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Gandhi: The Man, His People, and the Empire

2023-07-09 05:47:36

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There are few people in history who have been able to achieve what Gandhi did in one of the most powerful empires in history. Gandhi was a small Indian who acknowledged the fraud, discrimination, colonial policies of the British Empire and did not appeal to violence in any way. The fact that he overturned the British Empire by winning Indian independence proves that Gandhi was "great" in history. Gandhi is a young man in South Africa and started to work equally in India. Through demonstrations, demonstrations, and protests, Gandhi did not retaliate with violence, but by demonstrating the atrocities of the British Empire, we could gather the world's attention to India. For Gandhi, the way to Indian independence is difficult and in order to fully understand his efforts, it must start from the beginning.

Gandhi was the liberator of hundreds of millions of people in Asia and Africa in the bondage of imperialism. This is a wonderful achievement. But Gandhi was once a nonviolent means to release the most powerful empire in the world from the British Empire and made him a special "Millennial Man". In his life Gandhi proved that nonviolence and love can overcome bombs and bullets. In order to do this, he mastered himself perfectly. He is a rich lawyer who has abandoned his wealth and other secular property and lived in poverty. His life is reminiscent of Buddha and Jesus Christ. However, compared with the Buddha and Jesus Christ, which are far from secular circumstances, Gandhi is immersed in a dirty political world and it is not contaminated.

Mahatma Gandhi is a person who has faith and conviction. Mohadas Gandhi, most people know that Mahatma means 'great soul'. He spends most of his life doing freeing his country by great use of peace and love instead of war and destruction. Gandhi established Satyagraha, a new way to improve his voice. Gandhi was well educated and helped the repressed Indian community in South Africa. He proposed a nonviolent resistance policy called Satyagraha or "dedication to truth"