Letter to Raj Sharma
Letter to Raj Sharma from Dina Nath Varma, congratulating Sharma on her three children and relating that there may be job prospects in India for her husband Roshan thanks to the government’s interest in a nuclear program.
Brief Biography of Tugabai Kukde
A brief biography of Mary Kukde, one of the first women from India to receive her degree in medicine in the United States, dated April 6, 1911. The biography, written by Edith Brown, M.D., Principal of the Women’s Medical College of Pennsylvania, states that Dr. Kukde attended the College from January 1903-March 1906 and lists the classes she took.
Photograph of Vaishno Das Bagai and Others
A photograph of Vaishno Das Bagai and others. A handwritten note on the back of the photograph identifies others in the photograph, including Ramesh Chandra, Abnashi Ram Premi, and indicates the picture was taken in the early 1920s.
Women medical missionaries in India
From left: Dr. Mabell Sammons Hays, Dr. Mary Maya Das Lal, Dr. Anna Ruth Winter Korteling. Mabel and Anna graduated from the Woman's Medical College in 1923 and Mary in 1908. The photo was taken in Allahabad, India.
Gurubai Karmarkar
Photograph of Gurubai Karmarkar, an 1892 graduate from Woman's Medical College of Pennsylvania.
Old world girls to be M.D.'s
A newspaper article describing the upcoming graduation of Miss Dora Chatterjee as only the third "Native Hindu" woman to graduate from the college.
Letter from Shevantibai M. NiRambe to Dr. R. Bodley
Letter from Shevantibai M. NiRambe to Dean of Woman's Medical College of Pennsylvania, Dr. Rachel Bodley. Writing from India, NiRambe expresses her desire to study medicine in England or the U.S., and mentions that she had read Bodley's introduction for Pandita Ramabai's book The High Caste Hindu Woman (1888).
"Fake Encounters That Killed By The Thousands"
Illustration by Vishavjit Singh; the image tells the story of Jaswant Singh Khalra, who documented evidence relating to the 1984 mass killing of Sikhs and was subsequently abducted and killed by Indian police officers in 1995. It also depicts Harinder Singh, killed in 1990, as one of a mountain of skulls.
"Abusing the Sikh Nation"
Illustration by Vishavjit Singh; the image satirizes Indian propaganda articles about "the eradication of Sikh terrorists" in the mass killings of 1984 by comparing them to a hypothetical newspaper written in support of 17th-century Mughal ruler Jahangir, who executed the Sikh Guru Jahangir for supposed anti-state activities.