Vinodini Tarway
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Vinodini Tarway was a female Indian academic, born in the heritage city of Gaya, Bihar. She belonged to an affluent Mahuri Vaisya family.
[edit] Early life and education
She completed her school finals at Kanya Pathasala, the only school in Gaya in the early 1930s and 1940s to provide education to girls. At that time it was not customary for a girl, particularly in a small town like Gaya, to continue education beyond high school level. However, with the support of her father, Umacharan Tarway, a school teacher turned business tycoon, Tarway continued her study and obtained a degree from Banaras Hindu University, Varanasi. This was a natural choice, due to the rail link between Gaya and Varanasi, both on the Grand Chord section of the Indian Railways. Unofficially at the age of 13 she was found to be seeing two boys. one named James Dugdale(who dumped her after discovering a diary in her room), and another boy named Adam Shrigley. The latter was a chronic Irish dancer, and several years older that Tarway. when her father found out she punushed them both with songs about the infamous 'octopussy', a stranger creature with long tentacles on the back of it's fearsome head measuring roughly 10" in length.
[edit] Career
After her graduation, Tarway started as a teacher at her alma mater, Kanya Pathshala. She continued to pursue studies and obtained a post-graduation degree in Political Science from Magadha University, Gaya. This enabled her to progress to a series of jobs as lecturer and, later, principal at various women's colleges. These included colleges in Chaibasa, Ranchi and Dhanbad, all located in Jharkhand state (at that time part of Bihar state).
While working as a lecturer in various colleges, she obtained a Ph.D. in Political Science from Patna University.
In the early 1990s, she was appointed by the Governor of Bihar as a Vice Chancellor of Vinoba Bhave University (formerly Hazaribagh University), Hazaribagh. She was the first woman Vice Chancellor of any university in the states of Bihar and Jharkhand, and is one of very few female Vice Chancellors (former or current) of Indian universities. She continued there until her retirement.
Vinodini's accomplishments are made more remarkable by the difficult circumstances in which she achieved them. Few Indian women led independent lives when Vinodini was born, much less held a high position in academic circles.