The Queen's Daughters in India(Paperback, Elizabeth W. Andrew, Katharine C. Bushnell, Josephine E. Butler, Henry J. Wilson)
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These are reprint editions reprinted with the help of original book just to give the original look and feel we do not change its format and text due to which in some cases the text is not like new. About The Book: The Queen’s Daughters in India (1899), by Elizabeth Wheeler Andrew and Katharine Bushnell, exposes the harsh realities faced by Indian women under British colonial rule, particularly focusing on state-regulated prostitution and the abuse of women in so-called “Christian” governed areas. The book documents how British policies, especially the Contagious Diseases Acts, enabled systemic exploitation and sexual slavery. It criticizes the moral hypocrisy of colonial authorities and calls for urgent reforms. Through firsthand investigation and advocacy, the authors challenge both imperial and missionary complicity, urging Christian women in Britain to rise against such injustices and support the protection and dignity of Indian women. About The Author: Elizabeth Wheeler Andrew (1845–1917) was a missionary and author who highlighted social and religious issues in colonial India, advocating for justice and exposing the contradictions of British imperialism and Katharine Bushnell (1855–1946) was a medical doctor, Christian writer, and pioneering feminist theologian. She sought biblical affirmation of women’s equality, correcting Bible misinterpretations in *God's Word to Women*, and worked globally as a missionary and social reformer and Josephine Elizabeth Butler (1828–1906) was a Victorian feminist and social reformer who campaigned for women’s suffrage, education, legal rights, and against child prostitution, human trafficking, and the Contagious Diseases Acts, profoundly advancing women’s rights and social justice and Henry Joseph Wilson (1833–1914) was a British farmer, industrialist, and radical Liberal politician. He championed temperance, non-sectarian education, Irish Home Rule, anti-imperialism, and opposed state regulation of vice and the opium trade, ro