Essay On Mahatma Gandhi

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Mahatma Gandhi is one of India’s biggest key factors in gaining its independence from Great Britain. Gandhi became a civil rights pioneer making himself an architect of a non-violent form of civil obedience that would sway the world to a more positive or peaceful perspective on life itself. Mahatma’s eloquent embracement of an abstinent lifestyle based on prayer, meditation, and fasting earned him respect fast to who most around began to call him “the great-souled one”.
Growing up, Gandhi was shy and an ordinary student, but very rebellious as in his teenage years he would participate in smoking, eating meat, or even stealing change from household servants. When he turned 18 he sailed for London to study Law, Gandhi had a difficult time transitioning to Western Culture as he became committed to a meatless diet eventually joining the committee of the London Vegetarian Society where he started to read a variety of sacred texts about world religions. About 3 years later around 1891, he returned to India and learned that his mother had died weeks earlier. Now he has lost both his parents and is struggling to find work in his home land as he obtains a one-year contract in South Africa about 2 years later. Quickly after he …show more content…

He was not there long as by 1915, he returns to home to India and receives a hero’s welcome. This same year, Gandhi and his followers found Satyagraha ashram, a religiously oriented shared farm where Gandhi, his family, his followers lived. Mahatma is arrested in 1922 for sedition and remains imprisoned until 1924. After this, he avoids politics and strictly focuses his writings on the development of India. Not including his absence from politics, Gandhi became the President of the Indian National Congress. In 1930, he forms the Declaration of Independence for India and then begins to lead his Salt March to the Sea, in which he was later arrested for violating the Salt

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