Gretta Cousins: champion of Irish and Indian women

Published: April 16, 2020, 6:06 a.m.

How many people can lay claim to playing a key role in three different 20th century protest movements across the world, each of which largely succeeded in their aims? Margaret \u2018Gretta\u2019 Cousins, the daughter of a minor court official from Boyle in Ireland and a musician by profession certainly can. \nThe common thread in all of these battles for this driven, feisty activist was the demand for equality for women: Gretta Cousins spent time in jails in Ireland, England and India for her beliefs and remained a catalyst for change throughout her life. As a suffragette she was involved in high-profile direct action in London and Dublin, while in India she not only contributed to the improvement of women\u2019s lives but also became the country\u2019s first female magistrate.

Rajan Datar is joined by historians Dr. Margaret Ward from Queen's University in Belfast, Dr. Jyoti Atwal from Jawaharlal Nehru University, New Delhi and University of Limerick and Dr. Emily Rook-Koepsel from the University of Pittsburgh.

(Photo: Margaret Cousins, c.1931)