Publisher's Synopsis
Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi was brought into the world in Western India in 1869. He was taught in London and later made a trip to South Africa, where he encountered prejudice and took up the privileges of Indians, initiating his first mission of latent opposition. In 1915 he got back to British-controlled India, bringing to a country in the pains of autonomy his obligation to peaceful change, and his conviction generally in the force of truth. Under Gandhi's lead, a great many dissidents would take part in mass missions of common insubordination, looking for change through ahimsa or peacefulness. For Gandhi, the long way towards Indian freedom would prompt detainment and difficulty, yet he not even once failed to remember the standards of truth and peacefulness so dear to him. Written during the 1920s, Gandhi's collection of memoirs recounts his battles and his motivations; a strong and getting through explanation of an uncommon life.
M. K. GANDHI - The Father of Nation is the personal history of Mohandas K. Gandhi, covering his life from youth through to 1921. It was composed and distributed in his diary, Navjivan from 1925 to 1929. It was started at the demand of Swami Anand and other close collaborators of Gandhi, who urged him to make sense of the foundation of his public missions. M. K. GANDHI - The Father of Nation is the individual record of the existence of the one who liberated India from colonization through the Satyagraha - peaceful dissent - development. His initial childhood life, legitimate examinations, cleansing, and extreme salvation of his country is painstakingly described in this rousing and basic work of impossible significance.