NAME Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi — better known by the honorific Mahatma, meaning "Great Soul" in Sanskrit.
WHAT FAMOUS FOR Leader of India’s nonviolent struggle for independence from British rule. A global symbol of peace, simplicity, and civil disobedience.
BIRTH Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi was born on October 2, 1869, in the city of Porbandar, in present-day Gujarat, India. Porbandar is an old sea-port, overlooked by the distant Barda Hills, and even in ancient days ships from far-off lands went there to trade.
FAMILY BACKGROUND Gandhi belonged to the Modh Baniya caste of Gujarati Hindu tradesmen and came from a well-respected family in Gujarat. His father, Karamchand Uttamchand Gandhi (1822–1885), served as the Diwan (Chief Minister) of Porbandar and later in Rajkot and Wankaner. Karamchand had very little formal education, but his knowledge and experience made him a good administrator, though he had one fault - a bad temper.
His mother, Putlibai Gandhi, was a deeply religious woman who influenced Gandhi's principles of simplicity and devotion. She came from a Pranami Vaishnava Hindu family, whose religious texts included the Bhagavad Gita, the Bhagavata Purana, and a collection of 14 texts with teachings that the tradition believes to include the essence of the Vedas, the Quran and the Bible. Gandhi was deeply influenced by his mother, describing her as extremely pious, noting that she "would not think of taking her meals without her daily prayers... she would take the hardest vows and keep them without flinching".
CHILDHOOD As a child, Mohandas Gandhi was, in the words of his sister Raliat, "restless as mercury—either playing or roaming about." One of his more mischievous pastimes, she recalled, was twisting dogs' ears, a habit that might startle those who later saw him as the very embodiment of nonviolence.
The youngest of six children born to Kaba Gandhi, he was the darling of the household, affectionately nicknamed "Moniya" by family and friends. Rarely content to stay indoors, Moniya would dash home for meals and then disappear again, vanishing into the dusty alleys of Porbandar for another round of spirited play.
From early on, Gandhi was deeply influenced by tales from Indian mythology and epics, particularly the stories of Shravana, the devoted son, and King Harishchandra, who gave up his kingdom to honor a promise. These tales left a profound mark on his young conscience. "It haunted me," he would later write in his autobiography, "and I must have acted Harishchandra to myself times without number." It was in these formative years that Gandhi’s lifelong devotion to truth and moral integrity took root.
Despite his spiritual bent, Gandhi was a timid boy at heart—terrified of ghosts, snakes, and even the dark. Yet he also showed signs of a budding mystic: often spending hours absorbed in religious texts, especially the Bhagavad Gita, whose teachings would shape the entire course of his adult philosophy.
EDUCATION Mohandas Gandhi’s early education was modest and often challenging. At the primary school he first attended in Porbandar, children learned by tracing the alphabet in the dust with their fingers. Fortunately, when his father became dewan of Rajkot, Gandhi gained access to better educational facilities. Although he occasionally earned prizes and scholarships at local schools, his overall academic record was unremarkable. One report described him as “good at English, fair in Arithmetic, weak in Geography; conduct very good, bad handwriting.”
A shy and reserved child, Gandhi was married at 13, which caused him to miss a year of schooling. He neither excelled in the classroom nor on the playing field, and his interests were mainly confined to books and lessons.
In 1887, Gandhi barely passed the matriculation examination of the University of Bombay and enrolled at Samaldas College in Bhavnagar. He struggled with the sudden switch from his native Gujarati to English, making lectures difficult to follow. Unhappy there and under family pressure to continue the tradition of holding high office in Gujarat, he left college to pursue legal studies abroad. (1)
At 19, Gandhi traveled to England to study law at University College London and was admitted to the Inner Temple, one of the Inns of Court, to train as a barrister. Determined to improve his English and Latin, he took the London University matriculation exam. Though his Indian background made him an outsider among peers who often snubbed him, he focused on his studies and retreated into philosophy and self-improvement. During his three years in England, Gandhi’s attention was less on academics and more on personal and moral development. He became involved with the London Vegetarian Society, where he connected with like-minded individuals and began exploring ethical questions related to diet and lifestyle.
CAREER RECORD Gandhi adhered to a strict daily routine that no one—neither the King of the British Empire nor his closest friends—could disrupt. Rising at 2:00 a.m., he began his day by reading Hindu or Christian scriptures and saying prayers. He then spent the quiet early hours responding to correspondence before performing his ritual ablutions. (2)
1891 After returning to India in 1891, Gandhi briefly worked in Rajkot, where he struggled to build a successful legal practice before moving to Bombay (now Mumbai).
1893 Gandhi took a job representing an Indian merchant in a lawsuit in South Africa, where he would live for 21 years. It was in South Africa that Gandhi first employed nonviolent resistance in a campaign for civil rights and developed his satyagraha philosophy. He founded the Natal Indian Congress and his writings exposed to the world the injustices suffered by Indians and others.
1915 Upon returning to India , Gandhi joined the Indian National Congress and was introduced to Indian issues, politics and the Indian people primarily by Gopal Krishna Gokhale.
1920 Gandhi took leadership of the Congress in 1920 and began escalating demands until on 26 January 1930 the Indian National Congress declared the independence of India. He led nationwide campaigns for easing poverty, expanding women's rights, building religious and ethnic amity, ending untouchability, and achieving swaraj or self-rule.
APPEARANCE Gandhi was a small, physically unimpressive man. For most of his adult life, he weighed around 100 pounds and was five feet five inches tall (though some accounts put his height at five feet four inches). At the age of 70, he weighed 46.7 kg with a body mass index (BMI) of 17.1, which falls in the underweight category.
His physical description included a big nose and large ears, with nickel-rimmed spectacles. As one British newspaperman described him: "He seemed to be all spectacles... His bones positively stick out from his body... A large portion of his chest was protruding from his upper garment. His mouth is shaped as if it once had prominent teeth. They have now disappeared, leaving a gaping void".
His small eyes had a flashing lustre and a "twinkling" quality, and his toothless mouth hid a genial smile. (3)
FASHION Gandhi’s style of dress evolved with each chapter of his life, reflecting both personal transformation and political purpose. As a boy, he wore a traditional dhoti, close-fitting coat, and cap. During his student years in London, he adopted the attire of a proper English gentleman—suits, boots, hat—spending lavishly on Western clothes and practicing the art of tying a perfect cravat. It was a short-lived phase.
When he first arrived in South Africa, he wore a frock coat and turban, the outfit of a young barrister. But after returning to India from his successful legal practice abroad, Gandhi renounced Western clothing entirely, rejecting what he saw as symbols of wealth and colonial status. Instead, he chose to dress like the poorest of India’s rural population—donning a simple, homespun dhoti made from hand-spun yarn. Often barefoot and leaning on a sturdy wooden staff, this minimalist appearance became his unmistakable signature.
Gandhi’s attire was not merely aesthetic—it was deeply political. He championed the spinning of khadi (homespun cloth) as a symbol of Indian self-reliance and resistance to British industrial dominance. Where once idle Indian workers had depended on imported British textiles, Gandhi encouraged them to spin and weave their own fabric. The movement gained such momentum that the spinning wheel was later added to the flag of the Indian National Congress.
Even at the height of his international fame, Gandhi stuck to the same humble garments: a loose cotton loincloth and, when needed, a shawl—both made from coarse fabric he had spun himself. On more “formal” occasions, he might add a homespun robe and sandals. He always went barefoot, wore steel-rimmed spectacles that constantly slipped down his nose, and carried a simple Ingersoll pocket watch on a string.
On May 25, 1947, a thief stole Gandhi's cherished five-shilling Ingersoll pocket watch that had dangled from his loincloth for 25 years. It was taken amid the chaos of an adoring crowd at Kanpur railway station. The thief later returned the watch six months later, having been overcome with remorse.
Fittingly, Richard Attenborough’s film Gandhi, about the simply clad statesman, won an Oscar for Best Costume Design—ironic, given that Gandhi himself wore virtually the same outfit every day.
CHARACTER Gandhi's personality was shaped by a number of defining character traits. He was deeply conscientious and principled, with a strong sense of morality and self-discipline. Highly agreeable and open to new ideas and experiences, he also displayed a remarkable level of extraversion in his public life, while maintaining a notably low tendency toward neuroticism.
Truth and honesty were the cornerstones of his philosophy. He rejected violence, steered clear of materialistic pursuits, and consistently upheld high moral standards. His disciplined nature extended into every aspect of his daily life—he approached tasks with great care, had a strong affinity for cleanliness and order, and maintained an upright posture whether walking or sitting. He was known to walk briskly and purposefully, never slouching, and always carried himself with energy and poise.
A key source of Gandhi’s emotional resilience was his unwavering faith in a higher power. This spiritual grounding helped him avoid negative emotions and reinforced his commitment to living according to his values. His steadfast adherence to personal principles, combined with his calm temperament, made him a model of emotional stability and conscientiousness.
SPEAKING VOICE Gandhi's speaking voice was clear and measured, though somewhat soft. He spoke both in Hindi and English, depending on his audience. His speeches were characteristically thoughtful and deliberate in delivery. Gandhi himself noted that early in his career he was quite nervous about public speaking, being described as "hesitant in court" and "tongue-tied" as a student.
SENSE OF HUMOUR Gandhi possessed a warm and disarming sense of humour that endeared him to people across generations and backgrounds. His wit was sharp yet kind—often sly, occasionally whimsical, but never cruel. Rajaji described him as “a man of laughter,” adding, “he was a very companionable man... he liked to laugh, and he liked people who laughed. He liked children, he liked women, he liked good and cheerful company.” (3)
His puckish sense of humour became legendary. When asked what he thought of Western civilization, Gandhi famously quipped, “It would be a good idea.” And when criticized for wearing only a loincloth to an audience with the King-Emperor at Buckingham Palace, he replied, “His Majesty had enough clothes for both of us.”
Gandhi laughed easily and heartily, especially in conversation. His lightness of spirit and ability to find humour in even the most serious of settings made him not only a revered leader but also a deeply relatable and human one.
RELATIONSHIPS Gandhi married Kasturba Mohandas Gandhi (née Kasturba Gokuldas Kapadia) in May 1883 when he was 13 years old and she was 14, in an arranged marriage arranged by their families. Recalling their marriage, Gandhi once said, "As we didn't know much about marriage, for us it meant only wearing new clothes, eating sweets and playing with relatives".
The couple had five children together. Their first child was born in 1885 but died shortly after birth. Their surviving children were Harilal (1888), Manilal (1892), Ramdas (1897), and Devdas (1900). Kasturba became deeply involved in Gandhi's political and social activism, first in South Africa and later in India, and was arrested and sentenced to three months in prison in 1913 for her participation in his movements.
Gandhi's relationships extended to his numerous followers and associates, with whom he maintained correspondence and deep connections throughout his life. He was known for his ability to connect with people from all walks of life, from political leaders to common villagers.
MONEY AND FAME Gandhi’s views on wealth were deeply rooted in his ideals of simple living and trusteeship. He believed that the wealthy should regard themselves not as owners, but as trustees—custodians of their wealth for the benefit of society. For Gandhi, true economic progress was not measured by material accumulation, but by the dignity, welfare, and equality of all individuals.
Even after achieving global fame, Gandhi chose to live in voluntary poverty. He renounced material possessions and advocated for economic equality, declaring, “Economic equality is the master key to non-violent independence. Working for economic equality means abolishing the eternal conflict between capital and labour.” He practiced what he preached, living in self-sustaining communities, eating simple vegetarian meals, and undertaking fasts both for spiritual reflection and political resistance.
Though he believed wealth itself was not inherently evil—“Capital as such is not evil, it is its wrong use that is evil,” he said—he found that reducing his needs and possessions brought clarity and peace. Over time, he pared down his belongings to the bare essentials: a watch, eyeglasses, sandals, a bowl, a spoon mended with bamboo, and a book of devotional songs.
Despite being a national icon, Gandhi always traveled third class by train and stayed in modest lodgings, such as Kingsley Hall in London, where his goat famously stayed tethered on the roof. His life was a testament to the power of simplicity, integrity, and service.
FOOD AND DRINK Gandhi’s relationship with food was deeply intertwined with his philosophy of self-discipline, nonviolence, and experimentation in living. A lifelong vegetarian, he initially followed the dietary customs of his Vaishnava upbringing, but during his time in London, vegetarianism became a conscious moral and philosophical choice. He had promised his mother to abstain from meat and alcohol while studying law abroad, and although he initially struggled to maintain his diet—facing warnings from friends that it would ruin his health and studies—he eventually discovered a vegetarian restaurant. There, he not only found sustenance but also a community. He joined the London Vegetarian Society, served on its Executive Committee, and even founded a local chapter. These early organizational experiences proved formative in his later political work.
Influenced by ethical vegetarian thinkers such as Henry Salt and George Washington Carver and by members of the Theosophical Society, Gandhi came to believe that vegetarianism was not just a dietary choice but a moral imperative. He went so far as to avoid plucking fruit directly from trees, preferring only to eat what had naturally fallen, believing even that act of harvest could be a form of violence.
Over time, Gandhi’s dietary experiments became more rigorous and ascetic. He followed a plant-based, low-salt, often raw diet that in many ways anticipated modern veganism. For a period beginning in 1911, he cut salt entirely from his diet, only reintroducing it in the late 1920s after doctors insisted, and even then limiting himself to 30 grains per day. He ate only two meals a day within a restricted time window—an approach that closely resembles today’s intermittent fasting—and fasted regularly, believing it allowed the body to rest, detoxify, and regenerate. His meals were intentionally simple: a few segments of grapefruit, goat’s curds, lemon soup, or raw fruits substituted for processed sugar. He had a known fondness for mangoes.
His food intake was sometimes reduced to just four elements: wheat, vegetables, a little oil, and fruit. However, this minimal diet led to illness, and he reluctantly added goat’s milk and salt back into his regimen. Despite his international fame, Gandhi lived in voluntary poverty, owning only a few personal items: a pair of steel-rimmed spectacles, a watch, sandals, a bowl, a book of devotional songs, and a spoon repaired with a bit of bamboo and string. He wore dentures, but only while eating, and insisted on a nightly enema before bed, usually around 9 p.m.
Gandhi used fasting not just as a health practice, but also as a powerful tool for moral and political protest. One of the most notable examples was his 1932 "fast unto death" in support of the Untouchables. The dramatic protest brought together Hindu and Dalit leaders, who gathered around his bedside and ultimately reached a compromise.
Gandhi's approach to food—marked by restraint, experimentation, and ethical reflection—was a key expression of his larger vision: that personal habits could serve as instruments of spiritual discipline and social change. (4)
MUSIC AND ARTS Gandhi maintained an active and deeply nuanced relationship with music throughout his life. His early exposure came from growing up in a devout Vaishnav household, where he listened to his mother sing devotional bhajans and was captivated by the musical recitations of the Ramayana. From a young age, he recognized music’s power to uplift, unify, and inspire—a force capable of sustaining people on the long path toward freedom.
For Gandhi, music meant more than melody; it symbolized rhythm, harmony, and inner order. He believed it had an immediate calming effect, describing it as something that "immediately soothes." However, he was openly critical of classical Indian music, which he felt was overly exclusive—limited either to religious elites or courtesans. Instead, he championed simple, accessible forms of music using modest instruments like the charkha (spinning wheel) and tambura. These reflected his ideals of simplicity, affordability, and inclusivity.
While at Kingsley Hall in London for the Second Round Table Conference, Gandhi showed a lighter side to his musical engagement—he listened to music regularly and was even seen dancing to the Scottish folk song “Auld Lang Syne.” On a visit to the writer Romain Rolland in Switzerland, Gandhi requested a Beethoven piece, later writing that lines from the composer’s work provided “good spiritual food.”
To Gandhi, music was a universal language. He believed it should transcend borders, classes, and traditions—open to all, and serving not as a luxury, but as a tool for moral and emotional connection.
LITERATURE Gandhi was a prolific and disciplined writer whose literary output spanned books, essays, letters, and articles throughout his life. His most celebrated work is The Story of My Experiments with Truth, an autobiography that traces his personal journey through spiritual development, ethical struggles, and his unwavering commitment to truth. Another foundational text is Hind Swaraj or Indian Home Rule (1909), in which he offered a sharp critique of modern industrial civilization, British colonialism, and Western materialism, while advocating for self-rule, nonviolent resistance, and simplicity.
Among his other major writings are Satyagraha in South Africa, a detailed account of his early activism and the birth of his philosophy of nonviolent protest; and Gokhale: My Political Guru, a tribute to the man Gandhi regarded as a key mentor in his political education. He also addressed a wide range of social, religious, and economic issues in works such as Young India 1919–1922, Economics of Khadi, Nonviolence in Peace and War, and Constructive Programme: Its Meaning and Place. (5)
Gandhi’s writings were vast in volume and scope. The Collected Works of Mahatma Gandhi, published in 90 volumes, stands as a monumental archive of his thoughts and correspondence. Many of his original writings were in Gujarati and later translated into English and other languages, making his ideas accessible across cultures and continents. His works continue to be studied for their profound insights into nonviolence, justice, self-discipline, and political ethics.
True to his minimalist nature, Gandhi wrote with great care and simplicity. He avoided desks, preferring to place paper on his lap as he wrote, carefully reviewing each sentence before moving forward—a reflection of the same meticulousness that defined every other aspect of his life.
NATURE Gandhi had a profound respect for nature and believed that true well-being required living in harmony with the natural environment. This belief was reflected in the way he established his ashrams—intentional communities designed to foster simplicity, self-reliance, and closeness to nature. In South Africa, he founded the Phoenix Settlement and Tolstoy Farm, and in India, Sabarmati Ashram and Sevagram Ashram—each situated in tranquil, rural settings. Sabarmati Ashram, for example, was built on the banks of the Sabarmati River, deliberately placed away from the distractions of urban life to encourage reflection and sustainable living.
Environmental consciousness was woven into Gandhi’s broader economic and ethical philosophy. He maintained that economic progress should never come at the cost of the planet’s health, and he emphasized the importance of restraint, balance, and stewardship in the use of natural resources. His strong support for village industries and local self-sufficiency was driven not only by social and political goals, but also by a deep concern over the environmental degradation brought by industrialization.
For Gandhi, protecting the earth was not a separate cause—it was integral to living ethically and responsibly in a just society.
PETS While Gandhi didn't keep pets in the conventional sense, he had notable interactions with animals that reflected his philosophy of ahimsa (non-violence). He believed strongly in the ethical treatment of all living creatures, stating that "the greatness of a nation and its moral progress can be judged by the way its animals are treated".
Gandhi addressed the issue of stray dogs in society, advocating for a humane approach to animal welfare. When asked about dealing with rabid stray dogs in 1926, he supported necessary action to protect human lives but emphasized that this should be seen as a "duty in distress" rather than an absolute principle. He argued that society should take responsibility for animal welfare through proper care and organization rather than neglect.
His ashrams maintained various animals as part of their self-sufficient agricultural communities, treating them with respect and care as part of the natural order rather than as mere property.
HOBBIES AND SPORTS Gandhi’s daily life was grounded in simplicity, discipline, and physical activity—particularly walking, which became both his primary exercise and a form of meditation. For nearly four decades, he walked an average of 18 kilometers a day, covering an estimated 79,000 kilometers between 1914 and 1948. Walking was not only essential for his health and reflection, but also central to his activism, most famously during the Dandi Salt March.
In addition to walking, Gandhi devoted time each day to spinning khadi on the charkha (spinning wheel), which was both a practical task and a deeply symbolic act. Spinning represented his commitment to self-sufficiency and economic independence, becoming a powerful emblem of the swadeshi (self-reliance) movement. He viewed this daily ritual as a form of meditation and service.
Despite his rigorous schedule, Gandhi made time to engage with children, often playing with them during their visits.
Life in his ashrams was marked by hands-on, communal living—he personally participated in tasks such as cooking, farming, cobbling shoes, and cleaning, believing that manual labor was essential to self-discipline and equality.
Surprisingly, it was an English footballer who helped shape his thinking. “It was an English footballer who converted me to independence,” Gandhi once revealed, referring to none other than C.F. Andrews, a notable Cambridge athlete and scholar.
Gandhi’s routine reflected his belief that physical simplicity and daily work were not just duties, but spiritual practices aligned with his vision of a just and self-reliant society.
SCIENCE AND MATHS Gandhi approached science and mathematics with practicality and purpose, viewing them as essential tools for everyday life and meaningful education. He placed strong emphasis on mathematics, particularly its relevance to real-world applications. “Our boys can solve intricate mathematical problems,” he once observed, “but are ignorant of simple arithmetic useful in business.” He advocated for instruction in arithmetic, algebra, geometry, and trigonometry, with the goal of bringing students to a first-year college level of understanding.
Believing that education should reflect the lived realities of Indian students, Gandhi pushed for scientific and mathematical teaching tailored to village life. He worked on adapting textbooks in subjects like mathematics and physics to suit rural conditions, criticizing British texts for assuming access to modern machinery and laboratory equipment unfamiliar to most Indian children. His aim was to create science and math resources that resonated with local experience—a curriculum grounded in the everyday world of Indian villages.
Though not a scientist himself, Gandhi deeply respected the discipline and clarity of mathematics. He often used mathematical metaphors in his philosophical writing, appreciating how its logical, step-by-step reasoning mirrored the clarity he sought in his own thinking and communication. For Gandhi, science and math were not abstract subjects—they were practical, empowering, and most effective when rooted in local context and daily life.
LEGAL CAREER Gandhi wasn’t exactly a social butterfly during his student days at University College London. He took his studies seriously, especially his attempts to sharpen his English and Latin by taking the London University matriculation exam. Unfortunately, his fellow students weren’t exactly rolling out the welcome mat—they snubbed him because, well, he was Indian. So Gandhi did what any sensible person might do: he tucked himself away and buried his nose in philosophy books.
Later, at the Inner Temple, where he studied law, his teachers often groused about his atrocious handwriting. Apparently, neat penmanship wasn’t one of his strong suits.
In June 1891, Gandhi was called to the bar and promptly headed back to India. Upon arrival, he learned, rather heartbreakingly, that his mother had died while he was away—and his family had kept the news from him. Talk about a welcome home.
Trying his luck as a lawyer in Mumbai, Gandhi quickly discovered the legal profession was a bit overcrowded, and he wasn’t exactly lighting up the courtroom. Back in Rajkot, he eked out a modest living drafting petitions, until an unfortunate run-in with a British official (a little lobbying effort gone sideways, as Gandhi himself put it) forced him to shut shop.
Then, in 1893, Gandhi took a somewhat unexpected detour—accepting a one-year contract from a businessman in Natal, South Africa, named Dada Abdulla. This turned out to be a pivotal moment.
Soon after arriving, Gandhi got a harsh introduction to racism when he was booted from a first-class train compartment just for being non-white. Left shivering on the platform at Pietermaritzburg Station, he began to see the brutal realities of racial discrimination firsthand. That station would later be named in his honor—Mahatma Gandhi Station—so his shivering misery wasn’t entirely forgotten.
In South Africa, Gandhi encountered a slew of laws that codified skin color as a determinant of rights. Stirred into action, he began representing Indians in civil rights cases and stayed for 21 years fighting for their rights. Seeing his own people treated as second-class citizens deepened his political awareness and led him to help found the Natal Indian Congress in 1894, rallying the Indian community into a unified political force.
Eventually, Gandhi gave up lawyering as a day job to become a full-time activist, popularizing the term “Satyagraha” to replace the rather dull “Passive Resistance.”
By 1903, Gandhi became the first non-white lawyer admitted to the Supreme Court of Transvaal, quite the milestone. A few years later, in 1906, he launched a campaign of passive resistance against laws requiring Indians to register with the government. Alongside 2,000 fellow Indians, he marched peacefully across a border they weren’t allowed to cross. Their steadfast calm under pressure won over public opinion, and a commission eventually recommended repealing the discriminatory laws.
Of course, this activism wasn’t without consequence. On November 6, 1913, Gandhi was arrested while leading a march of Indian miners in South Africa—a prelude to many more acts of civil disobedience to come.
PHILOSOPHY & THEOLOGY Gandhi’s philosophy was firmly rooted in two big ideas: Truth (or Satya) and Non-violence (Ahimsa). To him, these weren’t just nice concepts—they were eternal, equal to God itself. He had a rather practical definition of religion: anything that brings us face-to-face with our Maker, and which colors every action we take. He wasn’t interested in religion as a club or a badge, but as a living, breathing force—“a belief in the ordered moral government of the universe” that, in his view, went beyond labels like Hindu, Muslim, Christian, or whatever else you might want to throw in.
Gandhi believed all the world’s great religions were essentially equal. Not just tolerant of each other, but genuinely respectful. He thought they all came from the same God and were, if you like, on a journey to the same destination. His approach was intensely personal and practical—religion had to make sense in everyday life, appeal to reason, and never contradict basic morality.
One of Gandhi’s most famous—and admittedly quite clever—ideas was that Truth and God were basically the same thing. He later condensed it to “Truth is God,” a phrase designed to bring together people of all faiths and even those who didn’t believe in God at all. His vision of religion wasn’t just about rituals or dogma; it was about self-realization, knowing oneself, and serving others—especially those on the margins.
You could say Gandhi’s spirituality had a bit of a family inheritance. His mother was a Jain, a tradition known for strict nonviolence and the belief that everything in the universe is eternal. Gandhi grew up steeped in Vaishnavism—worshipping Vishnu—with a good dose of Jain influence. So vegetarianism, fasting for self-purification, ahimsa (non-harm), and mutual tolerance weren’t just ideas to him—they were part of his everyday life.
He practised yoga, lived by the motto “Hate the sin, love the sinner,” and considered himself a Hindu, Christian, Muslim, Jew, Buddhist, and Confucian all rolled into one. Although, and here’s a funny twist, he wasn’t really that interested in the historical Jesus. He once said he wouldn’t mind if someone proved Jesus never existed and the Gospels were just stories. He was also no fan of missionary efforts trying to convert Hindus—he thought Christians should just try to be better Christians and Hindus better Hindus.
Yet, Gandhi tried hard to live out some of Jesus’ principles. He revived the Hindu cult of Rama worship because he saw Rama as the perfect symbol of chivalry, virtue, and reason—qualities he hoped would stir the Indian national spirit.
And, just to keep things relatable, his take on the Seven Deadly Sins was refreshingly down-to-earth: Wealth without Work, Pleasure without Conscience, Science without Humanity, Knowledge without Character, Politics without Principle, Commerce without Morality, and Worship without Sacrifice.
At heart, Gandhi’s worldview was simple but profound. He believed the universe was governed by a Supreme Intelligence, which he called Satya (Truth) or, when pressed, God. This essence was in everyone, making all human beings not just equal but, in fact, “identical.” For Gandhi, love was the only proper way to relate to each other.
INDIAN INDEPENDENCE In 1915, Gandhi returned to India from South Africa, already something of a hero, ready to launch the country’s struggle for independence through nonviolent cooperation.
The horrific 1919 Amritsar massacre—when British troops opened fire on a crowd of unarmed protesters, killing 379 people—became a crucial turning point for Gandhi. It pushed him to pursue a policy of active non-cooperation with the British authorities.
By 1920, Gandhi had taken the reins of the Indian National Congress, effectively turning it into the face of the freedom movement. Five years later, he was elected president of the party, cementing his leadership.
His civil disobedience campaign in the early 1920s was wildly popular and seemed unstoppable—until February 1922, when a violent outbreak in the town of Chauri Chaura shocked him. Fearful that violence would undo all the progress, Gandhi abruptly called off the non-cooperation movement. Predictably, he was arrested on March 10, 1922, tried for sedition, and sentenced to six years in prison.
He began his sentence on March 18, but was released just two years later, in February 1924, after an appendicitis operation. In total, Gandhi spent 2,338 days behind bars—plenty of time to reflect, read, and perhaps pen a few letters.
In 1930, Gandhi embarked on what became one of his most famous protests—the Salt March, or Salt Satyagraha. Over 24 days, he led a nonviolent trek against the British salt tax, which hit India’s poorest citizens hard. The march sparked nationwide civil disobedience and firmly established Gandhi as the leader of the independence movement.
Interestingly, Gandhi resigned from the Congress party in 1934. He explained that he no longer believed he could unite the deeply divided factions of caste and religion through the party. Plus, stepping away helped him avoid becoming an easy target for British propaganda since the Congress had, at least temporarily, accepted political compromises with the Raj.
There’s also the charming episode of Gandhi’s 1931 visit to Mussolini. Always accompanied by his trusty goat, Gandhi was something of a curiosity to the Italian leader’s children, who laughed at the unusual sight. Mussolini, however, reportedly said, “That man and his goat are shaking the British Empire.” A wonderfully odd image that somehow captured the moment perfectly.
Finally, in 1947, British India won its independence—but not without painful division. The empire was split into India and Pakistan, something Gandhi deeply opposed. Instead of celebrating freedom, he mourned the country’s partition, grieving the fracture of the land he had worked so hard to unite.
POLITICS Gandhi was a trailblazer in using nonviolent protest as the chief tool for political change. His philosophy centered on satyagraha—a steadfast devotion to truth—which he developed and honed during his 21 years in South Africa. By 1920, he had become the dominant political leader in India, guiding the Indian National Congress through peaceful resistance such as boycotts of British goods, legislative bodies, courts, offices, and schools.
He spearheaded several landmark campaigns: the Non-Cooperation Movement (1920–1922), the Civil Disobedience Movement—including the iconic Salt March of 1930—and the Quit India Movement in 1942. Gandhi’s strategy was to bring anti-colonial nationalism to ordinary Indians, uniting them in a peaceful challenge to British rule.
At the heart of his approach was the conviction that satyagraha was the only honorable path to independence. He argued that a nation born of violence might never truly heal. To that end, Gandhi exercised strict control over his followers to prevent outbreaks of violence, believing this discipline was as crucial as the political goal itself.
His first encounter with nonviolence as a political method came during his time at London University, where he read Henry David Thoreau’s Civil Disobedience. Returning to South Africa as a lawyer, he was shocked by the blatant discrimination against Indians—laws requiring fingerprinting of women and children over eight, for instance, caused understandable outrage. This ignited his initial civil disobedience campaign, which featured arrests, marches, and a peaceful crossing of a forbidden border. The calm dignity of Gandhi and his followers won sympathy and led to a commission recommending the repeal of discriminatory laws.
Once back in India, Gandhi’s activism extended beyond freedom from colonial rule. He championed the cause of the Untouchables—India’s most oppressed caste—and worked tirelessly to bridge the deep divide between Hindus and Muslims, even fasting for three weeks in Delhi to promote communal harmony. Despite his efforts, the painful partition that created Pakistan became a reality he reluctantly accepted.
Gandhi envisioned India’s future rooted in village self-sufficiency rather than Western-style industrialization. When asked his opinion of Western civilization, he famously quipped, “I think it would be a very good idea.”
SCANDAL Gandhi faced several controversies during his lifetime. One significant area of criticism involved his personal experiments with celibacy and sleeping arrangements in his later years. Gandhi's behaviour of sleeping with young female relatives and associates, including his grandniece Manu, was widely discussed and criticized by family members and leading politicians. Some members of his staff resigned, including two editors of his newspaper who refused to print parts of Gandhi's sermons dealing with his sleeping arrangements.
Another major controversy surrounds Gandhi's position during the execution of revolutionary freedom fighters Bhagat Singh, Sukhdev, and Rajguru in 1931. Critics argue that Gandhi could have done more to save them, particularly given his influence and the timing of the Gandhi-Irwin Pact. Gandhi wrote a letter to the Viceroy requesting mercy, but it was dated the same day as the scheduled execution.
Gandhi also faced criticism for his perceived favoritism toward Muslims and his approach to the partition of India. Some accused him of being too conciliatory to Muslims, and his suggestion of Jinnah's name for the first Prime Minister of independent India drew criticism. His post-partition fast demanding payment of Rs. 55 crores to Pakistan was controversial and contributed to the motivations of his eventual assassin. (6)
Gandhi was imprisoned by the British four times as a political prisoner - he sent a total of 2,338 days in British jails.
Winston Churchill once stated: "It is...nauseating to see Mr. Gandhi, a seditious Middle Temple lawyer, now posing as a fakir of a type well-known in the East, striding half-naked up the steps of the Viceregal Palace.".
MILITARY RECORD Gandhi had a complex relationship with military service, participating in non-combatant roles during conflicts while maintaining his commitment to non-violence. During the Second Boer War (1899-1902), Gandhi organized and led the Natal Indian Ambulance Corps consisting of 1,100 Indian volunteers. This was a non-military entity focused on providing medical aid to British troops.
Gandhi's ambulance corps saw action at the Battle of Spion Kop (January 23-24, 1900), where they went right up to the front lines under fire to rescue British casualties and physically carried wounded soldiers over miles of rough terrain to waiting horse-drawn ambulances. For this service, Gandhi and 37 other members of the unit received the Queen's South Africa Medal.
Later, during World War I, Gandhi again offered to support the British war effort through non-combatant means. It's important to note that Gandhi "was never employed by the British forces" and only "raised a voluntary ambulance corps consisting purely of non-combatants to render medical aid". His military involvement was always in humanitarian roles consistent with his principles of non-violence. (7)
HEALTH AND PHYSICAL FITNESS Despite his fragile frame and skeletal appearance, Gandhi possessed extraordinary physical endurance that often astonished those around him. His medical history reads like a catalogue of ailments: he battled malaria three times (in 1925, 1936, and 1944), underwent surgery for appendicitis in 1924 and for piles in 1919, and suffered from pleurisy and chronically high blood pressure. On one occasion—February 19, 1940—his blood pressure soared to a worrying 220/110.
Yet Gandhi’s seemingly delicate body was remarkably resilient. Thanks to his rigorous daily walking (he averaged 18 kilometers a day for decades), spartan diet, and insistence on staying active, he remained remarkably robust well into old age.
Rather than rely on modern medicine, Gandhi turned to natural treatments. He applied mud poultices to his abdomen, took garlic and Sarpgandha (Indian snakeroot) to help lower his blood pressure, and adhered to a lifestyle that balanced simplicity with discipline. An ECG revealed some signs of myocardial weakness and cardiovascular degeneration, but no evidence of coronary artery disease.
Gandhi believed in the value of rest and had a gift for falling asleep almost anywhere. Sleep, in his view, was essential to balance the body and mind.
At the age of 70, he weighed just 46.7 kg, with a body mass index of 17.1—clinically underweight. But this slight figure still upheld a grueling schedule that would exhaust men twice his size. Right to the end, Gandhi’s body—like his spirit—proved far stronger than it looked.
HOMES Gandhi established and lived in several ashrams throughout his life, which served as both his residences and experimental communities for his philosophical ideals. His first two ashrams were founded in South Africa: Phoenix Settlement (established 1904 in KwaZulu Natal) and Tolstoy Farm (established 1910 outside Johannesburg).
Upon returning to India in 1915, Gandhi established Sabarmati Ashram outside Ahmedabad, initially known as 'Satyagraha Ashram'. The ashram was located on 36 acres of wasteland on the banks of the Sabarmati River. Gandhi lived in a small cottage at Sabarmati known as 'Hridaya (Heart) Kunj,' which now houses some of his personal belongings including a writing desk, khadi kurta, yarn he spun, and some of his letters.
In 1936, Gandhi established his final ashram, Sevagram Ashram in Wardha. These ashrams were designed as self-sufficient residential communities where inhabitants engaged in acts of self-control and communal labor, tilling soil together, cooking meals together, and practicing various crafts. Gandhi vowed in 1930 that he would not return to Sabarmati Ashram until India gained independence.
TRAVEL Gandhi was a quintessential traveller whose journeys shaped his worldview and philosophy. His travels began in 1888 when he sailed for Southampton, England, to pursue law studies - a grueling 21-day ship journey. This was followed by his most formative travel period to South Africa in 1893, where he lived for 21 years with intermittent breaks in India and London.
It was during his travels in South Africa that Gandhi encountered racial discrimination and physical violence, experiences that fundamentally shaped his political philosophy. The famous train incident where he was thrown off a first-class compartment at Pietermaritzburg became a pivotal moment in his life.
In 1896, Gandhi returned to India briefly to fetch his wife and children and to canvass support for Indians overseas.
Later travels included his 1930 Dandi Salt March, a 400-kilometer journey that became one of the most significant acts of civil disobedience in the independence movement. Gandhi also traveled to London for the Second Round Table Conference in 1931 as a representative of the Indian National Congress.
Even as an international figure, Gandhi remained firmly committed to simplicity. He traveled mostly on foot, and when distance made walking impractical, he took the cheapest class of railway travel—usually third class—alongside India’s common people.
DEATH On January 30, 1948, Gandhi was walking through the gardens of Birla House in New Delhi on his way to a prayer meeting when he was fatally shot at 5:13 p.m. by Nathuram Godse, a Hindu nationalist who accused Gandhi of being too accommodating toward Muslims. Godse approached Gandhi with his hands folded in the traditional Hindu greeting gesture but had concealed a small-caliber revolver between his palms. He fired three shots at close range, striking Gandhi in the upper thigh, abdomen, and chest.
After the shooting, Gandhi was carried back to his couch inside Birla House, where he was offered a cup of milk—he couldn’t drink it. His final words were "He Ram!" ("O God!"). He died 40 minutes later, on the same day as aviation pioneer Orville Wright. Gandhi was 78-years-old.
Gandhi was cremated at Raj Ghat, Delhi. India mourned for 13 days. His ashes were kept in a bank vault and, 49 years later, were placed by his son into the sacred confluence of the Ganges and Jumna rivers, witnessed by an estimated 2–3 million people.
Godse and his collaborator Narayan Apte were tried, sentenced to death, and hanged on November 15, 1949.
The National Gandhi Museum, which opened shortly after his death in 1948, now stands at Rajghat in New Delhi, next to the site of his cremation. It remains a living testament to the man who showed the world the power of peace.
APPEARANCES IN MEDIA Gandhi's media presence during his lifetime was primarily through his extensive writings and speeches. He edited, published, and wrote regularly for journals such as Young India, Navjivan, and Harijan. His original voice has been preserved in recordings, including his speech at Prayer Meeting on January 15, 1948, just days before his assassination.
His famous speeches include the Quit India Speech delivered on August 8, 1942, to the All India Congress Committee in Bombay, and his Address at Kingsley Hall delivered on October 17, 1931, in London. These recordings provide insight into his speaking style and philosophical approach.
Gandhi's assassination was extensively covered by international media, with detailed reports from organizations like UPI describing the events of January 30, 1948.
Gandhi has since been portrayed in numerous documentaries, books, and films, but none more famously than in Richard Attenborough's 1982 epic Gandhi. The film won eight Academy Awards, including Best Picture, and staged the most extras ever assembled for a single scene—300,000 people participated in the two-minute funeral scene.
Other films include The Making of the Mahatma (1996) and Hey Ram (2000).
ACHIEVEMENTS Led India to Independence: Spearheaded the non-violent movement that led to India's independence from British rule in 1947.
Developed Satyagraha: Originated and successfully implemented the philosophy and method of non-violent civil disobedience, influencing numerous movements for civil rights and freedom worldwide (e.g., Martin Luther King Jr., Nelson Mandela).
Championed Social Reform: Fought against untouchability, advocated for Hindu-Muslim unity, promoted women's rights, and worked for rural upliftment and economic self-sufficiency (Swadeshi).
Moral and Spiritual Leader: Became an international symbol of peace, truth, and ethical living.
Inspired Global Movements: His principles and methods continue to inspire movements for justice, peace, and human rights across the globe.
Honors: He was nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize five times, though he never received it. In 1930, Time magazine named Gandhi its Man of the Year, recognizing his role as the moral force behind India’s independence movement.
Legacy: Gandhi's birthday, October 2nd, is celebrated across India as Gandhi Jayanti and is also recognized worldwide as the UN International Day of Non-Violence.
Sources (1) Encyclopaedia Britannica (2) Soul Survivor by Philip Yancey (3) Wisdom Library (4) Encyclopaedia of Trivia (5) Vajiram and Ravi (6) My India (7) Hindustan Times
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