Mahatma Gandhi

Mahatma Gandhi
Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi; 2 October 1869 – 30 January 1948) was the preeminent leader of the Indian independence movement in British-ruled India. Employing nonviolent civil disobedience, Gandhi led India to independence and inspired movements for civil rights and freedom across the world. The honorific Mahatma—applied to him first in 1914 in South Africa,—is now used worldwide. He is also called Bapuin India. In common parlance in India he is often called Gandhiji. He is unofficially called the Father of the Nation...
NationalityIndian
ProfessionCivil Rights Leader
Date of Birth2 October 1869
CityPortbandar, India
CountryIndia
To me God is truth and love, God is ethics and morality, God is fearlessness.
Nothing in the Shastra, which is manifestly contrary to universal truths and morals, can stand.
True knowledge gives a moral standing and moral strength.
Performance of duty and observance of morality are convertible terms.
Satyagraha can rid society of all evils, political, economic and moral.
A popular government wields a moral force, which is infinitely superior to the physical force that the foreign government could summon to its assistance.
The object of basic education is the physical, intellectual and moral development of children through the medium of handicraft.
Satan mostly employs comparatively moral instruments and the language of ethics to give his aims an air of respectability.
Economics that hurt the moral well-being of an individual or a nation are immoral and, therefore, sinful.
That economics is untrue which ignores or disregards moral values.
Moral result can only be produced by moral restraints.
In a nonviolent army, the general and the officers are elected, or are as if elected, when their authority is moral and rests solely on the willing obedience of the rank and file.
Khaddar delivers the poor from the bonds of the rich and creates a moral and spiritual bond between the classes and the masses.
Cowards can never be moral.