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Mohandas
Karamchand Gandhi: The Mahatma
Mohandas´
childhood
Mohandas
Karamchad Gandhi (which was his real name) was born on
October 2nd, 1869 in
Porbandar, a small seatown in Gurajat (Western India). The
Gandhis were Hindus and belonged to the Bania caste, the
second higest caste in Hinduism. Mohandas´ father was prime
minister of Gurajat. His mother was very religious and he
had two older brothers. When Mohandas was seven years old,
his family moved to Rajkot, where his father became a member
of the Rajasthenic Court. There he went to primary school
and later to high school. He never was a good student, but
he didn´t copy his work from other students. Gandhi was a
shy boy and tried to avoid any company.
Mohandas as a teenager
In India it´s custom to marry quite early and
parents have the right to choose the partners for the
children. Mohandas was married to Kasturbai Makanji when
both were 13 years old. Later he criticized his father for
having married him as a child. Nevertheless, he loved his
wife, but he was a quite jealous husband.
Hindus
aren´t allowed to eat meat, because their religion forbids
that, like drinking alcohol. Mohandas thought, that the
Britains ruled over the Indians because they were meat
eaters, which made them stronger. He wanted to get as strong
as those Britains were, because he couldn´t stand being
oppressed by them. So he began eating meat for about a year,
without his parents knowing it. But then he stopped and
never ate meat again.
Mohandas
Gandhi in England
Gandhi passed his matriculation exam in 1887.
In September he went to England to study law in London.
During this time his wife was pregnant and gave birth to
their first son Harilal.
First of all Gandhi wanted to become an
English gentleman. Therefore he took lessons in French,
dancing and elocution, but soon he stopped these things.
After a year he changed his life. Up to that
time he had lived with a family, but then he rented a small
room on his own, because he didn´t want to get an English
gentlemen anymore.
He opened a vegetarian club, but it only
existed a few months. Later he was elected to the Executive
Committee of the Vegetarian Society. Gandhi could talk to
single persons quite well, but he was too shy to talk to the
committee.
Gandhi occupied himself with different
religions. He read the Gita (the most important book of
Hinduism) and the bible, in which he liked the ‘’Seromon
on the Moun’’ best.
Mohandas passed his examinations, was called
to the Bar and enrolled in the High Court in June 1891. Then
he went back to India, where he found out, that his mother
had died.
Gandhi as legal
advisor in South Africa
Gandhi got a job as a lawyer in Bombay, but he
wasn´t succesful in it. He didn´t know the Indian law and
in his first case he was so nervous, that he couldn´t speak
a word. Another lawyer had to finish his work. So he went to
Rajkot to set up his own office. In 1892 Gandhi´s second
son Manilal was born.
In 1893 an Indian business man offered Gandhi
a job in South Africa, lasting for one year. He went by ship,
train and bus to Pretoria, which is the capital of South
Africa, where he worked.
South Africa was ruled by the Britons, and
Indians, who lived there, were discriminated by the law.
They had to travel third class, if they wanted to go by
train or bus; they were not allowed to walk on public
foothpaths; they might not move out of doors after nine o´clock
p.m. without a permit; and they had no franchise.
Gandhi organized several meetings of all the
Indians in Pretoria. He told them to work together in order
to change their lives. They should be clean and honest,
because the South Africans blamed them to be dirty and
dishonest. At these meetings Gandhi delivered his first
public speeches, and he wasn´t nervous. He was a different
man to the lawyer who couldn´t speak in the law court in
Bombay.
Gandhi´s job in South
Africa
After one year Gandhi wanted to return to
India, but he couldn´t, because the Indians in South Africa
needed him. So he stayed there to help them. He moved to
Durban (which is in the Natal Province), where he founded
the Natal Indian Congress in 1894. He organized the
resistance of the Indians against the discriminatory laws.
Indians could go to South Africa as slaves for
five years. If they decided to stay longer, they were slaves
forever, or they had to pay a yearly poll tax of 25, which hardly anyone could afford. Gandhi
achieved, that the tax was reduced to
3.
In 1896 Gandhi went back to India for six
months to fetch his wife and children.
Back in South Africa, Gandhi founded a school
and a hospital. In 1897 Gandhi´s wife Kasturbai gave birth
to her third son Ramdas, and three years later Davadas was
born.
In the Boer War Gandhi and his companions fetched wounded British soilders
from the field and nursed them.
In 1901 Gandhi returned to India, promising to
come back to South Africa, if the people there would need
him. He got luxurious gifts from Natal Indians, but instead
of keeping them, he gave them to the Indian community.
The Congress met at Calcutta in 1901. Gandhi
offered his services to the Congress office in order to gain
some experience, and so he got a job as a Congress secretary.
Soon Gandhi got a message from South Africa, telling him,
that he should come there, because Mr Chamberlain, the
British prime minister, was going to visit Africa. So he
again went there with his family, but the Asian department
didn´t allow him to represent the Indians in South Africa,
because they didn´t regard him as a domiciled Indian.
1904 Gandhi founded ‘’The Indian Opinion’’,
a weekly newspaper for Indians in South Africa, which was
written in four languages: English, Gujarati, Tamil and
Hindi.
Gandhi changed his
life
n 1914 Gandhi changed his life. He founded the
Phoenix settlement, a cooperative colony for Indians, near
Durban. The members tried to be independent, so they planted
fruit trees and even baked bread on their own. Gandhi began
to wash his clothes and to his cut his hair on his own. He
also helped Kasturbai to do the housework, and his wife didn´t
understand that, because
they easily would have been able to afford a servant.
Gandhi also trained to controll himself, and
so he changed from an irescible person into a peaceful man.
At the age of 37 he became a Bramachari. Bramacharies have
no sexual intercourses, they cut down eating, stirs of
emotion and talking, and they lead a simple life. Gandhi
only wore the clothes of the lowest Hindu caste, even if he
met important people, and he only travelled by thrid class
anymore.
From 1906 to 1913 Gandhi led a campaign, that
fought for the rights of Indians in South Africa. He
undertook a series of challenges for which he was imprisoned
several times.
In the Zulu Rebellion he formed an Indian
Ambulance Corp and nursed wounded Zulus.
In 1914 Gandhi went to England with his family
and a companion in order to meet a friend. During this journey the First World War, in which Gandhi
helped the Britons with amblance work, broke out.
Gandhi had achieved quite a lot in South
Africa. The poll tax was abolished in the end, and the
Indians were better off than 20 years before.
Gandhi´s work in
India
In 1914 Gandhi went back to India, and in 1915
he founded the Satyagraha Ashram in Ahmadabad, Gujarat,
which was like the Phoenix settlement in South Africa.
Gandhi supported the Indians, who needed him, and he also
helped untouchables there.
In Champaran he helped the ryots, who weren´t
fairly treated by the indigo planters, and founded primary
schools in six villages.
In Ahmadabad labouring conditions were bad,
and the wages were low. The situation for mill-hands was
worst, and so Gandhi advised them to strike. After about
three weeks he said, that he wouldn´t touch any food till
the mill-hands have reached a settlement with the
mill-owners.
Three days later the strike was called off,
and a settlement was reached.
In
the Kheda disrict the crops failed, and so people were
unable to pay the assessment. Gandhi achived that the rich
people had to pay their tax, while it was suspended for the
poor ones.
The fight against the
Rowlatt Acts
In 1919 the Parliament set up the Rowlatt Acts,
which allowed the police to imprision victims of persecution
without any trial. Gandhi told the Indians to fight against
these Acts, but without any weapons.
In Amistrar 400 Indians were killed by British
soilders in a demonstration against the Rowlatt Acts. Gandhi
required the whole country to observe a general strike on
April 6th, 1919. He told all Indians not to work and not to
go to school on that day, but to observe the day as one of
fasting and prayer. Shops, offices, factories and schools
were closed on that day. During public processions
proscribed books, written by Gandhi, were sold. Again lots
of Indians were killed. Gandhi blamed himself for the
violence during these two demonstrations. But with the
strike on April 6th he achieved, that the Rowlatt Acts were
never actually used.
The strike against this law was the first big
act of civil disobedience in India. The police wanted to
arrest Gandhi, but they were afraid of the Indians, because
they would have rebelled, and so they let him go.
Gandhi in the Indian
National Congress
Gandhi became a member of the Indian National
Congress, where he fought for the Hindu-Muslem unity, and
the removal of untouchability. He told the Indians to spin,
to weave and to make their own clothes in order to get work
for poor people, and to become independent from British
textile industry. He himself spinned half an hour every day.
In 1922 Gandhi organized a strike against a
tax in Gurajat. British police men illtreated Indians, and
so they burnt down a police station. Several people died and
Gandhi was sentenced to prision for six years, from where he
was released in 1924 because of his bad health. In prision
he read a lot of books, studied two Indian languages and
began to write down the story of his life.
After his release from prison Gandhi travelled
throughout India preaching the cardinal tenets of his
doctrine: Hindu-Moslem unity, the abolition of
untouchability and the promotion of hand-spinning. He began
to be known as Mahatma - the great soul.
In 1925 he became president of the Indian
National Congress.
The salt march
In 1930 Mahatma proclaimed a new campaign of
civil disobedience, telling the Indian population to refuse
paying taxes, especially the tax on salt. The campaign was a
march, in which thousands of Indians followed Gandhi from
Ahmedabad to the Arabian sea, where they made salt by
evaporating sea water.
This campaign was also a
strike against the British monopoly on salt. Once more the
Indian leader was arrested, but he was released in 1931.
Gandhi halted the campaign after the Britons made
concessions to his demands.
Gandhi as president
of the INC
In 1931 Gandhi represented the Indian National
Congress at a conference in London, but he wasn´t
successful there.
In 1932 Gandhi began new civil-disobedience
campaigns against British rules. Arrested twice, he fasted
several times for long periods; these fasts were effective
measures against the British, because a revolution might
have broken out in India, if he had died. In September 1932,
while Gandhi was in prison, he undertook a fast to death to
improve the status of the Hindu untouchables.
In 1934 Gandhi resigned his leadership of the
congress, but he still remained a powerful influence. The
limited home rule, granted by the Britions in 1934, could
not be implented without Gandhi´s approval.
Gandhi travelled througout India, teaching Ahimsa
(non-violence) and demanding eradiction of
untouchability.
The Independence of India
In 1939, when the Second World War broke out,
the Indian National Congress and Gandhi demanded a
declaration of war aims and their application to India. As a
reaction to the unsatisfactory response from the Britons,
they decided not to support Britain in the war, unless
complete and immediate independence would have been granted
to the country. The Britons refused that and offered
compromises, which were rejected by the Indians.
Gandhi
resumed his leadership from 1940 to 1941. He made propaganda
against the war. For that he was interned in 1942, but the
Britons released him two years later because of his failing
health.
In
1944 the Indian struggle for independence was in its final
stage. The British government agreed to Indian´s
independence on the condition, that the two contending
national groups, the Muslim League and the Indian National
Congress, should resolve their differences.
Gandhi
stood against the partition of India until he realized its
inevitability. So on Independence Day, August 15th, 1947,
India was devided into India (the Hindu state) and Pakistan
(the state for the Muslims). Gandhi refused to celebrate and
spent this day fasting and in prayer.
Religious
fights broke out, because nevertheless Hindus stayed in
Pakistan, and Muslims still lived in India. Ryots engulfed
in Calcutta. Gandhi fasted until thedisturbances were ceased.
In
January 1948 Gandhi fasted for the Muslims in India.
On
January the 30th, 1948 Gandhi was assassinated by a fanatic
Hindu on the way to his evening prayer.
Gandhi´s
personality
Gandhi
was a saint and a politician.
He
lived a spiritual and ascetic life of prayer, fasting and
meditation.
All
his life he held to two fundamental principles, a belief in Ahimsa
(non-violence) and the concept of
truth
(Satya).
|Sources:
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M. K. GANDHI: An Autobiography or The Story of My
Experiments with Truth
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DONN BYRNE: Gandhi - His Life Was The Message
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INTERNET
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LEXICONS
Quelle/Source:
Referate.de
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