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service in India. He entreated his superiors in
Belgium to send their most talented scholastics to engage in the deep study of Hindu texts. Pierre Johanns and Georges Dandoy were fruits of this vision of Wallace. These St Xavier's Jesuits âproduced a durable synthesis of Catholicism and Hinduism.... The âBengal School,â which these came to be clubbed under, was the lasting contribution to India of Father William Wallace.â The 'Bengal School' is also known as the '
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and
Animananda. With them he felt that Christianity had to be Indianized if it had to gain a successful hearing in Bengal. He had read Upadhyayâs articles in Sophia and had been impressed by his basic motivations. In his own writings, he reiterated Upadhyayâs approach regarding the suitability of
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Wallace's significance rests on the influence he exerted upon his contemporaries and on younger
Jesuits about the way mission was done in Bengal. He helped shift the mentality toward Indian spirituality among the Jesuits and influence the spiritual formation of the novices who were preparing for
141:, and also several works on Hindu philosophy and yoga. He wanted to make use of Indian philosophy to make an acceptable presentation of Christianity to the Hindus. With his health beginning to fail, he was transferred back to St Mary's, Kurseong, in 1921. He died on 14 November 1922.
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in 1882, received a degree in divinity, and sought ordination in the
Anglican tradition at the age of 24. He took up parish work in the Midlands in England, but, after an illness, returned to Ireland to recuperate. Two years later, he decided to become a missionary with the
87:. His life of simplicity and seeking endeared him to his Indian neighbours. His contact with Bengali Hindus led him to the opinion that Protestant spiritualty was inadequate to meet the needs of his deeply spiritual Vaisnava friends.
83:, in 1889. Disillusioned with the Christianity practiced by his fellow Anglicans, he left the Mission quarters and took up residence in a little hut in Krishnagar where he devoted himself to the study of Bengali and
228:
Francis X. Clooney, SJ, âAlienation, Xenophilia, And Coming Home: William
Wallace, SJâs From Evangelical to Catholic by Way of the East,â Common Knowledge 24.2 (2018), 280-290
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and spirituality, and became convinced that only
Catholicism could provide him with the means of dialoguing with his Hindu associates, and that only
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on the 15 February 1898. Upon finishing the two years spiritual training in
England, he arrived in Calcutta on 13 December 1901.
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as lecturer and parish priest among the Anglo-Indians. It was at this time that he composed his autobiography,
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The
Everlasting Religion of the Hindoo Sages in Relation to the Catholic Religion of the Christian Fathers
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After serving seven years in Bengal, he returned to
Ireland on home leave. There he made a study of
185:. Kurseong, 1920. Typescript, unpublished. MS at Goethals Library, St Xavierâs College, Calcutta.
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197:. Typescript, unpublished. Varia of Wallace, Goethals Library, St Xavierâs College, Calcutta.
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191:. 1923. Polycopied, unpublished. MS at Goethals Library, St Xavierâs College, Calcutta.
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179:. The Light of the East Series, no. 35. Calcutta: Catholic Orphan Press, 1923.
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Indian philosophy as a natural foundation for supernatural religion.
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was worth preaching to the
Bengalis. Having been rejected by the
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before being appointed as a lecturer in English literature at
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He engaged in further studies in philosophy and theology at
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Synthesizing the Veda: The Theology of Pierre Johanns, S.J.
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Synthesizing the Veda: The Theology of Pierre Johanns, S.J.
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Synthesizing the Veda: The Theology of Pierre Johanns, S.J.
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Hosten, Henry. âIn Memoriam: William Wallace, 1863-1922.â
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William Wallace was personally tutored by his father, an
261:(New Delhi: Viking/Penguin Books India, 1995) 116.
259:St Xavierâs: The Making of a Calcutta Institution
223:St Xavierâs: The Making of a Calcutta Institution
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177:From Evangelical to Catholic by Way of the East
139:From Evangelical to Catholic by Way of the East
320:Converts to Roman Catholicism from Anglicanism
225:. New Delhi: Viking/Penguin Books India, 1995.
16:For other people named William Wallace, see
189:A Bengali Commentary on the Yoga Philosophy
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244:For this whole section, see Sean Doyle,
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157:Wallace was inspired by the efforts of
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300:Christian clergy from Dublin (city)
183:Introduction to Hindoo Clairvoyance
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270:For this section, see Sean Doyle,
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274:(Bern: Peter Lang, 2006) 125-126.
248:(Bern: Peter Lang, 2006) 123-124.
325:Alumni of Trinity College Dublin
211:Bern: Peter Lang, 2006. 123-126.
102:, he requested admission to the
18:William Wallace (disambiguation)
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131:St Xavier's College, Calcutta
106:whose members were active in
26:(2 March 1863 in Battibrack,
216:The Catholic Herald of India
30:– 14 November 1922 in
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315:20th-century Indian Jesuits
218:5 (22 November 1922) 803â4.
152:Calcutta School of Indology
114:provincial and entered the
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310:20th-century Irish Jesuits
42:priest who later became a
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110:. He was accepted by the
73:Church Missionary Society
133:. He was later sent to
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202:Secondary bibliography
159:Brahmabandhab Upadhyay
68:Trinity College Dublin
66:minister. He attended
46:priest, member of the
96:Catholic spirituality
221:Namboodiry, Udayan.
171:Primary bibliography
257:Udayan Namboodiry,
127:St Mary's, Kurseong
85:Gaudiya Vaisnavism
100:Mill Hill Fathers
92:Catholic theology
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295:1922 deaths
290:1863 births
123:Shembaganur
81:West Bengal
64:Evangelical
36:West Bengal
284:Categories
233:References
135:Darjeeling
77:Krishnagar
52:Indologist
116:novitiate
38:) was an
40:Anglican
32:Kurseong
112:Belgian
108:Bengal
28:Dublin
125:and
58:Life
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