Police spokesman Manoj Pandita said all the injured were stable.
When Pandita was sixteen, her parents and sister died of starvation.
Pandita Ramabai(1858-1922)- social reformer a champion for the emancipation
of women in British India.
Pandita Ramabai was a social worker,
scholar and a champion of women's rights, freedom and education.
Pandita Ramabai(23 April 1858,
Maharashtra- 5 April 1922) was an eminent Marathi Christian social reformer and activist.
He has written five books, including the well received The Absent State(2010),
which he co-wrote with Rahul Pandita[11].
Pandita Ramabai participated in the freedom movement
and was one of the 10 women delegates of the Congress session of 1889.
Because young Nimai Pandita seemed to have grown arrogant by His scholarship,
one day Srivasa Pandita told Him,“Why do people study?
Her much acclaimed work
is on the 19th century Indian feminist Pandita Ramabai, whose writings she compiled, edited and translated from Marathi.
For her distinguished social service, Pandita Ramabai became the first Indian woman
to be awarded the Kaisar-i-Hind Medal by the British Raj.
When Raghava Pandita reached his home,
he was surprised to see beautiful fragrant kadamba flowers blossomed on the lemon tree in his courtyard.
In 1878, Calcutta University, conferred on her the titles of Pandita and Saraswati in recognition of her knowledge of various Sanskrit works.
In the 1880s, in present-day Maharashtra, Tarabai Shinde and Pandita Ramabai wrote with passionate anger about the miserable
lives of upper-caste Hindu women, especially widows.