What Their Story Gandhi PDF
What Their Story Gandhi PDF
What Their Story Gandhi PDF
GandhiPratima Mitchell
✸ WHAT’S THEIR STORY?✸
Gandhi
Gandhi
Electronic book published by ipicturebooks.com
24 W. 25th St.
New York, NY 10010
Originally published by
Byron Preiss Visual Publications, Inc.in 1967
e-ISBN 1-58824-293-5
✸ WHAT’S THEIR STORY?✸
Gandhi
THE FATHER OF MODERN INDIA
PRATIMA MITCHELL
Illustrated by Mrinal Mitra
4
M
ohandas Karamchand Gandhi was small, shy
and not very clever at school. Who would have
guessed that one day he would free India from
British rule?
M
ohandas went to
England when he
was seventeen, to
study to become a lawyer.
The journey took three long
weeks by ship. Mohandas
was very shy and unsure of
himself. At meal times he
stayed in his cabin and ate
the fruit and sweets that his
relatives had given him.
A
fter three years in England, Mohandas qualified
as a lawyer. He returned to his home town. Sadly,
his mother had died, but waiting for him was
Kasturba and their baby son, Harilal. Work was hard to
find in India, so in 1893 Mohandas accepted a job in
South Africa.
9
In those days South Africa was also part of the British
Empire. The British brought in thousands of workers
from India and other parts of Asia for their farms and
factories. Mohandas was shocked to find that the
workers were treated like slaves.
M
ohandas returned
to India to fetch his family,
and South Africa became
their home for the next twenty years.
M
ohandas was loved
and admired as a
politician because he
had a unique message. He
explained that standing up for
what is right and true should
never lead to anger or violence.
He called this way of behaving
Satyagraha, which means
Truth Force. His followers called
him Gandhibhai – brother
Gandhi. He taught the
Asians that they deserved
respect and should speak
up against unfair laws.
I
ndia has many large cities and towns, but most
Indians lived in villages, without clean water or
electricity. In one remote village called Champaran,
in Bihar, a farmer called Shukla had heard that
Mohandas wanted villagers to feel they were also part of
modern India.
Shukla and his friends could not grow the food they
needed because their British landlords forced them to
plant indigo, which was sold to Europe as a dye for cloth.
Shukla begged Mohandas to come and help them in
Champaran.
17
As there were no roads, Mohandas and Shukla rode to
Champaran on an elephant. Mohandas encouraged
the villagers not to be afraid of their British landlords
and to insist on growing whatever they wanted.
S
oon afterwards, something
terrible happened in the state of
Punjab, which made Mohandas
realise that all of India would have
to be involved in the freedom
movement.
I
ndians loved Mohandas and called him Bapu,
which means “father”. He used to say that he was
a Hindu, a Christian and a Muslim, and all
Indians were his family. People’s trust in his goodness
and leadership led them to make many sacrifices in
order to gain independence for their country.
T
he British did not think that Indians were ready
to be in charge of their own country, so in 1931
Mohandas visited London to talk to the
government. He chose to stay in the poorest area, the
East End, where he was warmly welcomed. Children
called him “Uncle Gandhi”, and one cheeky little boy
shouted, “Hey, Gandhi, where’s your trousers?”
23
S
oon after returning to India, Mohandas was once
again sent to prison, together with thousands of
other people who refused to obey the government.
Going to jail was an expected part of their struggle for
freedom from British rule, and they cheerfully allowed
themselves to be arrested. Altogether Mohandas spent
2,089 days, or nearly six years of his life, in Indian
prisons.
25
But getting rid of the British was only part of the story.
Mohandas was even more interested in getting Indians
to think seriously about their behaviour towards one
another. Often he would fast, going without food and
water to draw people’s attention to the need to become
kinder and more tolerant. Several times he came close
to death, but he also made his countrymen think.
26
A
lthough millions
loved and admired
Mohandas, very few
were prepared to be non-
violent all the time. The
Indian National Congress,
who were talking with the
British about
independence, thought that
violence could sometimes
be used to gain power. But
Mohandas did not agree.
He believed that non-
violence was the only way.
27
A
fter the war, the British finally realised
that it was impossible to resist the
Indian demand for independence. But
what was an independent India going to be
like? The Muslims wanted their own country.
In the fear and uncertainty of what was going
to happen, Muslims and Hindus started
fighting. Mohandas was completely against
separating Indians from one another. To him,
Indians were all brothers.
S
ix months after
independence,
Mohandas was walking
to an afternoon prayer
meeting at a friend’s house in
New Delhi. He was seventy-
eight, and walked slowly,
with his arms around two
young female relatives.
Suddenly a man came up
and greeted him. As
Mohandas folded his hands
in namaste, the stranger
pointed a pistol at him and
fired. “Hey Rama” (“Oh
God”) were Mohandas’s last
words as he fell. He had been
killed by a Hindu who could
not accept his message of
love and peace between
Muslims and Hindus.