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Indian Leaders
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C. Rajagopalachari
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Heir to a great tradition
Bharatmata is
writhing in anguish and pain over the loss. No man loved Bharatmata and
Indians more than Mahatma Gandhi. Let the tragedy that was enacted in
Delhi give the people of India the tune, reason, rhyme and melody for the
history of their future. I pray that the history of India might be written
with the rhythm and tune of the grief that Bharatmata had felt when
Mahatma Gandhi fell.
No one could die a more glorious death than Mahatma Gandhi. He was going
to the seat of his prayer to speak to his Rama. He did not die in the bed
calling for hot water, doctors or nurses. He did not die after mumbling
incoherent words in the sick bed. He died standing, not even sitting down,
Rama was too eager to take him even before he could reach the seat of his
prayer.
When Socrates died for his views and Christ for his faith, they believed
that they would not get another example like that.
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Pandit Jawaharlal
Nehru
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The light has gone out!
"The light has gone out of our
lives and there is darkness everywhere and I do not quite know what to
tell you and how to say it. Our beloved dear, Bapu as we called him, the
Father of the Nation, is no more. Perhaps I am wrong to say that.
Nevertheless, we will not see him again as we have seen him for these many
years. We will not run to him for advice and seek solace from him and that
is a terrible blow not to me only but to millions and millions in
this country. And it is a little difficult to soften the blow by any
advice that I or anyone else can give you. The light has gone out, I said
and yet I was wrong. For the light that shown in this country was no
ordinary light. The light that has illumined this country for these many
years will illumine this country for many more years and thousand years
later, the light will still be seen in this country and the world will see
it and it will solace to innumerable hearts. it represented the living
truth and the eternal man was with us with his eternal truth reminding us
of the right path, drawing us from error, taking his ancient country to
freedom. All his life he fought against evil and falsehood. He was
constructive fighter and not a destructive one. The aim before him was
never to destroy or annihilate the enemy but to bring about change in him
and to win him over to his side. He was a great unifier in India who
taught us not only a bare tolerance of others but a willing acceptance of
them as our friends and comrades in common undertaking."
Great men and eminent men have
monuments in bronze and marble set up for them, but this man of divine
fire managed in his life-time to become enmeshed in millions and millions
of hearts so that all of us became somewhat of the stuff that he was made
of, though to an infinitely lesser degree. He spread out over India not in
places only, or in select places, or in assemblies, but in every hamlet
and hurt of the lowly and those who suffer. He lives in the hearts of
millions of and he will live for immortal ages.
...He has gone, an all over India there is a feeling of having been left
desolate and forlorn. All of sense that feeling, and I do not know when we
shall be able to get rid of it, and yet together with that feeling there
is also a feeling of proud thanksgiving that it has been given to us of
this generation to be associated with this mighty person. In ages to come,
centuries and many millenniums after us, people will think of this
generation when this man of God trod the earth and will think of is who,
however small, could also follow his path and probably tread on that holy
ground where his feet had been. Let us be worthy of him. Let us always be
so.
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Sardar Vallabhbhai
Patel
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His supreme sacrifice will quicken our conscience
For even though his mortal
frame will turn in to ashes tomorrow, at 4.00 pm, Gandhiji's imperishable
teachings will abide with us. I even feel that Gandhiji's immortal spirit
is still hovering over us and will continue to watch over the nation's
destiny in future also. The mad youth who killed him was wrong if he
thought thereby he was destroying his noble mission. Perhaps God wanted
Gandhiji's mission to fulfill and prosper through his death.
I am sure Gandhiji's supreme sacrifice will wake up the conscience of our
countrymen and evoke a higher response in the heart of every Indian. I
hope and pray that it may be given to us to complete Gandhiji's mission.
At this solemn moment, no one of us can afford to waver or lose his or her
heart. Let us all stand united and bravely face the national disaster that
has overtaken us. Let us all solemnly pledge ourselves afresh to
Gandhiji's teachings and ideals.
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Maulana Abul
Kalam Azad
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Carried burden of humanity on his frail shoulders Mahatma Gandhi has carried on
his frail shoulders a great deal of burden of humanity and now it was for
them to stand together and share it. If millions of Indians could divide
that burden and carry it successfully, it would be nothing short of a
miracle.
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Sardar Baldev Singh
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Teacher, Seer and Prophet
We know him as our General,
our Guide and a Father of our Nation. To the world at large, he was a
teacher, seer and prophet. He gave to mankind a lesson which was as unique
as it was sublime. In a world torn asunder by wars, hatred, suspicion and
fear, Gandhiji came with his message of love for fellowman. To him to
conquest was not the conquest of the battle field but not the conquest of
self.
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Dr. S. P. Mukharjee |
Undying influence
The light that illuminated our
motherland and indeed the world amidst darkness and sorrow has suddenly
gone out. The passing away of Mahatma Gandhi is the most stunning blow to
that could fall on India. That he who made India free and self-reliant, a
friend of and enemy of none, loved and respected by millions, should fall
at the hands of an assassin, one of his own community and countrymen, is a
matter of deepest shame and tragedy. He is of those whose influence never
dies and indeed shines more and more with the passage of time.
The shot of the assessing not only vitally pierced through his mortal body
but has grievously struck the very heart of Humanism and India, which
could survive only if people resolutely decide to make the pursuit of such
methods impossible.
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Mrs. Sarojini Naidu
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Gave his country its freedom and its flag
Mahatma Gandhi, whose frail
body was committed to the flames yesterday, is not dead. It was right that
the cremation took place in the midst of the dead kings who were buried in
Delhi, for he was the kingliest of all kings. It is right also that he who
was the Apostle of Peace should have been taken to the cremation ground
with all the honours of a great warrior. Far greater than all the warriors
who led the armies to battle was this little man, the bravest, the most
tried friend of all. Delhi has become the centre and sanctuary of the
great revolutionary who emancipated his enslave country from foreign
bondage and gave it to its freedom and its flag.
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Rajkumari Amrit Kaur
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He stood between us and
disaster
It is impossible to estimate
his loss at this critical juncture in our history. I am sure that we shall
miss his wise counsel more and more as the days pass by. He has led us
faultlessly to our goal of political independence. The communal strife
that almost immediately after August 15 wounded him to the depths. An
India wedded to violence he could not tolerate. He saw the moral
deterioration in us and, as a loving father, he again unwearyingly pointed
out to us the right way. With his infinite love he was trying to quench
the anger that raised in many breasts. He was the only thing that stood
between us and disaster, for lawlessness and disorder and hate and
violence can lead nowhere else. .
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Dr. Rajendra Prasad
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The liberator of the Hindu Community
Can we ever dream that
Gandhiji was bringing harm to the Hindus or to their religion? Was it ever
possible that this liberator of the Hindu community and emancipator of the
low and downtrodden could even think of doing so? But men with narrow
minds and limited vision who do not understand the core of Hindu Dharma
thought it otherwise and the present calamity is a direct result of such
an out look.
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Acharya J. B. Kripalani |
His faith stood the test
His death only proves that the
world is not yet ready for his doctrine of truth and ahimsa as applied by
him to individual and group life. The way of truth and nonviolence is yet
the way of martyrdom as it has been throughout history. His faith in the
moral law was more seriously tried by recent events, yet he stood the
test. His faith did not falter in the darkest hour of his life. Gandhiji
always held that the rigour of the moral law required that one must
magnify one's own faults and those of one's community and minimize the
false of others and of other communities. It is only thus that the moral
law can be truly fulfilled, and when so fulfilled the result must be good.
The man and the nation that work in the light of this moral law can never
come to grief. Where there is dharma ultimate victory is a sure.
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Dr.S.Radhakrishnan
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The lonely symbol of a vanishing past
I am shocked beyond words at
this fatal attack on Gandhiji. The incredible, the inconceivable, has
happened. That this purest, most elevating, most inspiring man of our age
should have suffered by a madman's anger shows that we have not improved
since the days of Socrates, who had to drink hemlock, of Jesus, who was
put on the cross.
Mahatma Gandhi, the lonely symbol of vanishing past, is no more. We have
killed his body but the light in him, which is from the divine flame of
Truth and Love, cannot be put out.
When will the world be safe for saints? May the Dominions, may the whole
world, learn that if we are not to slide into abyss of violence, cruelty
and chaos, there is no other way than that for which Mahatma Gandhi has
lived and died.
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Sri Aurobindo
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The light will burn on
I would have preferred silence
in the face of these circumstances that surround us. For, any words we can
find fall flat on amid such happenings.
This much, however, I will say, that the light which led us to freedom,
though not yet to unity, still burns and will burn on, till it conquers. I
believe firmly that a great and united future is the destiny of the nation
and its people.
The power that brought us through so much struggle and suffering to
freedom will achieve also, through whatever strife or trouble, the aim
which so poignantly occupied the thoughts of the fallen leader at the time
of his tragic ending : as it brought us freedom, it will bring us unity.
A free and united India will be there, and the mother will gather around
her sons and weld them into a single national strength in the life of a
great and united people.
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Jayprakash
Narayan
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We must follow the path shown by him
It is not the time to speak as
it is an occasion of mourning. Let us weep. Let the nation weep and wipe
off from its soul the stain of the innocent blood of the greatest man the
world has ever produced. We must follow the path shown by Mahatma Gandhi.
He came to Delhi with a specific mission, either to do or die. He did a
lot and in the end he laid down his life for what he wished to do. Let us
now accomplish the sacred task that has been left undone by him.
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G. D. Birla
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Warrior, prophet and saint
Seldom, I think, human history
records of one individual was at once a warrior, a prophet and a saint and
yet deeply humble and intensely human.
It is this quality of all-embracing human warmth which stands out most
prominent in his character.
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Miraben (Ms.Slade)
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Full of love and gentleness
Bapu lived and died for us
all-every man, woman and child. He lived working unceasingly, and died a
martyr's death, that we might be turn from the evil path of hatred, greed,
violence and untruth. Bapu was full of love and gentleness, but in his
fight with evil he was relentless. Bapu could fight evil without, because
he had mastered the evil within.
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Dr. Sushila Nayyar |
He lives and watches our
fumbling efforts
May God give us the strength
to love up to the teachings of the great master, at whose feet we had come
together and sat due to some punya of our previous births! Tears
rush to the eye at the thought that never more shall we hear that loving,
soothing voice; never more shall we fill that magic touch of his pat,
which always made one feel strong and lightened one's burden whether
physical or mental. But we must not allow our emotion to be depleted by
them. The agony that we all feel at our loss must be transmuted into
action. We followed him with halting footsteps during his lifetime. Let us
all pray that we may be able to do so now with firmness and determination.
Within my heart I hear an acho say : "No, he is not dead. He lives and
watches our fumbling efforts with same old, sweet, sad smile."
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Devdas Gandhi
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I had long ceased to look upon him as my father
During the past few months
that he was in Delhi it was the privilege of my three year old boy to be
lovingly fondled by Bapu. I was a complete back number and once recently
had told me that he missed Bapu more than me whenever he failed to turn up
at Birla house. The little urchin now draws renewed tears from our eyes
when he pouts his lips in imitation of the way his grandfather greeted
him. And yet Gandhiji's interest in the narrow domestic circle was of the
meagerest, and I had long ceased to look upon him as my father in any
possessive sense. He was to me a saint as much as to any of you and I feel
and see the void exactly as you do.
I, therefore, view the disaster with the detachment of one living in the
north pole and having ties neither of blood nor of race with the Great One
of whose loss we are as yet but dimly aware.
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The Amrita Bazar
Patrika, Allahabad.
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In life a mighty rebel, in death a beacon light
No man in recorded history ever lived a life more daring in
its conception, more eventful in its import and more human in its urges and impulses. Here is a tragic occasion when one can say truthfully that the world is poorer today, poorer not merely by the passing of this greatest man of the age but by the circumstances in which a life of selfless dedication has been so cruelly and so wantonly cut short.
... In life Gandhiji was a mighty rebel, in death Gandhiji is humanity's beacon light.
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The Times of India,
Bombay |
He stood for humanitarian principles Mahatma Gandhi did not belong to India alone; he stood for elemental principles essential to the welfare of humanity as a whole.
Here was a man whose eyes were opened to the tribulations of his people generations ago in a far-off land; who from that day onwards gave his mind-and now literally his body-to their salvation. How far Mahatma Gandhi's devotion to things of the spirit in the greatest and most influential tradition of the East will prove of lasting and immortal consequence must largely depend on the extent to which those of this generation and others immediately following are inspired by his precepts and his memory.
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The Statesman, Calcutta.
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He provided alternative to atomic warfare Mahatma Gandhi was not merely a great nationalist but perhaps a greater internationalist, proving by action that the two are not incompatible. He was unique in evolving, and in rendering world-famous, a weapon novel in modern times with which to fight, the weapon of non-violence. The world may soon find it has no alternative, because of the horrifying new means of slaughter now developed.
Whether the nations come to their senses in time, or are engulfed in atomic war, Mahatma Gandhi will stand pre-eminent in this century as the man who not only saw, before most others, the calamitous objectives to which violence of its nature tends, but who made practical efforts on an unprecedentedly large scale to provide an alternative.
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The Hindustan
Times, New Delhi.
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Born to refashion a new civiIisation Mahatma Gandhi was born to refashion a new civilisation and make the people of India the vehicle of that civilization. No span of individual mortal life-long as it was by the mercy of Providence-could suffice for anything more than laying the foundations. With the disappearance of his physical body it has become the glorious destiny of his country and his people to build upon the foundations he has laid a structure of which he as well as humanity may be proud.
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Global Leaders
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Pakistan
United
Kingdom (UK)
United
States of America (USA)
Europe
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PAKISTAN
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Khan Abdul Gafar
Khan
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The only ray of light
He was the only ray of light to help us through these darkest days.
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M. A. Jinnah
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A noble death
I associate myself with the tributes that have been paid to this great
man.
He died in the discharge of the duty in which he believed. His tragic
death, however much we may deplore it and however much we may condemn the
murderer, was a noble death, for he died in the discharge of his duty.
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Liaquat Ali Khan
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Memorable efforts for
Communal Harmony
His removal from the stage of Indian politics at this juncture is an
irreparable loss.
His great effort for the restoration of communal harmony will be
remembered with gratitude by all lovers of peace and goodwill. We
earnestly hope that his efforts for communal harmony which he had foremost
in his heart just before his tragic death will be crowned with success.
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Pakistan Times, Lahore
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Timeless symbol of love and
rectitude
Mahatma Gandhi is dead. The world has been deprived of the sight and sound
of his frail body and aged voice - the body and voice that had in the last
few months almost lost, for a large section of mankind, their personal and
ephemeral character and become timeless symbols of compassionate love and
fearless attitude. In his last momentous days Gandhi, the politician, give
place to the infinitely greater Gandhi, the man.
The best love and most
venerated political leader and moral evangelist of a near subcontinent,
and idol of millions, has been publicly murdered. In India and Pakistan
today every heart and every conscience should be search to assess how far
every heart and every conscience is answerable for this most fearful of
tragedies. The people of India and indirectly the people of Pakistan for
he was trying to befriend both, have added their other losses. The most
grievous loss of all - the loss of Gandhiji.
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United Kingdom (UK)
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His Majesty the King
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Irreparable loss
The Queen and I are deeply shocked by the death of Mr. Gandhi. Will you
please convey to the people of India our sincere sympathy in the
irreparable loss which they, and indeed mankind, have suffered.
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Lord Mountbatten |
Life of love and truth
Gandhiji's death is truly a loss to mankind which sorely needs the living
light of those ideals of love and tolerance for which he strove and died.
In her hour of deep sorrow India is proud to have given to the world a man
of his imperishable renown and is confident that his example will be a
source of inspiration and strength in the fulfillment of her destiny...
India, indeed the world, will not see the like of him again, perhaps, for
centuries.
Our one consolation in this hour of unparalleled grief is that his life of
truth, tolerance and love towards his fellows may inspire our troubled
world to save itself by following his noble example.
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Countess Mountbatten |
An international tragedy
The death of Mahatma Gandhi is not only a national disaster, but an
international tragedy. My heart is so full that I am unable to find words.
Gandhiji's death is world loss. He was a great leader. The utmost we can
do now is to try and carry on and live up to the principles which Gandhiji
taught us.
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George Bernard Shaw |
Dangerous to be good
It shows how dangerous it is to be too good.
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Horace Alexander |
Friend of the English
The long struggle against British power never led to alienation from the
English people. Not only did he count several viceroys, and other British
rulers as his friends, but even among those who are his close intimates,
among those who ran to him with all their problems and difficulties, among
those who love to call him 'Bapu', not a few were Englishmen and women.
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Mr. Kingsley Martin,
Editor, New Statesman &
Nation, London.
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His brave campaign
The Mahatma did not teach a soft doctrine of complacence but he did, like Jesus Christ, convince millions of people that the only alternative to an endless succession of hates and wars was to realise that truth and love were the supreme methods of warfare, for the only true victory is to turn your enemy into your friend...I was present when Mahatma Gandhi held his prayer meeting at Mehrauli Tomb, as part of his brave and beneficent campaign to end hatred and bitterness between Hindus and Muslims. People sometimes speak as if the western world is incapable of appreciation of such a life as Gandhi's.. .But they sometimes forget what Gandhi always remembered
that Christ himself taught a doctrine that was closely akin to ahimsa . . .
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The News
Chronicle, London.
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A high religious tragedy
The darkness which is over the earth today is but the deepening of a shadow which has fallen across all generations of men. The murder of Mahatma Gandhi is something far more terrible than any political crime. It belongs to the supernatural realm of high religious tragedy.
The hand that killed the Mahatma is the same hand that nailed the Cross. It is the hand that fired the faggots. It is the hand that through the ages has been growing ever more mighty in war and less sure in the pursuit of peace. It is your hand and mine. . .
Yet after the work of the Mahatma, it is not too presumptuous to hope for a miracle. It may be that the death of this leader, who was held in so much reverence by so many millions, will raise men to heights they have not hitherto attained. It may be that love against which the gun has no power will evoke out of this great tragedy the beginnings of peace and unity for India.
Now in the pain of Mahatma Gandhi's death it is possible to realise how lasting and how strong is the faith which he preached. Now we can see that the light which was kindled in the East has not been put out, but is made one with the white radiance of eternity.
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The Times, London. |
Mahatma Gandhi will rightly take his place alone in Indian history as a leader who embodied far more than his own religious community's ideas of human brotherhood, of respect for individual conscience, and of supreme self-sacrifice in support of right. |
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The Manchester
Guardian.
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To the West he is, above all, the man who revived and refreshed
the meaning and value of religion. |
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The Daily Worker,
London.
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Mahatma Gandhi has lost his life truly as a martyr in the fight against communal conflict...The solemnity of the moment calls for renewed efforts to find the path of co-operation and democratic unity.
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The Daily Herald,
London.
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The assassination is not only a calamity for India but for the world. Mahatma Gandhi was one of the great teachers of mankind.
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The Daily
Telegraph,
London
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He gave to Indians a new sense of power and responsibility and
the value of political agitation.
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EUROPE
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Belgium
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Frans Van Cauwelaer,
President of the Belgian Chamber of Deputies
His death has plunged in a personal mourning all men who have not ceased
to believe in the power of the spirit and the radiance of godliness. Let
this tragic death continue to serve his noble dream of human fraternity.
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Czechoslovakia
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Dr. Edward Benes
The representative of your independence and freedom.
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France |
A Resolution of the Council
of Republic of France
May the memory of the Apostle of India inspire men of all races in their
march towards liberty and justice and may the idea of mutual understanding
prevail over violence and fatalism.
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Germany
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Dr. Kurt Schumacher, GSD
Leader
Mr. Gandhi will on with us as an example of humanity... his influence will
be stronger than ever before...
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Italy
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His Holiness Pope Pius XII,
Vatican City
The great man was the spiritual leader of millions of Indians and had
always struggled for peace.
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Switzerland President |
Mahatma Gandhi exceptionally personified the Prince of Peace whose loss
affects all humanity.
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United States of America (USA)
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Albert Einstein
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Everyone concerned in the
better future of mankind must be deeply moved by the tragic death of
Mahatma Gandhi. He died as the victim of his own principles, the principle
of non-violence. He died because in time of disorder and general
irritation in his country, he refused armed protection for himself. It was
his unshakable belief that the use of force is an evil in itself, that
therefore it must be avoided by those who are striving for supreme justice
to his belief. With his belief in his heart and mind, he has led a great
nation on to its liberation. He has demonstrated that a powerful human
following can be assembled no only through the cunning game of the usual
political manoeuvres and trickeries but through the cogent example of
morally superior conduct of life.
The admiration for Mahatma Gandhi in all countries of the world rests on
recognition, mostly sub-conscious, recognition of the fact that in our
time of utter moral decadence, he was the only statesman to stand for a
higher level of human relationship in political sphere. This level we
must, with all our forces, attempt to reach. We must learn the difficult
lesson that an endurable future of humanity will be possible only if, also
in international relations, decisions are based on law and justice and not
on self-righteous power, as they have been upto now.
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President Truman
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Gandhi was great Indian
nationalist, but at the same time he was a leader of international
stature. His teachings and actions have left a deep impression on millions
of people. As a teacher and leader, his influence made itself felt not
only in India, but everywhere in the world and his death brings great
sorrow to all peace loving people. Another giant among men has fallen in
the cause of brotherhood and peace. I know that the people of Asia will be
inspired by his tragic death to strive with increased determination to
achieve the goals of cooperation and mutual trust for which the Mahatma
has now given his life.
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Eleanor Roosevelt
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There is no doubt Gandhi had
great spiritual qualities and the one only hope, even though he is not
with his people, is that his influence had much of value to give to the
rest of the world and one hopes the very violence of his death will turn
people away from violence.
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General Dogulas
MacArthur,
C-in-C, Allied forces
in Japan
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Nothing more revolting has
occurred in history of modern world than the senseless assassination of
this venerable man. That he should die by violence is one of those bitter
anachronisms that seems to refute all logic.
In the evolution of civilization, if it is to survive, all men can not
fail eventually to adopt his belief that the process of mass application
of force to resolve contentious issues is fundamentally not only wrong but
contains within itself the germs of self-destruction.
Gandhiji, however, was one of those prophets who lived far ahead of the
times.
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Pearl S. Buck |
“He was right, he knew he was
right, we all knew he was right. The man who killed him knew he was right.
However long the follies of the violent continue, they but prove that
Gandhi was right. 'Resist to the very end', he said, 'but without
violence'. Of violence the world is sick. Oh, India, dare to be worthy of
your Gandhi.”
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Dr.Martin Luther King, Jr. |
“Gandhi was probably the first
person in history to lift the love ethic of Jesus above mere interaction
between individuals to a powerful and effective social force on a large
scale. The intellectual and moral satisfaction that I failed to gain from
the utilitarianism of Bentham and Mill, the revolutionary methods of Marx
and Lenin, the social contract theory of Hobbes, the 'back to nature'
optimism of Rousseau, and the superman philosophy of Nietzsche, I found in
the non-violent resistance philosophy of Gandhi.”
“If humanity is to progress, Gandhi is inescapable. He lived, thought, and
acted, inspired by the vision of humanity evolving toward a world of peace
and harmony. We may ignore him at our own risk.”
“Gandhi resisted evil with as much vigor and power as the violent
resister, but he resisted with love instead of hate. True pacifism is not
unrealistic submission to evil power. It is rather a courageous
confrontation of evil by the power of love.”
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Others On Gandhi
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Arnold Zweig |
“Then rose the star of Gandhi.
He showed that a doctrine of nonviolence was possible.”
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Haile Selassie I. |
“Mahatma Gandhi will always be
remembered as long as free men and those who love freedom and justice
live.”
“The name Mahatma Gandhi has become synonymous with right and justice;
towards this end it has become an inspiration to millions of oppressed
people and has kindled the light of liberty.”
“Today, when world peace is threatened with atomic and nuclear weapons
capable of annihilating the human race, Mahatma Gandhi's teachings of love
and truth and of respect for others' rights have become even more
meaningful than at any other time.”
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Ho Chi Minh |
“I and others may be
revolutionaries but we are disciples of Mahatma Gandhi, directly or
indirectly. Nothing more, nothing less.”
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Rabindranath Tagore |
"Mahatma Gandhi came and stood
at the door of India's destitute millions, clad as one of themselves,
speaking to them in their own language...who else has so unreservedly
accepted the vast masses of the Indian people as his flesh and
blood...Truth awakened Truth.”
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Romain Rolland |
“Gandhi is not only for India
a hero of national history, whose legendary memory will be enshrined in
the millennial epoch. -Gandhi has renewed, for all the peoples of the
West, the message of their Christ, forgotten or betrayed.”
“For many, he was like a return of Christ. For others, for independent
thinkers, Gandhi was a new incarnation of Jean-Jaques Rosseau and of
Tolstoy, denouncing the illusions and the crimes of civilization, and
preaching to men the return to nature, to the simple life, to health.”
“I have seen here, in Switzerland, the pious love that he [Gandhi]
inspired in humble peasants of the country side and the mountains.”
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U Thant |
“Many of his principles have
universal application and eternal validity, and I hope the passing years
will show that his faith in the efficacy of nonviolent pressure as an
agent for peaceful change is as justified today all over the world as it
was in his time in India.”
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Werner Heisenberg |
“Gandhi's way of thinking can
lead directly into the political structure of the future world, in which a
nation might be much better protected by not possessing atomic weapons
than by having them, or might pursue its own interests much more
efficiently by participating in the interests of other nations than by
ignoring them. It was the unique example given by Gandhi which
demonstrated that the most sincere personal engagement combined with
complete renunciation of violence can lead to great political success. We
are all indebted to him for this example.”
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Will Durant |
“Not since Buddha has India so
revered any man. Not since St. Francis of Assissi has any life known to
history been so marked by gentleness, disinterestedness, simplicity of
soul and forgiveness of enemies. We have the astonishing phenomenon of a
revolution led by a saint.”
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Lord Richard
Attenborough |
“When asked what attribute he
most admired in human nature, Mahatma Gandhi replied, simply and
immediately, 'Courage'. 'Nonviolence', he said, 'is not to be used ever as
the shield of the coward. It is the weapon of the brave.”
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HH The Dalai Lama |
“I have the greatest
admiration and respect for Mahatma Gandhi. He was a great human being with
a deep understanding of human nature. He made every effort to encourage
the full development of the positive aspects of the human potential and to
reduce or restrain the negative. His life has inspired me ever since I was
a small boy. Ahimsa or nonviolence is the powerful idea that Mahatma
Gandhi made familiar throughout the world. But nonviolence does not mean
the mere absence of violence. It is something more positive, more
meaningful than that, for it depends wholly on the power of truth. The
true expression of nonviolence is compassion. Some people seem to think
that compassion is just a passive emotional response instead of a rational
stimulus to action. To experience genuine compassion is to develop a
feeling of closeness to others combined with a sense of responsibility for
their welfare. This develops when we accept that other people are just
like ourselves in wanting happiness and not wanting suffering. What is the
relevance of nonviolence and compassion to the future of humanity? As
Mahatma Gandhi showed by his own example, nonviolence can be implemented
not only in politics but also in day-to-day life. That was his great
achievement. He showed that nonviolence should be active in helping
others. Nonviolence means that if you can help and serve others you should
do so. If you cannot, you must at least restrain yourself from harming
others. I believe that it is very important that we find positive ways in
which children and adults can be educated in the path of compassion,
kindness and nonviolence. If we can actively do this I believe we will be
fulfilling Mahatma Gandhi's legacy to us. It is my prayer that, as we
enter this new century, nonviolence and dialogue will increasingly come to
govern all human relations.” |
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Louis Fischer |
Just an old man in a loin
cloth in distant India. Yet when he died, humanity wept. |
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Swami Premananda |
True to its spiritual
heritage, India has contributed in the personality of Mahatma Gandhi the
greatest truth, the truth of God. No other nation in this century has
contributed anything of such eternal value. But India has. And this I must
say; that for another thousand years the world must look towards the
idealism of Mahatma Gandhi. Mahatma Gandhi was an avatar. I don't mean a
mythological figure or a personality. Who is an avatar? one who manifests
in his life to the utmost the attributes of God on earth; he is an avatar.
Who has done this in this twentieth century of ours? Mahatma Gandhi. He is
an avatar. India has contributed something to the United States: idealism,
the truth by living example rather than theory, not in words, not not from
the pulpit, but from among the people. Not in words but in action. India
has contributed Mahatma Gandhi's life, his ideals. There is no other way
for mankind to establish the kingdom of God on earth, no other way except
the path which Mahatma Gandhi has revealed unto us." |