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Mahatma Gandhi Biography

Mahatma Gandhi aka Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi
Mahatma Gandhi
Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi
Born: 1869-10-02
Birthplace: Porbandar, India
Died: 1948-01-30
Location of Death: Delhi, India
Cause of Death: Assassination

Race: Asian/Indian
Religion: Hindu
Field: Activist
Famous for: Advocate of pacifism as a means of revolution
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#33

Field: Activist

Mohandas Karamchand "Mahatma" (Sanskrit: "great soul") Gandhi was one of the founding fathers of the modern Indian state and an influential advocate of pacifism as a means of revolution.

He helped bring about India's independence from British rule, inspiring other colonial peoples to work for their own independence and ultimately dismantle the British Empire and replace it with the Commonwealth. Gandhi's principle of satyagraha (Sanskrit: truth + path/way), often roughly translated as "[way of truth]", has inspired generations of democratic and anti-racist activists including Martin Luther King, Jr. and Nelson Mandela.

Gandhi was born on October 2, 1869, in Gujarat, India. He was the son of a local official and trained as a lawyer in London. He went to South Africa to practise law in 1893 and began his political career by lobbying against laws discriminating against Indians in South Africa.

Gandhi drew inspiration from the writings of Leo Tolstoy, who in the 1880s had undergone a profound conversion to a personal form of Christian anarchism. Gandhi translated Tolstoy's "Letter to a Hindu" which was written in 1908 in response to aggressive Indian nationalists, and the two corresponded until Tolstoy's death in 1910.

During World War I, Gandhi returned to India, where he campaigned for Indians to join British Indian Army. After the war, he became involved with the Indian National Congress and the movement for independence. He gained worldwide publicity through his policy of civil disobedience and the use of fasting as a form of protest, and was repeatedly imprisoned by the British authorities. One of his most striking actions was the salt march of 1930, when he led thousands of people to march to the sea to collect their own salt rather than pay the salt tax.

Gandhi became even more vocal in his demand for independence during World War II, drafting a resolution calling for the British to Quit India, which soon sparked the largest movement for Indian independence ever, with mass arrests and violence on an unprecedented scale. During this time, he even hinted an end for his otherwise unwavering support of non-violence, saying that the 'ordered anarchy' around him was 'worse than real anarchy'.

Gandhi was a larger-than-life figure in relations between the Hindu and Muslim communities of India. It is said that he ended communal riots through his mere presence. Gandhi was vehemently opposed to any plan which partitioned India into two separate countries (as the plan which was eventually adopted did--creating a Hindu-dominated India, and a Muslim-dominated Pakistan). On the day of power transfer, Gandhi did not celebrate independence with the rest of India, but mourned partition alone in Calcutta instead. He was assassinated by Naturam Godse, a Hindu radical who held him responsible for Partition, in New Delhi on January 30, 1948.

Mahatma Gandhi Famous Quote

There are people in the world so hungry, that God cannot appear to them except in the form of bread.
More famous quotes by Mahatma Gandhi


Mahatma Gandhi News


Gandhi's college in Bhavnagar a heritage mystery?
Times of India
It is the college where Mahatma Gandhi studied for six months Shamaldas Arts College. The college has changed buildings four times till date. ...

and more »


UTSA Today

Honors College sponsors 'Be the Change You Wish to See' photo contest
UTSA Today
This year's theme, borrowed from a quote by Mahatma Gandhi, is "Be the Change You Wish to See." That theme is the focus of a series of academic events on ...
B...


Heritage building facades will get rid of ACs, grills
Daily News & Analysis
Box grills on treasured structures, like the Mumbadevi Temple Trust building at Kalbadevi and Mani Bhavan, where Mahatma Gandhi used to live, robbed them of ...

and more »


The Marketing Of The Mahatma
NPR
12:00 pm ET This holiday season, Montblanc is selling a Mahatma Gandhi Limited Edition fountain pen. It's crafted out of 18 karat gold, topped with a ...

and more »


UNESCO to set up peace institute in city
Indian Express
The United Nations Educational Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) will set up the Mahatma Gandhi Institute of Education for Peace and Sustainable ...
Karan Singh India's representativ...


CBC.ca

We are India's nuclear 'friend,' Harper says
Toronto Star
Prime Minister Stephen Harper accepts a bust of Mahatma Gandhi at Gandhi's memorial site in Delhi. (Nov. ...
India's nukes are 'ground zero' for jihadists: Canadian mediaHindustan Times
I...


Can the Mahatma be used as a marketing machine?
Economic Times
So how better to do that than to make one of Mont Blanc's Limited Edition pens in honour of the most famous and recognisable Indian of all ? Mahatma Gandhi.

and more »


When Was the Last Time You De-learned?
Bloomberg
Only in retrospect are Mahatma Gandhi and Nelson Mandela ? who faced criticism for most of their lives ? regarded as great leaders who fought for the right ...

and more »


Urban Legend
TIME
... it could begin by acknowledging that India no longer "lives in its villages" as Mahatma Gandhi said it did ? at least not in the same way. ...

and more »


Gandhi explains a confluence of ideas
The Brown Daily Herald
?The non-violence of King and Gandhi had a strong element of courtesy and forgiveness,? Rajmohan Gandhi, grandson of Mahatma Gandhi, ...
Q&A with Rajmohan GandhiThe Brown Daily Herald

all 2 ...



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