| |
Home>Funding>Bharati
Funding
- Bharati Memorial Grant
 |
| Professor
Agehananda Bharati with The Dalai Lama |
Agehananda
Bharati was not only a professor of Anthropology at Syracuse
University for 30 years and the Ford/Maxwell Professor of
South Asian Studies, but also a world-renowned expert in the
cultural anthropology of South Asia.
Professor Bharati was born Leopold Fischer
on April 20, 1923, in Vienna, Austria. His interest in South
Asia began when he was a young boy in Vienna learning classical
Sanskrit and Hindi. He graduated Akademisches Gymnasium, Vienna,
in 1941 and Oriental Institute and Ethological Institute of
the University of Vienna in 1948. He received the name Agehananda
Bharati in 1951 when he was ordained in the Dasanami Sanyasi
order of Hindu monks. He earned his acharya, the equivalent
of a PhD., from Sanyasa Mahavidyalaya in Varanasi, India,
that same year.
Early in his career, Prof. Bharati became
a noted scholar of Indian culture, teaching linguistics, comparative
philosophy, anthropology, and South Asian studies at universities
and institutions in India, Japan, Thailand, and the United
States. In the 1950s, he was a lecturer in German at Delhi
University, a reader in philosophy at Banaras Hindu University
in India, a guest professor of comparative religion at the
Nalanda Institute of Post-graduate Buddhist Academy in Bangkok,
Thailand, Asia Foundation Visiting Professor at the universities
of Tokyo and Kyoto in Japan, and research associate for the
Far Eastern Institute at the University of Washington in Seattle.
Prof. Bharati joined the Maxwell faculty in
1961 as an assistant professor of anthropology. He was promoted
to associate professor in 1964 and to full professor in 1968.
He chaired the anthropology department from 1971 to 1977 and
was acting chair during the spring semester of 1985. In 1991,
he was named the Ford/Maxwell Professor of South Asian Studies
and also was presented with the Chancellor's Citation for
Exceptional Academic Achievement.
An outstanding
Sanskritist who spoke 15 classical and modern European and
Indian vernacular languages, he is recognized as one of the
leading pioneers in the field of tantric studies. He is perhaps
best known for his books The Tantric Tradition (The Hutchinson
University Publishers, 1966) and The Ochre Robe (Ross-Erikson
Press, 1980). Prof. Bharati also wrote hundreds of articles
for publications distributed worldwide, was an editor for
several international publications, and presented numerous
lectures and papers at national and international professional
conventions.
|