In 1893, Mohandas Gandhi was abandoned on a train in South Africa and became Indian and became first class. Gandhi recognized that these laws are biased towards Indians and decided to start a non-violent protest against all Indian rights in South Africa. After repeated repetitions of arrest and unnecessary attention in the world, the government finally relaxed by not recognizing the indigenous blacks of South Africa, but by accepting Indian rights. After this victory, Gandhi was invited to India, and now he is regarded as a national hero. He was urged to fight for Indian independence from the British Empire. Gandhi launched in agreement with an unprecedented nonviolent and non-cooperative movement to coordinate millions of Indians across the country. There are several regressions such as violence against protesters and extraordinary imprisonment in Gandhi. But this movement is causing great concern and the UK is facing big public pressure. It's too weak ... written by gavin (gunmasterM@hotmail.com)
Originally, Ben Kingsley played in movie play, Gandhi (1982), seems to have written Gandhi. The first erroneous view on Gandhi seems to be Ronald Reagan's speech to the UN General Assembly on September 24, 1984 (also an erroneous quote that replaced the failure with the word "failure") . John S. Dunne incorrectly wrote the first sentence of "Peace Now" (1991) on page 7. 50, like the first two incorrect tasks of Reagan. Dan also incorrectly quoted the last part of the quote in the same book in p. 34
The most famous artistic portrayal of Gandhi's lifetime is Richard Attenborough's movie "Gandhi" (1982), starring Ben Kingsley. But colonists after scholars believe that it goes beyond Gandhi's role and underestimates other famous people in anti-colonial struggle. Other films about Gandhi include the production of Mahjong (directed by Shyam Benegal, starring Rajat Kapur), Sardar (starring Anu Kapoor), Hey Ram (starring Kamal Hasan). Other dramas explore the chaotic relationship with his eldest and the reasons and circumstances of the murder of Gandhi
In 1982, Gandhi movie, director Richard Attenborough, screenwriter John Bree and Ben Kingsley served as Gandhi, and produced Indian National Film Development Corporation (NFDC) and Gold Crest Films International. (Movie clip for watching conversations on wingclips.com on February 25, 2012. Data from internet movie database) link links