
More Than Half A Century After His Death, Mahatma Gandhi Continues To Inspire Millions Throughout The World. Yet Modern India, Most Strikingly In Its Decision To Join The Nuclear Arms Race, Seems To Have Abandoned Much Of His Nonviolent Vision. Inspired By Recent Events In India, Stanley Wolpert Offers This Subtle And Profound Biography Of India's Great Soul. Wolpert Compellingly Chronicles The Life Of Mahatma Gandhi From His Early Days As A Child Of Privilege To His Humble Rise To Power And His Assassination At The Hands Of A Man Of His Own Faith. This Trajectory, Like That Of Christ, Was The Result Of Gandhi's Passion: His Conscious Courting Of Suffering As The Means To Reach Divine Truth. From His Early Campaigns To Stop Discrimination In South Africa To His Leadership Of A People's Revolution To End The British Imperial Domination Of India, Gandhi Emerges As A Man Of Inner Conflicts Obscured By His Political Genius And Moral Vision. Influenced Early On By Nonviolent Teachings In Hinduism, Jainism, Christianity, And Buddhism, He Came To Insist On The Primacy Of Love For One's Adversary In Any Conflict As The Invincible Power For Change. His Unyielding Opposition To Intolerance And Oppression Would Inspire India Like No Leader Since The Buddha--creating A Legacy That Would Encourage Martin Luther King, Jr., Nelson Mandela, And Other Global Leaders To Demand A Better World Through Peaceful Civil Disobedience. By Boldly Considering Gandhi The Man, Rather Than The Living God Depicted By His Disciples, Wolpert Provides An Unprecedented Representation Of Gandhi's Personality And The Profound Complexities That Compelled His Actions And Brought Freedom To India.
This biography investigates the core question of how Mahatma Gandhi’s personal internal conflicts and his deliberate pursuit of suffering shaped his political philosophy and the liberation of India. Stanley Wolpert, a distinguished historian of South Asian studies, utilizes extensive historical records and primary accounts to deconstruct the myth of Gandhi as a living saint. By examining the man behind the icon, Wolpert argues that Gandhi’s commitment to nonviolence was not merely a political strategy but a deeply personal, spiritual discipline rooted in a synthesis of diverse religious traditions.
What You Will Find
Historians and scholars frequently cite this work for its balanced, humanizing portrayal of a figure often obscured by hagiography. Readers note the academic rigor of the prose, which provides a clear-eyed look at the complexities of Gandhi’s personality and his enduring global influence.
Page Count:
336
Publication Date:
2001-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0199728720
ISBN-13:
9780199728725
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