Mahatma gandhi biography images of roses

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  • Gandhi A Life In Pictures

  • 1. Mohandas K. Gandhi A Life in Pictures www.gandhifoundation.org
  • 2. 1876 as a child This is the earliest picture of Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi He is aged 7 www.gandhifoundation.org
  • 3. Gandhi’s mother Putlibai Putlibai had a strong spiritual influence on Gandhi She was a devout Hindu, who used to fast regularly She also took advice from a Jain priest www.gandhifoundation.org
  • 4. Gandhi’s father Karamchand Gandhi’s father was a politician He was Prime Minister of Porbandar, a small princely state in Western India www.gandhifoundation.org
  • 5. 1883 as a teenager Gandhi played sports such as tennis and cricket When he lied to his parents or stole from his brother he felt very guilty! www.gandhifoundation.org
  • 6. 1886 with brother Gandhi had two brothers and one sister He was the youngest child Here he is shown with his elder brother Laxmidas www.gandhifoundation.org
  • 7. 1890 in England This the first picture of Gandhi in England. Gandhi was a lifelong vegetarian He is shown on a visit of the Vegetarian Society to the Isle of Wight www.gandhifoundation.org
  • 8. 1891 law student Gandhi trained to be a barrister at the Inner Temple in London www.gandhifoundation.org
  • 9. 1895 as a barrister After a brief period back in India, Gandhi went to South Africa to practice law He was retained by a firm of Muslim merchants, headed by Dada Abdullah Sheth www.gandhifoundation.org
  • 10. 1895 Natal Congress In South Africa he soon became involved in protecting the rights of Indian migrants Here he is shown with other members of the Natal Indian Congress www.gandhifoundation.org
  • 11. 1899 ambulance corps During the Boer War, Gandhi formed the Indian Ambulance Corps “ Their unassuming dauntlessness cost them many lives and eventually an order was published forbidding them to go into the firing line.” (Mr. Vere Kent Johannesburg Illustrated Star ) www.gandhifoundation.org
  • 12. 1902 with Kasturbhai Mohandas and Kasturbai were m
  • Sevagram ashram near Wardha in Maharashtra founded by Gandhiji in 1936.

    In January 1948, before three pistol shots put an end to his life, Gandhi had been on the political stage for more than fifty years. He had inspired two generations of India, patriots, shaken an empire and sparked off a revolution which was to change the face of Africa and Asia. To millions of his own people, he was the Mahatma- the great soul- whose sacred glimpse was a reward in itself. By the end of 1947 he had lived down much of the suspicion, ridicule and opposition which he had to face, when he first raised the banner of revolt against racial exclusiveness and imperial domination. His ideas, once dismissed as quaint and utopian ,had begun to strike answering chords in some of the finest minds in the world. "Generations to come, it may be", Einstein had said of Gandhi in July 1944, "will scarcely believe that such one as this ever in flesh and blood walked upon earth."

    Though his life had been continual unfolding of an endless drama, Gandhi himself seemed the least dramatic of men. It would be difficult to imagine a man with fewer trappings of political eminence or with less of the popular image of a heroic figure. With his loin cloth, steel-rimmed glasses, rough sandals, a toothless smile and a voice which rarely rose above a whisper, he had a disarming humility. He used a stone instead of soap for his bath, wrote his letters on little bits of paper with little stumps of pencils which he could hardly hold between his fingers, shaved with a crude country razor and ate with a wooden spoon from a prisoner’s bowl. He was, if one were to use the famous words of the Buddha, a man who had "by rousing himself, by earnestness, by restraint and control, made for himself an island which no flood could overwhelm." Gandhi’s, deepest strivings were spiritual, but he did not-as had been the custom in his country- retire to a cave in the Himalayas to seek hi

    Mahatma Gandhi

    A Hindu and Muslim kite-maker work together in the state of Gujarat spreading harmony

    January 21, 2016 11:48 am

    Gujarat, Jan 21 (ANI): Time and again, people in India have proved their unity through innumerable examples of friendship and acts of harmony. An example of this can be seen in India's western city of Ahmadabad where two kite-makers have been working towards spreading communal harmony through messages scripted on their kites. They make kites with messages of harmony written over them. Radheshyam Gupta read out a short poem printed on one of the kites that speaks about the unity that exists between the people of different communities in India.Radheshyam and Iqbal on their kites write about the growing influence of social media and even try to create awareness about pressing issues such as the ‘Save the girl child, educate the girl child’ initiative of the government, ill effects of consumption of tobacco and more. Their collection also comprises kites with speeches by India's iconic freedom leader Mahatma Gandhi, philosopher-thinker Swami Vivekananda, Prime Minister Narendra Modi, Delhi Chief Minister Arvind Kejriwal and social activist Anna Hazare. The two men do not believe in discrimination on the basis of religion, and wish to spread the message of oneness among the people through their friendship and work.

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