Difference between revisions of "Mahatma Gandhi"
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|birth_date=1869-10-02 | |birth_date=1869-10-02 | ||
− | |birth_place=British Indian Empire | + | |birth_place= Gujarat, British Indian Empire |
+ | |birth_place_now=India) | ||
|death_date=30 January 1948 | |death_date=30 January 1948 | ||
|death_place=New Delhi, Delhi, India | |death_place=New Delhi, Delhi, India |
Revision as of 12:53, 23 September 2019
Mahatma Gandhi (Lawyer, Politician, Activist, Writer) | |
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Born | Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi 1869-10-02 Gujarat, British Indian Empire (Now India)) |
Died | 30 January 1948 (Age 78) New Delhi, Delhi, India |
Nationality | Indian |
Alma mater | Bhavnagar, University College London |
Parents | • Karamchand Gandhi • Putlibai Gandhi |
Children | • Harilal • Manilal • Ramdas • Devdas |
Spouse | Kasturba Gandhi |
Interest of | James Douglass |
Party | Indian National Congress |
Related Quotation
Page | Quote | Author | Date |
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Pacifism | “the only intelligent, realistic, expedient program which Gandhi had at his disposal; and that the ‘morality’ which surrounded this policy of passive resistance was to a large degree a rationale to cloak a pragmatic program with a desired and essential moral cover…. Confronted with the issue of what means he could employ against the British, we come to the other criteria previously mentioned; that the kind of means selected and how they can be used is significantly dependent upon the face of the enemy, or the character of his opposition. Gandhi’s opposition not only made the effective use of passive resistance possible but practically invited it. His enemy was a British administration characterized by an old, aristocratic, liberal tradition, one which granted a good deal of freedom to its colonials and which always had operated on a pattern of using, absorbing, seducing, or destroying, through flattery or corruption, the revolutionary leaders who arose from the colonial ranks. This was the kind of opposition that would have tolerated and ultimately capitulated before the tactic of passive resistance.” | Saul Alinsky | 1972 |
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