Paul Olaf Bodding

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    Paul Olaf Bodding (born in the Norwegian town Gjøvik 2. November 1865, dead in Odense, Denmark 25. September 1938) was a norwegian missionary, linguist and folklorist. He served in India for 44 years (1889-1933), and operated mainly from the town Dumka in the Santhal Parganas-district. The reverend Bodding created the first alphabet and a grammar for the Santali-speaking native people in eastern India. In 1914 he also completed the translation of the Bible into Santali language.

    Paul Olaf Bodding had studied theology at the university of Oslo. He was a celebrated scientist, and he is still well known among the santals living in the states of Jharkand, Bihar and Assam as well as in Bangladesh and the Scandinavian countries.

    Bodding was the son of a bookseller, and he first met the founder of The Indian Home Mission to the Santals (later developed to the NELC), Lars Olsen Skrefsrud, in his fathers bookshop in Gjøvik. Skrefsrud was born just outside the neighbouring town Lillehammer, in Oppland, Norway.

    Bodding was also involuntarily involved in a personal scandal, as his second wife, a Danish missionary-daughter, ran away with an Indian muslim.

    At the front of Gjøvik church (in Norway) a monument is erected for Bodding.

    [edit] Works

    • Materials for a Santali Grammar I, Dumka 1922
    • A Chapter of Santal Folklore, Oslo 1924
    • Santal Folk Tales (3 volumes), 1925-29
    • Studies in Santal Medicine and Connected Folklore (3 volumes), 1925-40
    • A Santal Dictionary (5 volumes), 1933-36
    • Santal Riddles and Witchcraft among the Santals, 1940

    [edit] Some sources