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Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi, leader of the
India's
nationalist movement and known in his later life as Mahatma ("great
soul"), was one of the greatest national leaders of the 20th
century. His methods and philosophy of nonviolent confrontation, or
civil disobedience,
not only led his own country to independence but influenced
political activists of many persuasions throughout the world.
Gandhi was born in
Porbandar, India, on Oct. 2,
1869. Although his father was a chief minister for the maharaja of
Porbandar, the family came from the traditional caste of grocers and
moneylenders (the name Gandhi means "grocer"). His mother was a
devout adherent of
Jainism,
a religion in which ideas of nonviolence and vegetarianism are
paramount. Gandhi stated that he was most influenced by his mother,
whose life "was an endless chain of fasts and vows." When, in the
company of boyhood friends, he secretly smoked, ate meat, told lies,
or wore Western clothing, he suffered intense feelings of guilt.
These feelings forced him to make resolutions about his moral
behavior that were to remain with him.
Married by arrangement at age 13, Gandhi went to
London to study law when he was
18. He was admitted to the bar in 1891 and for a while practiced law
in Bombay. From 1893 to 1914 he worked for an Indian firm in
South Africa.
During these years Gandhi's humiliating experiences of overt racial
discrimination propelled him into agitation on behalf of the Indian
community of South Africa. He assumed leadership of protest
campaigns and gradually developed his techniques and tenets of
nonviolent resistance known as
satyagraha
(literally, "steadfastness in truth").
Returning to
India in January 1915, Gandhi soon became involved in labor
organizing. The
Amritsar Massacre
(1919), in which troops fired on and killed hundreds of nationalist
demonstrators, turned him to direct political protest. Within a year
he was the dominant figure in the
Indian National Congress,
which he launched on a policy of noncooperation with the British in
192022.
Although total noncooperation was abandoned, Gandhi continued civil
disobedience, organizing protest marches against unpopular British
measures, such as the salt tax (1930), and boycotts of British
goods.
Gandhi was repeatedly imprisoned
by the British and resorted to hunger strikes as part of his civil
disobedience. His final imprisonment came in 194244,
after he had demanded total withdrawal of the British (the
Quit India
movement) during World War II.
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Gandhi also fought to improve the
status of the lowest classes of society, the casteless
Untouchables,
whom he called harijans ("children of God"). He believed in manual
labor and simple living; he spun thread and wove cloth for his own
garments and insisted that his followers do so, too. He disagreed
with those who wanted
India to industrialize.
Gandhi was also tireless in trying to forge closer
bonds between the Hindu majority and the numerous minorities of
India, particularly the Muslims.
His greatest failure, in fact, was his inability to dissuade Indian
Muslims, led by Muhammad Ali
Jinnah,
from creating a separate state,
Pakistan. When India gained independence in 1947, after negotiations
in which he was a principal participant, Gandhi opposed the
partition of the subcontinent with such intensity that he launched a
mass movement against it. Ironically, he was assassinated in Delhi
on Jan. 30, 1948, by a Hindu fanatic who mistakenly thought Gandhi's
antipartition sentiment both pro-Muslim and pro-Pakistan.
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