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Who is Cornelia Sorabji?

 Why is there a Google Doodle in her memory?


On her 151st birth anniversary, Google Doodle honours Cornelia Sorabji, India's first female advocate, who went against all odds to fight for her education, and then for the people who couldn't get a lawyer. Here is all you must know about her.
While it is nothing new of Google to come up with artistic homepage designs in some great soul's memory every other day, more than often we don't know who (or what) they are talking about.
Like today, on November 15, for example, Google is honouring Cornelia Sorabji with a doodle. How much do you know about her?

India's first female advocate.
Returning to India in 1894, Sorabji started fighting for the rights of Purdanashins; the Hindu women who were not allowed to communicate with any male apart from their husbands. Thus, those women were not able to communicate and fight for their own rights in courts.
Women were also not allowed to fight in courts or be barristers at that time, neither in India nor in England. Cornelia Sorabji then started petitioning the India Office to provide female legal advisers for women and minors in provincial courts.
In India, Sorabji took the LLB exams under the Bombay University to get a law degree -- one which she was denied in Oxford -- and became the first woman graduate from the institution.
However, even as she passed the pleader examination in Allahabad High Court in 1899, she was not recognised as a barrister until 1923, when the laws concerning women lawyers finally changed.
In 1904, Sorabji was made the Lady Assistant to the Court of Wards of Bengal, and she went on to work in the provinces of Bengal, Bihar, Orissa (now Odisha) and Assam.
Over the next 20 years, Cornelia Sorabji helped and fought on behalf of over 600 women and children. Legend has it that she did so by charging no fee.

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10 Hottest Trending Topics in 2023