scouts and Guides
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भारत स्काउट्स एवं गाइड्स |
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Headquarters
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New Delhi
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Country
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India
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Founded
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1950
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Membership
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4,150,000
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National Commissioner
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Lalit Mohan Jain
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Affiliation
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The Bharat
Scouts and Guides (BSG;
Hindi: भारत स्काउट्स एवं गाइड्स) is the national Scouting and Guiding association
of India.
Scouting was
founded in India in 1909 as an overseas branch of the Scout Association and became a
member of the World Organization of theScout Movement in 1938. Guiding in India started in 1911 and was
amongst the founder members of the World Association ofGirl Guides and Girl Scouts in 1928, also covering present-day Bangladesh and Pakistan at
that time. The BSG serves 2,886,460 Scouts (as of 2011) and
1,286,161 Guides (as of 2005).
History
Boy Scouts
Scouting was
officially founded in British India in 1909, first starting at the Bishop Cotton Boys' School in Bangalore.
Scouting for native Indians was started by Justice Vivian Bose, Pandit Madan Mohan Malaviya, Pandit Hridayanath Kunzru, Girija Shankar Bajpai, Annie
Besant and George Arundale, in 1913. Prior to this date,
Scouting was open only for British and foreign Scouts. In 1916, a Cub section
was started, followed by the Rover section
in 1918.
In 1916, Calcutta's Senior
Deputy Commissioner of Police J. S.
Wilson introduced Scouting for Boys as a textbook in
the Calcutta Police Training School. Colonel Wilson volunteered his services to
the District Scout Commissioner, Alfred
Pickford, and in 1917 became Assistant Scoutmaster of the Old Mission
Church Troop. Together the two struggled for the admission of Indian boys into
the Boy Scouts Association, which had not been
admitted due to a Government of India order against it because
"Scouting might train them to become revolutionaries". Shortly Wilson
was acting as Cubmaster and Scoutmaster, and succeeded Pickford as District
Commissioner in May 1919 when Pickford was promoted to Chief Scout Commissioner
for India.
As a way of
getting around the Government Order, the Boy Scouts of Bengal was
founded, with identical aims and methods. Many separate Scout organizations
began to spring up, the Indian Boy Scouts Association, founded in
1916, based in Madras and headed by Annie Besant and George
Arundale; Boy Scouts of Mysore; Boy
Scouts of Baroda; Nizam's Scouts in Hyderabad; Seva Samiti Scout
Association (Humanity Uplift Service Society), founded in 1917 by
Madan Mohan Malaviya and Hridayanath Kunzru and based in Allahabad;
the aforementioned Boy Scouts ofBengal and
likely others. A conference was held in Calcutta in August 1920 in which Wilson
staged a Scout Rally, and as a result the Viceroy of India sent an invitation
to Lord Baden-Powell, by then Chief Scout of the
World, to visit India. Lord and Lady Baden-Powell arrived in Bombay in late
January 1921 for a short tour of the subcontinent before leaving Calcutta
for Rangoon.
Alfred Pickford accompanied them and became one of their closest friends.
The emblem of the Boy
Scouts Association in India–note modern Burma, Pakistan and Bangladesh are
included in the map
The result of
this visit was a union of all of the Scout organizations except the Seva Samiti
Scout Association into The Boy Scouts Association in India. In 1922
Pickford returned to England and was appointed Overseas Commissioner of The Boy
Scouts Association at their headquarters in London, but his dream of allowance
of local boys into the program had been fulfilled.
In 1938, a number
of members left the Boy Scouts Association in India after a wave of
nationalism. They formed – together with the Seva Samiti Scout Association and
the newly founded India National Scout Association – the Hindustan
Scout Association, the first coeducational Scouting and Guiding
organisation in India. In the same year, the Boy Scouts Association in
India became a member of the World Organization of the Scout Movement.
Girl Guides
The first Girl
Guides company was founded in Jabalpur in
1911. The movement immediately grew: In 1915, more than fifty companies existed
with a membership of over 1,200, all of them directly registered with the Girl
Guide Association and all restricted to girls of European descent.
These companies formed the All India Girl Guides Association in
1916. In the same year the organisation opened for Indian girls.
J. S.
Wilson provided transportation for Girl Guide rallies.
“
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The girls themselves were never quite sure whether they
preferred to ride in police vans or in the riot truck. The former concealed
them from public view, but were very hot; the latter, being cages of expanded
metal, were cooler, but reminiscent of the Calcutta
Zoo!
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”
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In 1928,
the All India Girl Guides Association joined the World
Association of Girl Guides and Girl Scouts as one of its founder members. This
membership was renewed in 1948 after the independence of India and its partition.
Bharat Scouts and Guides
In the first
years after India's independence leading politicians, including Jawaharlal
Nehru, Maulana Abul Kalam Azad and Mangal Das Pakvasa, as well as Scout leaders
tried to unify India's Scouts and Guides. A first success was the merger of
the The Boy Scouts Association in India and the Hindustan
Scout Association forming the Bharat Scouts and Guides on November 7,
1950. About a year later, on August 15, 1951, the All India Girl Guides
Association joined this new organisation.
In 1959,
the 17th World Scout Conference in New
Delhi was hosted by the BSG. The Sangam World Girl Guide/Girl
Scout Center in Pune, Maharashtra, India, opened in 1966. The idea for this
fourth world centre dates back to 1956 when it was developed during a WAGGGS
International commissioners' meeting in New Delhi.
The United
Nations selected the Bharat Scouts and Guides as honorary "Peace
Messengers" for their significant and concrete contributions to the International Year of Peace in
1986.
Sethna's
18th West Bombay Scout Group
Sethna's 18th
West Bombay Scout Group is
the oldest continuously running Scout Group in
India . It was established in 1914, when Rustomji Edulji Sethna
(1898–1954) came across the book Scouting
for Boys, written by Robert Baden-Powell, the founder of the Scout
movement. He was enamoured by the book and formed one of India's first Scout
groups for native boys. Prior to that, there existed some Scout groups, but
they were primarily for the British expatriates in India then.
Sethna resisted
joining one of the competing Scout associations and registering his troop until
Scouting became open for all irrespective of color, caste, or creed. He wrote
to Baden-Powell about this discrepancy. In 1921 the regulations were changed
and all were allowed to become part of the Scout movement in India. The 18th
West has been continuously running since the day it started. None of the World
Wars or the Partition of India stopped the group from
functioning.
Notable members
Vivian Bose was a
member of the World Scout Committee of the World
Organization of the Scout Movement from 1947 until 1949.
In 1969,
Mrs. Lakhshmi Mazumdar was awarded the Bronze Wolf,
the only distinction of the World Organization of the
Scout Movement, awarded by the World Scout Committee for exceptional
services to world Scouting.
Program
The association
describes its aims in its mission:
The mission of
Scouting is to contribute to the education of young people, through a value
system based on the Scout Promise and Law to help build a better world where
people are self-fulfilled as individuals and play a constructive role in
society.
Scout and Guide units
are separate although they have some coeducational activities such as
Jamborees, rallies, and conferences. Handicapped boys and girls also
participate in the Scouting program.
The Scout emblem
incorporates a wheel with twenty-four spokes, known as the Ashoka
Chakra, taken from the Ashoka
pillar at Sarnath, in the green-and-saffron colors
of the flag of India.
Sections and branches
Membership badge–Trithiya
Sopan Scout/Guide rank
The association
is divided in four (respective three) sections according to age:
Bharat Scouts
- Bunnies - ages 3 to 6
- Cubs -
boys, ages 5 to 10
- Scouts -
boys, ages 10 to 17
- Rovers -
boys, ages 16 to 25
Bharat Guides
Additionally,
there are four special branches:
Awards
Rashtrapati Scout/Guide Award (older version)
The highest
awards are
- for the Cubs/Bulbuls section the
"Chaturth Charan/Heerak Pankh"
- for the Scout/Guide section the Rashtrapati
Scout/Guide Award
- for the Rover/Ranger section
the Rashtrapati
Rover/Ranger Award
Scout Motto
- Cubs/Bulbuls - Koshish Karo (Do your
best)
- Scouts/Guides - Taiyar (Be Prepared)
- Rovers/Rangers - Seva (Service)
Scout Oath
On my honour, I
promise that I will do my best
To do my duty to God and my country,
To help other people at all times,
And to obey the Scout/Guide Law.
[1] - The word
"Dharma" may be substituted for the word "God" if so
desired.
Scout and Guide Law
- A Scout/Guide is trustworthy
- A Scout/Guide is loyal
- A Scout/Guide is a friend to all and
a brother/sister to every other Scout/Guide.
- A Scout/Guide is courteous
- A Scout/Guide is a friend to animals
and loves nature.
- A Scout/Guide is disciplined and
helps protect public property.
- A Scout/Guide is courageous.
- A Scout/Guide is thrifty.
- A Scout/Guide is pure in thought,
word and deed.
Membership
State or division
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2004 membership
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4,877
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46,602
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11,789
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16,878
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41,586
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10,544
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968
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7,243
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87,014
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100
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23,913
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15,777
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20,741
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58,202
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432,139
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37,180
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12,408
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9,825
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218,178
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Kendriya Vidyalaya Sangathan
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114,446
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68,890
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no Scouts
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350,751
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1,113,124
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1,146
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8,342
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3,059
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2,117
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Navodaya Vidyalaya Samiti
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25,779
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15,808
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6,699
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24,709
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31,015
|
|
2,450
|
|
91,260
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|
436,208
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|
1,473
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|
14,281
|
|
6,205
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|
9,472
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|
222
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|
5,414
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|
184,789
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2,030
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84,217
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33,542
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12,783
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14,415
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Leadership
National Commissioners
- Dr. Hridya Nath Kunzru 1952 to November
1957
- Justice Vivian
Bose November 1957 to November 1959
- Professor Madan Mohan November 1959 to
November 1960
- Dr. Hridya Nath Kunzru November 1960
to November 1964
- Mrs. Lakhshmi Mazumdar November 1964 to
April 1983
- Lakshman
Singh April 1983 to November 1992
- V.P. Deenadayalu Naidu November
1992 to November 1995
- Lalit Mohan Jain November 1995 -
Presidents
- Mangal Das Pakvasa 1953 to November
1960
- Ammu Swaminathan November 1960 to March
1965
- Justice Bhuvaneshwar Prasad Sinha April
1965 to February 1967
- Sir Chandulal M. Trivedi February 1967
to October 1973
- Dharma
Vira November 1973 to September 1976
- Jagjivan
Ram September 1976 to April 1983
- Shankarrao Chavan April 1983 to
November 1998
- Rameshwar Thakur November 1998 to
November 2001
- Sharad
Pawar November 2001 to November 2004
- Rameshwar Thakur November 2004 -
Bharat Scouts and Guides abroad
The BSG maintains
units for Indian citizens in Saudi
Arabia, Qatar,
the United Arab Emirates and Oman. The Saudi Arabia
branch serves 222 members, and the Oman branch 5,414 members.
References
- ^ "Triennal review: Census as at 1 December 2010". World Organization of the Scout Movement. Retrieved 2011-01-13.
- ^ a b "Membership". The Bharat Scouts and Guides. Retrieved 2007-01-13.
- ^ "Honouring the oath: The beginning". The Hindu. Aug 17, 2007.
- ^ "The Bharat Scouts and Guides". scoutsnguides.com. Archived from the original on 2007-01-10. Retrieved 2007-01-13.
- ^ a b "About us". The Bharat Scouts and Guides. Retrieved 2007-01-13.
- ^ a b World Association of Girl Guides and Girl Scouts (1997). Trefoil round the World. London: World Association of Girl Guides and Girl Scouts. ISBN 0-900827-75-0.
- ^ "The Group". Sethna's 18th West Bombay Scouts. Retrieved 4 May 2012.
- ^ "Mission statement". The Bharat Scouts and Guides. Retrieved 2007-01-13.
- ^ a b c "Youth training". The Bharat Scouts and Guides. Retrieved 2007-01-13.
- wikipedia.org( wikipedia link)
For more details click here.
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