Known
as 'Mahatma' (great soul), Gandhi was the leader of the Indian nationalist
movement against British rule, and is widely considered the father of his
country. His doctrine of non-violent protest
to achieve political and social progress has been hugely influential.
Mohandas
Karamchand Gandhi was born on 2 October 1869 in Porbandar
in Gujarat. After university, he went to London to train as a barrister. He
returned to India in 1891 and in 1893 accepted a job at an Indian law firm in
Durban, South Africa. Gandhi was appalled by the treatment of Indian immigrants
there, and joined the struggle to obtain basic rights for them. During his 20
years in South Africa he was sent to prison many times. Influenced primarily by
Hinduism, but also by elements of Jainism and Christianity as well as writers
including Tolstoy and Thoreau, Gandhi developed the satyagraha ('devotion to
truth'), a new non-violent way to redress wrongs.
In
1922, Gandhi himself was sentenced to six years’ imprisonment. He was released
after two years and withdrew from politics, devoting himself to trying to
improve Hindu-Muslim relations, which had worsened. In 1930, Gandhi proclaimed
a new campaign of civil disobedience in protest at a tax on salt, leading
thousands on a ‘March to the Sea’ to symbolically make their own salt from
seawater. In 1931,
Gandhi
attended the Round Table Conference in London, as the sole representative of
the Indian National Congress, but resigned from the party in 1934 in protest at
its use of non-violence as a political expedient. He was replaced as leader by
Jawaharlal Nehru.
In
1945, the British government began negotiations which culminated in the
Mountbatten Plan of June 1947, and the formation of the two new independent
states of India and Pakistan, divided along religious lines. Massive
inter-communal violence marred the months before and after independence. Gandhi
was opposed to partition, and now fasted in an attempt to bring calm in
Calcutta and Delhi. On 30 January 1948, he was assassinated in Delhi by a Hindu
fanatic.
No comments:
Post a Comment