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Mohandas Gandhi Essay Research Paper Mohandas Gandhi

Mohandas Gandhi Essay, Research Paper

Mohandas Gandhi

Leo Peters

Section 567-01

Mid-Term Paper

This Essay will be about the life and accomplishments of Mohandas

Karamchand Gandhi. And will also discuss Civil Disobedience.

Throughout history most national heroes have been warriors, but Gandhi

ended British rule over his native India without striking a single blow. A frail

man, he devoted his life to peace and brotherhood in order to achieve social and

political progress. Yet less than six months after his nonviolent resistance to

British rule won independence for India, he was assassinated by a religious

fanatic.

Gandhi was one of the gentlest of men, a devout and almost mystical Hindu,

but he had an iron core of determination. Nothing could change his convictions.

This combination of traits made him the leader of India’s nationalist movement.

Some observers called him a master politician. Others believed him a saint. To

millions of Hindus he was their beloved Mahatma, meaning “great soul.”

Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi was born on Oct. 2, 1869, in Porbandar, near

Bombay. His family belonged to the Hindu merchant caste Vaisya. His father had

been prime minister of several small native states. Gandhi was married when he

was only 13 years old.

When he was 19 he defied custom by going abroad to study. He studied law

at University College in London. Fellow students snubbed him because he was an

Indian. In his lonely hours he studied philosophy. In his reading he discovered

the principle of nonviolence as enunciated in Henry David Thoreau’s “Civil

Disobedience,” and he was persuaded by John Ruskin’s plea to give up

industrialism for farm life and traditional handicrafts–ideals similar to many

Hindu religious ideas.

In 1891 Gandhi returned to India. Unsuccessful in Bombay, he went to

South Africa in 1893. At Natal he was the first so-called “colored” lawyer

admitted to the supreme court. He then built a large practice.

His interest soon turned to the problem of fellow Indians who had come

to South Africa as laborers. He had seen how they were treated as inferiors in

India, in England, and then in South Africa. In 1894 he founded the Natal Indian

Congress to agitate for Indian rights. Yet he remained loyal to the British

Empire. In 1899, during the Boer War, he raised an ambulance corps and served

the South African government. In 1906 he gave aid against the Zulu revolt.

Later in 1906, however, Gandhi began his peaceful revolution. He

declared he would go to jail or even die before obeying an anti-Asian law.

Thousands of Indians joined him in this civil disobedience campaign. He was

imprisoned twice. Yet in World War I he again organized an ambulance corps for

the British before returning home to India in 1914.

Gandhi’s writings and devout life won him a mass of Indian followers.

They followed him almost blindly in his campaign for swaraj, or “home rule.” He

worked to reconcile all classes and religious sects, especially Hindus and

Muslims. In 1919 he became a leader in the newly formed Indian National Congress

political party. In 1920 he launched a noncooperation campaign against Britain,

urging Indians to spin their own cotton and to boycott British goods, courts,

and government. This led to his imprisonment from 1922 to 1924. In 1930, in

protest of a salt tax, Gandhi led thousands of Indians on a extremly long march

to the sea to make their own salt. Again he was jailed.

In 1934 he retired as head of the party but remained its actual leader.

Gradually he became convinced that India would receive no real freedom as long

as it remained in the British Empire. Early in World War II he demanded

immediate independence as India’s price for aiding Britain in the war. He was

imprisoned for the third time, from 1942 to 1944.

Gandhi’s victory came in 1947 when India won independence. The

subcontinent split into two countries (India and Pakistan) and brought Hindu-

Muslim riots. Again Gandhi turned to nonviolence, fasting until Delhi rioters

pledged peace to him. On Jan. 30, 1948, while on his way to prayer in Delhi,

Gandhi was killed by a Hindu who had been maddened by the Mahatma’s efforts to

reconcile Hindus and Muslims. An epic motion picture based on his life won

several Academy awards in 1983.

I hope this essay has been both educational and informing about the life

of Gandhi. Thank you for your time.

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