India of My Dreams, Volume 10"A selection of the most telling and significant passage[s] from Mahatma Gandhi's writings." -- Foreword. |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 16
Page vi
... Independence , should feel little inclined to enthuse over the Independence that is dawning ; and cry out , like the Vedic seer , ' Lead us from darkness unto Light . ' Gandhiji has refused to subscribe to the fantastic theory that the ...
... Independence , should feel little inclined to enthuse over the Independence that is dawning ; and cry out , like the Vedic seer , ' Lead us from darkness unto Light . ' Gandhiji has refused to subscribe to the fantastic theory that the ...
Page 10
... independence of alien control and complete economic independence . So at one end you have political independence , at the other the econo- mic . It has two other ends . One of them is moral and social , the corresponding end is Dharma ...
... independence of alien control and complete economic independence . So at one end you have political independence , at the other the econo- mic . It has two other ends . One of them is moral and social , the corresponding end is Dharma ...
Page 328
... independence of violent type there will be crime , but no criminals , 265 ; under ! independence she cannot afford to have communal representation , 269 ; her independence will lose its meaning if provinces look upon themselves as ...
... independence of violent type there will be crime , but no criminals , 265 ; under ! independence she cannot afford to have communal representation , 269 ; her independence will lose its meaning if provinces look upon themselves as ...
Contents
Chapter | 3 |
IN DEFENCE OF NATIONALISM | 13 |
INDIA AND SOCIALISM | 22 |
Copyright | |
27 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
able become begin believe better body boys cattle CHAPTER common condition culture difficulty disease duty economic effort English equal evil faith feel follow force foreign freedom give given Government hands Harijan Hindi Hinduism Hindus hold hope human ideal impossible independence individual industry knowledge labour land language less living masses matter means millions mind moral Musalmans natural necessary never non-violence one's opinion organized peace person political poor possession possible present provinces realize reason receive regard religion religious requirements respect result rich rule schools serve social society soul speech spirit Swaraj teach teachers thing thought true truth universal untouchability village violence West whole women worker Writings Young India