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Gandhi Mahatma
The Essential Writings (Oxford World's Classics)
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DescriptionMahatma Gandhi was a profound and original thinker, one of the most influential figures in the history of the twentieth century, and a famous advocate of non-violent civil resistance. His many and varied writings largely respond to the specific challenges he faced throughout his life, and they show his evolving ideas, as well as his deepening spirituality and humanity, over several decades. Drawn from the full range of Gandhi's published work--books, articles, broadcasts, interviews, letters--this superb selection illuminates his thinking on religion and spirituality, on society and its problems, on politics and British rule, and on non-violence and civil disobedience. The pieces are arranged to underscore Gandhi's belief that transformation in human life should be from the roots upwards, from the individual through to social and political relations. The Introduction by Judith Brown--a leading authority on Gandhi--provides a succinct account of his life and his ambiguous role in the Indian nationalist movement, examines what kind of thinker and writer Gandhi was, and shows how he built a coherent body of thought.
The Bhagavad Gita According to Gandhi
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DescriptionThe Bhagavad Gita, also called The Song of the Lord, is a 700-line section of a much longer Sanskrit war epic, the Mahabharata, about the legendary conflict between two branches of an Indian ruling family. Framed as a conversation between Krishna, an incarnation of the god Vishnu, and a general of one of the armies, the Gita is written in powerful poetic language meant to be chanted. Equally treasured as a guide to action, a devotional scripture, a philosophical text, and inspirational reading, it remains one of the world’s most influential, widely read spiritual books.The Bhagavad Gita According to Gandhi is based on talks given by Gandhi between February and November 1926 at the Satyagraha Ashram in Ahmedabad, India. During this time—a period when Gandhi had withdrawn from mass political activity—he devoted much of his time and energy to translating the Gita from Sanskrit into his native Gujarati. As a result, he met with his followers almost daily, after morning prayer sessions, to discuss the Gita’s contents and meaning as it unfolded before him. This book is the transcription of those daily sessions. Customer Reviewsneeds better formattingThe text of the Bhagavad Gita and Gandhi's commentary are not as distinct from each other as I would have liked. The exact same text of both Gita and commentary can be found in "Anasaktiyoga: The Gospel of Selfless Action- the Gita according to Gandhi", edited by Jim Rankin. In Rankin's edition the text of the Gita is very distinct from Gandhi's commentary, and Rankin even labels who is speaking in the Gita so it is easy for someone (like myself)not familiar with the Gita to follow the flow of the discourse. Unfortunately Rankin does not include even half of the commentary included in "The Bhagavad Gita According to Gandhi" (edited by John Strohmeier) so if you are seeking Gandhi's thoughts on the Gita this is the better edition to purchase. Great tool for studying the Gita I've read many different translations of the Bhagavad-Gita (and am always looking for more). As a translation of the Gita, this one is...fairly good. It has a slightly "fancy," mildly archaic form of English that uses a lot of "thee" and "thou," and sometimes uses some syntactical flourishes that make it very pretty, but sometimes difficult to understand--something like the New King James Bible, if you want a comparison. And, occasionally, there's a Sanskrit term in the text that didn't make it into the glossary, so that's something to keep in mind. But what i really like about this book is Gandhiji's commentary, which runs through the whole book, interspersed between lines of the text. It provides wonderful insight into how he understood and practiced the teachings of the Bhagavad Gita--and how that informed Satyagraha, and his overall commitment to non-violence. The only other Gita commentary i've read thus far is that contained in "Bhagavad Gita As It Is," by Swami Prabhupada, so that's the only commentary i can compare this one to: This commentary is much less substantial, but also has a bit less of... an "agenda" is not the word i want, but i can't come up with a better one. Gandhiji's commentary is not written from the perspective of a devout Krishna bhakta, so this book is not meant to teach one how to attain "Krishna Consciousness," as Swami Prabhupada and those devotees in his tradition might want. What this commentary does do is give some insight into how people from any and all walks of life can use the Gita as a guide to living a life of devotional service--no matter what deity (if any!) you worship. I'm glad i purchased this book; it has added substantially to my understanding of the Bhagavad Gita and the path of bhakti yoga, and i would recommend it highly--maybe not as your only copy of the Gita, but certainly a translation worth reading. Namaste This is the greatest second Gita you could buy for scriptural satyagraha, but read Sivananda's translation first This is a most amazing book. That being said I purchased this as my first Gita purchase and couldn't finish it. All the commentary is geared towards satyagraha and not much towards building an understanding for westerners. This book is a record of a reading which Gandhi gave at his ashram in India so uninformed westerners were obviously not his audience. I then purchased The Bhagavad Gita translated by Sri Swami Sivananda, this is the most authentic translation with illuminating commentary and the one I would recommend to start with. Returning to Gandhi's gita with this background understanding I can now read with the background knowledge to read the scripture written buy one of the greatest contemporary mahatmas. The follower of Satyagraha in this iron age are blessed, so please buy this new reprint which is only a fraction of the price the used vendors were charging last year. Also there are several other books, readily available on amazon although some are out of print, that I would recommend if you are specifically interested in Gandhi's writing. -Non-Violent Resistance (Satyagraha) -Vows and Observances -Prayer -Book of Prayers And again not Ghandi but Swami Sivananda's gita as a starting point -The Bhagavad Gita Om shanti shanti shanti Gandhi's Gita If you wish to understand the Bhagavad Gita itself, order one without Gandhi's commentary first. Reading the Gita with Gandhi's commentary interwoven can disrupt the flow and continuity of ideas. Nonetheless, by the end of the book you will appreciate some of the major reasons Gandhi loved the Gita, and its calling to truth, benevolence, and non-attachment to the fruits of one's actions. The Gita was of course Gandhi's favorite text, and those wishing to fully appreciate Gandhi's religious thought will find this helpful in giving dimension to Gandhi's Hindu beliefs *** OK Book **** I bought this book because I wanted to read the Bhagvad Gita and this one was written by Gandhi. How ever I found that it is not a good translation and at many places uses words which are commonly understood only by hindus. So if you do not have a good background about hinduism then I would not recommend this. Instead the translation by one Stephen Mitchel is much better.
Peace: The Words and Inspiration of Mahatma Gandhi (Me-We)
DescriptionA collection of of words and inspiration by four of the 20th Century's most preeminent humanitarians. Each book in this series features an introduction by Archbishop Desmond Tutu.
Mahatma Gandhi: Selected Political Writings
DescriptionBased on the complete edition of his works, this new volume presents Gandhi's most important political writings arranged around the two central themes of his political teachings: satyagraha (the power of non-violence) and swaraji (freedom). Dennis Dalton's general introduction and headnotes highlight the life of Gandhi, set the readings in hisorical context, and provide insight into the conceptual framework of Gandhi's political theory.Customer ReviewsAs good as a book can be....The book was in good shape, no writing on the inside, and I received it pretty quickly. Opinion Dennis Dalton, editor, is a Gandhi scholar and professor of political science. This collection of Gandhi's political writing is the best introduction to Gandhi's thinking that I have found. Professor Dalton's Introduction and the structuring of the writings quickly give the reader a framework in which Gandhi's life and work can be clearly comprehended.
Gandhi An Autobiography: The Story of My Experiments With Truth
DescriptionTranslated by Mahadev Desai and with a New PrefaceThe only authorized American edition Mohandas K. Gandhi is one of the most inspiring figures of our time. In his classic autobiography he recounts the story of his life and how he developed his concept of active nonviolent resistance, which propelled the Indian struggle for independence and countless other nonviolent struggles of the twentieth century. In a new foreword, noted peace expert and teacher Sissela Bok urges us to adopt Gandhi's "attitude of experimenting, of tesing what will and will not bear close scrutiny, what can and cannot be adapted to new circumstances," in order to bring about change in our own lives and communities. All royalties earned on this book are paid to the Navajivan Trust, founded by Gandhi, for use in carrying on his work. Gandhi's nonviolent struggles in South Africa and India had already brought him to such a level of notoriety, adulation, and controversy that when asked to write an autobiography midway through his career, he took it as an opportunity to explain himself. Although accepting of his status as a great innovator in the struggle against racism, violence, and, just then, colonialism, Gandhi feared that enthusiasm for his ideas tended to exceed a deeper understanding. He says that he was after truth rooted in devotion to God and attributed the turning points, successes, and challenges in his life to the will of God. His attempts to get closer to this divine power led him to seek purity through simple living, dietary practices (he called himself a fruitarian), celibacy, and ahimsa, a life without violence. It is in this sense that he calls his book The Story of My Experiments with Truth, offering it also as a reference for those who would follow in his footsteps. A reader expecting a complete accounting of his actions, however, will be sorely disappointed. Although Gandhi presents his episodes chronologically, he happily leaves wide gaps, such as the entire satyagraha struggle in South Africa, for which he refers the reader to another of his books. And writing for his contemporaries, he takes it for granted that the reader is familiar with the major events of his life and of the political milieu of early 20th-century India. For the objective story, try Yogesh Chadha's Gandhi: A Life. For the inner world of a man held as a criminal by the British, a hero by Muslims, and a holy man by Hindus, look no further than these experiments. --Brian Bruya Customer ReviewsOrder OnlineHaven't read the book yet but got it on time and in great condition (Brand new) Cheap and worth it Gandhi Revealed I read this book as part of a yoga book club. In his autobiography, Gandhi comes across as very unlikeable and tiresome. Furthermore, although Gandhi promotes non-violence outside the home, within his own home he is cruel and abusive particularly to his wife but also to his children--he did not practice what he preached. Many reviewers here mention his obsession with food and diet, which to me is indicative of eating disorders. Instead of interacting with people and truly caring about them, he constantly mentions the adulation he received. Ghandi clearly loved to be in control--he wanted to control his diet, he wanted to control people, and sex was abhorrent because he was not in control. My view of Gandhi was radically altered by reading this book. Phenomenal! This is one of my favorite books, a powerful and gripping autobiography of Mahatma Gandhi. It changed how I viewed Gandhi. Before reading this book, I only knew him from his famous quotes and some knowledge of Indian history, but now I understand his life a lot more and what made him so great and yet flawed like any human being. It depends on an appeal to someones capable of caring I read today is his birthday. So I hear that old tune in my head, " today it's your birthday..." and think about ultimately the lessons I took from this book. Since I store knowledge I think a bit differently than many- I also store books that way. For one thing they give me impressions, and they hit emotional centers, they call me to actions, they serve as organizers for understanding experiences, or as ways of explaining experience. They function as verbs, occasionally nouns. For a lot of people I believe they are adjectives or maybe sometimes adverbs. Gandhi wrote this book about his life and reasons. I read it three times and at three different stages, not recently, but soon I'll undertake it again as I am in another stage almost transformed. It struck me on many levels, the book was helpful in processing my experiences teaching, and living, and ultimately assisted me in that part of a me that has to be here alive "doing something about it." So it's his birthday. And injustices live on. Racial unfairness and "institutionalized" forms live on. Look at the poor here to understand that. What he tells you primarily on one level in the book is that the way he interpreted doing something to change this was to always act on the notion that you stand up to the power with the fairness and rightness of your claim, And with an ability to look at self too. So on one level reading that as it looked in his context, and as it looked in his complete mindset, that has value. I've come quite able to see that you are appealing to your oppressor to face their own darkness or capability, or actions, as if you. I've just got this simple format to say that reading how he came to his actions, how his education functioned within what happened to him, his life, his initial issues with the limits and unfairnesses he saw in an oppressor/oppressee dynamiic are powerful things to read, and his responses- that's a narrative here that allows you to process his actions in a context,see reasons, see ultimate ethical perspectives. It's a massively helpful part because he seeks to make it so possible for any humble, bumbling person that has been given the clarity of an insight, and an abhorance for toleration of further wrong to act. So it helped build in me an internal barometer already in place. Then there are other layers in his story. Interesting ones. For one thing I always like to listen to how he talks about his relationship to his wife. How he describes ultimately finding the relating one where his aggression functioned, ultimately if biologically driven how that really was for her, for him. He calls the marital act one always routed in aggression. I think that's correct. So he's actually redifining for you "act of love" in case your wires crossed. I think so anyway. I think he's showing you it's amazingly complex. How at root he freed her from the physicality-you have to sit with that it's rather personal- to relating for himself instead through I believe the importance of the relationship, his weaknesses and his responsibility in trying to reveal this I think is a man showing you that he will analyze even something he may never fully get. I may read it differently now. I thought he never got it. Then but I was reading within a very difficult and different perspective and time in my life when kids were small and I felt abandoned often to their daily life over the right to act on outside world things and torn by too many real needs in both. So, right, but he has the capacity to understand that his drives can be looked at for how they hurt another. That he "gets." And he explains, certainly not to just "testify," though it is that. It's a model of how a person works on their effect on another. Love would call us to that. So within the book one part that I mull about is his relating the family dimension. I read some criticism of him in that somewhere else-but I think at the least he is speaking of a cost paid to family through his work, or his attempt to understand this from their shoes. He addresses for instance how he educated, or failed to, or the resentments of his son or his family. He is showing he is willing to address these resentments and that in my world is a rare bird. I think if you read here you will learn something of value even if ultimately you also have to face a man telling you he's a normal man. Just as we all one day face that fact about everyone we maybe idealized. Another thing I found interesting was how he talked of experiment, when he discusses his relationship to food, it's taken me a long while on that. It's sufficent to say how he relates to milk, stomach pain, valuing animals, life, doing as little damage by or through killing, living values to full extent-it hits you on the most basic levels. We eat daily to sustain life. He looks at what that means, what's going on. What is the process. How he relates to food. You do this everyday, eating, and at least for me this related to levels where you collect some sense of maybe violating a principle like "not killing." It's worth the time to read to see how doing it yourself proceeds his actions, as one of the greatest tools in his box. So Gandhi made me think about this. I would grow impatient reading about the food actually-or think it juvenile or have some thread of sarcasm- and that would require I look at why I was dismissive. Ultimately that attitude or that kind of behavior usually means I'm unwilling to do something. Overall I read during times of illness realizing that on that level, in this life, I made fatal errors in seeing and acting, behaving. Then I recall enjoying and learning from the book about how he brought to consciousness so much, and then informed actions via working from great human models of behavior-those that improved human relating through an active lexicon of love. So maybe I can see why working one to one daily with kids on reading for instance is such a pleasurable thing. It's such a love driven process. I can then relate to the bigger messages he's speaking. It's rather hard for me after engaging actively such a text and person-since I cannot do so "in person" or through shared experience, it's hard not to hear this as a walk into his thoughts and his meanings. As a process of "becoming." And that is how the book worked for me as a change agent. A model for me, or a "way," with the willingness to confront error, mistake, drives, biologies, stupidities, evolved into streaming a life/consciousness through an experimental process that's driven by that core value system to strive with love based acting for a better world. I think this is a book, I'm saying, one "takes up." And so it's your birthday, may you live on in those that take you up to continue that work and move out of self to selflessness to functioning for the good of humanity. And thus cause each of us growth and to find the capacity to love. Quite interesting to the non-expert Gandhi's autobiography, written in his fifties with great accomplishments yet to come, cannot be read without companion study. He explicitly says significant content was skipped, and one can easily sense that when reading, even without much knowledge of the events. The book is mostly very interesting in its reflections on Gandhi's youth and the years in South Africa where many of his ideas formed and were first tried in practice. The 1910s and 1920s years in India are less engaging, with more political content and more details oriented toward what was a current, familiar audience. The target audience at the time also knew much more about what was going on, the various places, the concepts, and the people involved. Here is where I would have preferred more background, which instead must be provided for the non-expert by other sources. Initially I was surprised by the amount of space devoted to diet and other forms of self-denial, such as "lustful" sexual relations. Eventually that made sense as anchors for how Gandhi thought and adhered to moral principles (and tried to define them), not just in sweeping national issues, but highly personal matters. To him, only if you were personally pure, or nearly pure, could you deserve God's full love and support in higher missions. Gandhi humbly describes his successes and shows no mercy in pointing out his slips. Occasionally he defends himself against enemies or ones who simply disagreed, and it was refreshing, without the whining and partisan attacks of modern politicians. In many cases, Gandhi was quite gracious to his opponents. However, that was not true when calling out racism and other morally objectionable actions that he and others sought to remove, often successfully. Those stories are the highlight of the book. Gandhi cannot be considered a great writer, assuming the translation is faithful to his style and vocabulary. No singing Lincoln-esque prose here. Pretty straightforward language accessible to average readers, as when he compares religions or ponders racism while Indians practiced the caste system. The indirect descriptions of the culture in England, South Africa and India were sharp reminders of how much has changed in a hundred years. I could only imagine the smell and filth in scenes of Gandhi's travels and local poverty. Certainly anyone interested in Gandhi must read the autobiography and not rely on traditional biographies and historical studies.
The Essential Gandhi: An Anthology of His Writings on His Life, Work, and Ideas
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DescriptionMohandas K. Gandhi, called Mahatma (“great soul”), was the father of modern India, but his influence has spread well beyond the subcontinent and is as important today as it was in the first part of the twentieth century and during this nation’s own civil rights movement. Taken from Gandhi’s writings throughout his life, The Essential Gandhi introduces us to his thoughts on politics, spirituality, poverty, suffering, love, non-violence, civil disobedience, and his own life. The pieces collected here, with explanatory head notes by Gandhi biographer Louis Fischer, offer the clearest, most thorough portrait of one of the greatest spiritual leaders the world has known.“Gandhi was inevitable. If humanity is to progress, Gandhi is inescapable. . . . We may ignore him at our own risk.” –Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. With a new Preface drawn from the writings of Eknath Easwaran In the annals of spirituality certain books stand out both for their historical importance and for their continued relevance. The Vintage Spiritual Classics series offers the greatest of these works in authoritative new editions, with specially commissioned essays by noted contemporary commentators. Filled with eloquence and fresh insight, encouragement and solace, Vintage Spiritual Classics are incomparable resources for all readers who seek a more substantive understanding of mankind's relation to the divine. Customer ReviewsEditor's selection of Gandhi writing, not chronologicalDisappointed that Gandhi's writing was lumped together by topic selected by the editor, rather than by chronology, so you can't really see how his thought developed over time. Still a good selection. Inspiring! "The Essential Gandhi" is the most inspiring work I have read in a long time. Reading about the life of this most amazing man can be nothing short of inspirational. It makes me want to change my own life in so many areas. I give this work my highest recommendation. The Essential Gandhi A most insightful body of work. To get a real grasp of Gandhis life, and his non-violence movement, this is a must read. Surprisingly good The best thing about this book for me is that in short chapters a reader is given a relatively thorough understanding of Ghandi as he spoke about different categories such as non violence, the power of the mind, political principles or how he felt about himself as a father. The kind of book you can pick up to read a chapter in an hour or so. outstanding and inspirational Wow! This is such an inspirational book! I'm chagrined that I hadn't read it before. In this book, Ganhi's thoughts, experiments, approaches that resulted in the coming together of millions of people, guiding them to not just a more enlightened spiritual being, but, like most great religious leaders, moving them toward [political] justice. Brilliant read. Perhaps because of the interpretation or the shear brilliance of the man, I found this book to be a much slower read than many books. As one with an interest in personal - spiritual growth as well as political movements, this was an outstanding book for me. I was surprised to read about his relationships with his children. I couldn't give this a rating any lower than A+. Gandhi Mahatma News![]()
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