University of Louisville researcher Meera Alagaraja believes yoga brings people together. It鈥檚 something she first noticed while teaching youth yoga as a doctoral student. She remembers two high school student yogis from different cliques speaking for the first time, though they had been in the same classes since grade school.

鈥淚 always think yoga lets us put down our guard and be a little freer and make connections,鈥 said Alagaraja, an associate professor in the College of 成人直播 and
Human Development. 鈥淚t really connects us to those around us.鈥

And, as it turns out, those connections run particularly deep in Louisville. In a recently published paper, Alagaraja highlights forgotten historic links she鈥檚 discovered between Louisville and yoga鈥檚 spread in America 鈥 a story that connects India and Kentucky, creating an exchange of philosophy, culture and surging feminism that left both forever changed.

鈥淚n a sense, the one part of me 鈥 the immigrant part of me 鈥 I like seeing these connections,鈥 said Alagaraja, who herself is a transplant from India. 鈥淭he sense of
global community, that鈥檚 very real.鈥

鈥楾he Mystery鈥

This story begins as all good stories do 鈥 with a mystery.

While visiting a monastery in Los Angeles several years ago, Alagaraja was approached by a monk who heard she was from Louisville. There was a poem, he said, that had long been attributed to another monk, India鈥檚 Swami Vivekananda 鈥 a driving force in introducing the spirituality behind yoga to America 鈥 in his collected works. But it turns out, the poem was actually聽written by a woman from Louisville.

That poem is, appropriately, titled 鈥淭he Mystery鈥 鈥 or 鈥淭he Cup,鈥 in the swami鈥檚 works 鈥 published around the turn of the 20th century by Margaret Steele Anderson. Anderson was a poet, journalist and art history lecturer at UofL.

鈥淗ere鈥檚 this woman from Louisville, and her work is somehow in the swami鈥檚 Complete Works,鈥 Alagaraja said. 鈥淎nd from there, it became my mission to figure out how this misattribution happened.鈥

She began pulling threads, calling the book鈥檚 publisher, tracing Anderson鈥檚 family with assistance from the Cave Hill Heritage Foundation and tracking down the lawyer who executed Anderson鈥檚 will 鈥 but nothing. So, Alagaraja widened the net and began poring over letters, public records and other documents to find other Louisvillians who might have run the same social circles as Anderson.

She found Ellen Churchill Semple, Enid Yandell and Bertha Palmer.

Amid growing support for women鈥檚 suffrage and American feminism in the 19th and early 20th centuries, each of these three, like Anderson, had become pioneers in their respective careers ranging from art to science and business.

鈥淚 can鈥檛 imagine how they would break down those barriers,鈥 Alagaraja said. 鈥淗ow they would fight to be heard and to pursue their passions, in a time when that wasn鈥檛 always available to them as women.鈥

Semple, born in Louisville in 1863, was an anthropologist and geographer, founding an entirely new discipline where the two intersect: anthropogeography. She earned not only her bachelor鈥檚 degree, but her master鈥檚, and continued her studies unofficially at a German university, where women were not allowed to matriculate.

Yandell, born in Louisville in 1869, was a sculptor who studied in France under Auguste Rodin 鈥 the artist behind UofL鈥檚 iconic Thinker statue. Yandell now has her work featured in the Speed Art Museum and beyond.

Lastly, Palmer, born in Louisville in 1849, was a socialite, avid philanthropist and businesswoman. Palmer was selected as president of the Board of Lady Managers, a position of leadership for the 1893 Chicago聽World鈥檚 Fair, particularly the Woman鈥檚 Building exhibition.

But, Alagaraja wondered, what exactly did these Louisville women 鈥 all Anderson鈥檚 contemporaries 鈥 have to do with an Indian monk?

It was at the World鈥檚聽Fair that Palmer became linked with a young Hindu, who exposed her to yoga philosophy.

From India, to the World (Fair)

That Indian monk, Swami Vivekananda had been solicited by a king, Maharaja of Khetri,
to travel to the United States for the 1893 World鈥檚 Fair. The maharaja saw the World Parliament of Religions as an opportunity to spread his ideas in the West, Alagaraja
said, and he sponsored Vivekananda鈥檚 trip.

After a long ocean liner voyage, Vivekananda attended the fair and spoke on Hinduism, spirituality and yoga philosophy 鈥 ideas like the importance of connection to the universe and mindfulness still very present in America today.

鈥淎nd now, it鈥檚 a multibillion dollar industry, and many, many people practice it here,鈥 Alagaraja, a practitioner herself, said. 鈥淗e laid the groundwork with the philosophy and sparked interest, and that really exploded decades later with the practice of yoga.鈥

Vivekananda also spoke at the Woman鈥檚 Building, which Palmer played a key role in planning. The two developed a friendship, exchanging letters back and forth even after the swami returned home. It was likely through Palmer and shared friends, Alagaraja said, that Vivekananda also crossed paths with Semple and Yandell. The influence of his philosophies can be seen in both women鈥檚 later writings and works.

There is evidence that Semple frequently interacted with the swami鈥檚 followers and was taken with their ideas of spirituality. An accomplished and studied scientist, she wrote in a letter to one follower that those ideas 鈥渋nspire me too, in spite of my strict scientific training, for I realise that the domain of the spirit is larger.鈥

There also is evidence of the swami鈥檚 impact on Yandell, the artist, who would later create a small sculpture described as 鈥渁n Indian man standing.鈥 In an interview with The New York
Times, Yandell would call the sculpture the 鈥淗indoo鈥 bronze.

鈥淭hat鈥檚 how he sparked that聽interest (in yoga and spiritualism),鈥 Alagaraja said. 鈥淚t started as an interest in him, and how he was different from anyone else and it grew from there.鈥

Of course, the presence of Anderson鈥檚 鈥淭he Mystery鈥 poem in Vivekananda鈥檚 collected works offers some evidence that they crossed paths as well. While that鈥檚 a mystery Alagaraja is still working to solve, she says her work so far has still cast light on a little-known piece of Louisville鈥檚 past.

鈥淚n search of Margaret,鈥 she said, 鈥淚 have found Enid, I have found Ellen, I have found all of these characters. And their stories聽are so interesting.鈥

Those stories explain Louisville鈥檚 connection to the spread of yoga philosophy in America. But, the women had an impact on the Swami, as well, inspiring ideas of feminism he would bring back to India.

Flowing both ways

Aside from connection, yoga is all about flows 鈥 and in this case, it鈥檚 influence that flows both ways. While the women learned of yogic thought and Hinduism from the swami, he was inspired by their ideas of feminism and efforts to gain equality.

In the 1890s, when the swami traveled to America, the social hierarchy in India was rigid and gender-driven, with women and men not being able to speak to those of the other sex outside of their own family. When he arrived in America, Vivekananda would have been surprised to see women and men shoulder to shoulder at the World鈥檚 Fair and to see women thriving in careers and leadership positions as Palmer, Yandell and Semple did.

This inspired the swami, Alagaraja said, as he understood freedom and equality as being firmly connected to his sense of spirituality. When he returned to India, he continued to speak to the ideas of feminism through his teachings and writings.

鈥淲hen he goes back to India, he becomes such a champion for women鈥檚 rights, and that鈥檚 evident in his writings,鈥 Alagaraja said. 鈥淔eminism, empowerment, yoga聽鈥 they all have this connection.鈥

Alagaraja

In letters written to friends in India about his visit to the U.S., Vivekananda said he admired the 鈥渂road and liberal minds鈥 of the women he met who expanded his own outlook 鈥 and, in turn, the outlooks of his followers and those who still read his works today.

鈥淎bout the women in America, I cannot express my gratitude for their kindness,鈥 he wrote. 鈥淚n this country (America), women are the life of every movement and represent all the culture of the nation.鈥

In July 1896, shortly after his trip to America, Vivekananda founded the journal Prabuddha Bharata, or Awakened India 鈥 the very same journal in which Alagaraja鈥檚 recent findings were published. In his time, the swami used the journal as a bullhorn to spread his teachings, including those on gender, racial and class equity.

In the generations after the swami, during unrest in India as its people fought for political independence, Alagaraja said, protesters would cite the Vivekananda鈥檚 works and ideas of unity and freedom 鈥 ideas that聽overlap with the ideas of the women from Louisville.

鈥淥ur right of interference is limited entirely to giving education,鈥 Vivekenanda wrote. 鈥淲omen must be put in a position to solve their own problems in their own way. No one can or ought to do this for them. And our Indian women are capable of doing it as any in the world.鈥

Vivekananda would likely be as impressed with another Louisville woman and her work to continue advancing the ideas he and his contemporaries shared: Alagaraja herself, whose efforts to solve this mystery go far beyond her typical university research.

鈥淚nnovation these days within universities is critical for stretching our thoughts, words and reach,鈥 said Sharon Kerrick, Alagaraja鈥檚 chair and colleague in the UofL department of education leadership, evaluation and organizational development. 鈥淒r. Alagaraja鈥檚 discovery of this forgotten part of history is the very definition of innovative and shows how she utilized her traditional inquiry skills, mixed with curiosity and a bold thought process, to trace this fascinating story.鈥

More importantly, Alagaraja said, highlighting the connections between Kentucky and India, and between the swami and the Louisville women, and between these two seemingly disparate ideas and movements, reveals a universal truth 鈥 we are all connected.

鈥淎t their most basic level, both (feminism and yoga) are built on the recognition of equality 鈥 and the recognition of freedom for not just the physical self but for the spirit,鈥 Alagaraja said. 鈥淲e aren鈥檛 men and women 鈥 we are spirit and spirit. We are the same.鈥

Help solve “The Mystery”:聽If you have any information on Margaret Steele Anderson or her poem, email meera.alagaraja@louisville.edu.

Illustrations by Aditi Yeva

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Baylee Pulliam leads research marketing and communications at UofL, building on her experience as an award-winning business, technology, health care and startups reporter. She is a proud product of the UofL College of Arts and Sciences, where she earned her undergraduate degree in English. She also holds an MBA, a Master of Arts in Organizational Leadership and is pursuing a Ph.D. in the latter with a focus on corporate innovation.