An Analysis Of Gandhi's Essay 'My Faith In Nonviolence'

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Talal Almutairi ENG 1113.6 February 21, 2017 Essay 2, Final Draft Gandhi’s “My Faith in Nonviolence” Mohandas K. Gandhi, a great Indian philosopher, wrote the essay “My Faith in Nonviolence”. His essay focuses on the use of nonviolence means on overthrowing the British rule of India. Gandhi’s main claim on this essay is that love is the higher law of life and that “every problem lends itself to solution” (p. 203) , if we followed that law. People in India call him Mahatma and according to the oxford dictionary it means a revered person regarded with love and respect, two words that Gandhi uses a lot in his writing, in this essay he used the word love eight times. He is recognized as “The Father of the Nation” in India. The essay “My Faith in Nonviolence” was written in 1930 and was directed to the Indian people. Also in 1930 Gandhi started a march to the sea to protest the British rule of India so this letter and many others were important for Gandhi to explain his message to his followers. Gandhi supported his claim …show more content…

He claims that it needs a lot of discipline and patients. In a try to support this claim Gandhi compare between him and his readers and admits that he too is capable of anger but he learned how to control it by practicing patience. Gandhi says “Nonviolence is a weapon of the strong. With the weak, it might easily be hypocrisy.” (p. 203), this sentence may face allot of criticism because in many cases especially at the times of war and occupation the citizens are the weak side. So is it fair to call them the hypocrite if they chose nonviolence? If the readers thought of it like that Gandhi may look like he is contradicting himself. There is another way of explaining this quote. What Gandhi meant is that the strong has the capability to punish the weak if he chooses to do so. But the weak have no option but

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