圣雄甘地
Mahatma
Gandhi
作者:Unknown
来源:http://pitara.com
(生词可拖选或双击)

(Illustrated by
Amarjeet Malik)
Married by
arrangement at 13, Gandhi went to London to study law when he
was 18. He was admitted to the bar in 1891 and for a while
practiced law in Bombay. From 1893 to 1914 he worked for an
Indian firm in South Africa. During these years Gandhi's
humiliating experiences of overt racial discrimination propelled
him into agitation on behalf of the Indian community of South
Africa. He assumed leadership of protest campaigns and gradually
developed his techniques and tenets of nonviolent resistance
known as Satyagraha (literally, "steadfastness in truth").
Returning to India in January
1915, Gandhi soon became involved in labor organizing. The
Jallianwala Bagh massacre of Amritsar (1919), in which troops
fired on and killed hundreds of nationalist demonstrators,
turned him to direct political protest. Within a year he was the
dominant figure in the Indian National Congress, which he
launched on a policy of noncooperation with the British in
1920-22. Although total noncooperation was abandoned, Gandhi
continued civil disobedience, organizing protest marches against
unpopular British measures, such as the salt tax (1930), and
boycotts of British goods.
Gandhi was repeatedly imprisoned
by the British and resorted to hunger strikes as part of his
civil disobedience. His final imprisonment came in 1942-44,
after he had demanded total withdrawal of the British (the "Quit
India" movement) during World War II.
Gandhi also fought to improve the
status of the lowest classes of society, the ‘Untouchables’,
whom he called harijans ("children of God"). He believed in
manual labor and simple living; he spun thread and wove cloth
for his own garments and insisted that his followers do so, too.
He disagreed with those who wanted India to industrialize.
Gandhi was also tireless in
trying to forge closer bonds between the Hindu majority and the
numerous minorities of India, particularly the Muslims. His
greatest failure, in fact, was his inability to dissuade Indian
Muslims, led by Muhammad Ali Jinnah, from creating a separate
state, Pakistan. When India gained independence in 1947, after
negotiations in which he was a principal participant, Gandhi
opposed the partition of the subcontinent with such intensity
that he launched a mass movement against it. Ironically, he was
assassinated in Delhi on January 30, 1948, by a Hindu fanatic
who mistakenly thought Gandhi's anti-partition sentiment were
both pro-Muslim and pro-Pakistan.