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Gandhi

Gandhi. A Non-Violent World Peace Leader He and his followers threw the King of England and his great armies out of India without using weapons of any kind. Mohandas Gandhi was born in the state of Gujarat, India in 1869. At the age of thirteen Mohandas was married to Kasturba.

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Gandhi

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  1. Gandhi A Non-Violent World Peace Leader He and his followers threw the King of England and his great armies out of India without using weapons of any kind.

  2. Mohandas Gandhi was born in the state of Gujarat, India in 1869.

  3. At the age of thirteen Mohandas was married to Kasturba. The marriage had been arranged for him by his family. They had four sons.

  4. When he was 18 Gandhi came to London to train as a barrister. He tried behaving like an Englishman and took up ballroom dancing. We know that he took a dislike to his landlady’s boiled cabbage! In these days he got ‘stage fright’ when speaking in court.

  5. He returned to India in 1891, then accepted a job at an Indian law firm in South Africa.

  6. His experience of racism in South Africa proved to be a turning point in his life. He was refused admission to hotels, beaten up when he refused to give up his seat to a white man on a stage coach ….. …and thrown off a train when he refused to move to a third class compartment, after he had paid for a first class ticket.

  7. When he was about to return to India, he heard that a law was going to be passed to prevent Indian people from voting. He decided to draw attention to this injustice and became an activist.

  8. However, Gandhi said: ‘There are many causes that I am prepared to die for, but no causes that I am prepared to kill for.’ He developed a new non-violent way to make things right, by getting lots of people to disobey unfair laws, and to be unco-operative with rulers who were treating them badly.

  9. Over the next seven years Gandhi led a non-violent campaign of resistance to laws which were unfair to ‘coloured’ people. During this time thousands of Indians, including Gandhi, were flogged or jailed, and many were shot for striking or burning their registration cards.

  10. Eventually the government was forced to seek a compromise with Gandhi, and when he left South Africa, conditions for Indian people had greatly improved.

  11. In 1915, back in India, Gandhi set up an ‘ashram’ - a self-sufficient community, where he ate a simple diet, and lived like the poorest villagers.

  12. He spun his own yarn and made his own cloth. He encouraged others to do the same, instead of buying imported British material.

  13. At this time Indian villagers were poorly paid, and many were dying of famine. In 1918 Gandhi began a campaign to get them to stand up for themselves against the British who were ruling India.

  14. It was at this time that Gandhi became known as Mahatma, which means ‘Great Soul’.

  15. The British became worried about keeping control. Soldiers were ordered to prevent people from gathering together for meetings.

  16. Nevertheless, in 1919 ten thousand unarmed people attended a protest meeting in Amritsar. Without warning, British soldiers fired on the crowd, killing nearly 400 people, and wounding over one thousand. People were very shocked by this atrocity, and many more joined Gandhi’s campaign.

  17. Meanwhile the British rulers continued to collect heavy taxes from the people, which kept them in poverty.

  18. In 1930 Gandhi led a 248 mile march to the sea, as a protest against a tax on salt. Thousands joined him in making salt of their own. Over 60,000 people were arrested.

  19. However, the British government was forced to negotiate with Gandhi, and they agreed to release political prisoners if he stopped his campaign of non-co-operation.

  20. In 1933 Gandhi went on a fast for 21 days to draw attention to the treatment of the very poorest people in India, who he called ‘The Children of God’.

  21. During the second World War, Gandhi and his followers made it clear that they wouldn’t support Britain unless India was granted independence. In 1942 Gandhi was arrested by the British, and imprisoned for two years.

  22. By 1947 Gandhi’s campaign had weakened the British government’s hold on the country, but with independence looming, killings and riots raged between Hindus and Muslims who hoped to take control of the new Indian government.

  23. It was decided to divide India into two separate countries - India and Pakistan. Gandhi was strongly opposed to this idea, but was forced to agree because of the threat of civil war.

  24. The violence continued. Gandhi's appeals for calm were ignored, so he began another fast. Only when the Hindu, Sikh and Muslim leaders promised to renounce violence did he agree to take a sip of orange juice.

  25. A few days later, on January 30th 1948 Gandhi was shot by a Hindu fanatic on his way to a prayer meeting in Delhi.

  26. His ashes were dipped in all the major rivers of the world before being enshrined in the Mahatma Gandhi World Peace Memorial.

  27. In India Gandhi is often called ‘The Father of the Nation.’ Gandhi’s birthday, October 2nd, is a public holiday in India. Click here for Timeline Tool

  28. Finally, after years and many, many non-violent protests like this, Gandhi and his hundreds of thousands of freedom fighters forced the English to leave India and allow the Indians to run their own country. They did this without weapons that could hurt or kill. Gandhi’s ideas of non-violent protest - or trying to change unfair practices or laws without hurting anyone - have been used by important leaders in our country and around the world. Here, in the United States, the most famous example is Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., when he joined others in the struggle for equal rights and justice for African Americans.

  29. ‘Be the Change you want to see in the World!’ Mohandas Gandhi

  30. Team Discussion Questions • Who was Gandhi? • Why was he important to India? • What can you learn from him?

  31. 5 Life Lessons from Gandhi

  32. 1. Be the Change“You must be the change you want to see in the world.”Be the example, be the leader.  If you lead properly people will follow, and together you will change the world.  Anyone can complain, anyone can blame, and most do, but if you desire to change, then “you” be the change.

  33. 2. Ask the Right Questions“The power to question is the basis of all human progress.”The quality of your life is in direct proportion to the quality of the questions that you dare to ask.  Are you asking the right questions?  Are you asking the right people?  You can’t get answers, without questions; you can’t make progress, without an inquiring mind.

  34. 3.  Always ActY”ou can break that big plan into small steps and take the first step right away.”If you’re going to be biased, be biased towards making something happen today.  Tomorrow never comes, any progress to be made, must be made today.  It must be made right now!If you don’t act now, you don’t have a future, just a longer today.  Gandhi said, “The future depends on what we do in the present.”

  35. 4. Forgive“The weak can never forgive.  Forgiveness is the attribute of the strong.”It’s not “weaklings” who are quick-to-forgive; it’s those who are strongest.  The ability to forgive quickly is a sign of strength.  How strong are you?If you’ve been weak in the past, you can begin today to be strong.

  36. 5. Focus Your Beliefs“Your beliefs become your thoughts.  Your thoughts become your words.  Your words become your actions.  Your actions become your habits.  Your habits become your values.  Your values become your destiny.”In short, your beliefs will create your destiny.  What do you believe?  What do you believe about yourself, your future, and your potential?  What you believe, you will surely become.

  37. “Seven Deadly Sins” by Mahatma Gandhi • Wealth Without Work • Pleasure Without Conscience • Knowledge Without Character • Commerce (Business) Without Morality (Ethics) • Science Without Humanity • Religion Without Sacrifice • Politics Without Principle

  38. Partner Share What do you think is the main message of Gandhi?

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