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This page
is compiled from
The Official Mahatma Gandhi
eArchive.
Gandhiji's Wit & Wisdom -
Famous Quotes
- Woman is the companion of
man, gifted with equal mental
capacities. She has the right
to participate in the minutest
details in the activities of
man, and she has an equal right
of freedom and liberty with
him.
- Hatred ever kills, love
never dies such is the vast
difference between the two.
What is obtained by love is
retained for all time. What is
obtained by hatred proves a
burden in reality for it
increases hatred.
- Fear of death makes us
devoid both of valour and
religion. For want of valour is
want of religious faith.
- There are times when you
have to obey a call which is
the highest of all, i.e. the
voice of conscience even though
such obedience may cost many a
bitter tear, and even more,
separation from friends, from
family, from the state to which
you may belong, from all that
you have held as dear as life
itself. For this obedience is
the law of our being.
- Insistence on truth can
come into play when one party
practises untruth or injustice.
Only then can love be tested.
True friendship is put to the
test only when one party
disregards the obligation of
friendship.
- The test of friendship is
assistance in adversity, and
that too, unconditional
assistance. Co-operation which
needs consideration is a
commercial contract and not
friendship. Conditional
co-operation is like
adulterated cement which does
not bind.
- It may be long before the
law of love will be recognised
in international affairs. The
machineries of government stand
between and hide the hearts of
one people from those of
another.
- A vow is a purely religious
act which cannot be taken in a
fit of passion. It can be taken
only with a mind purified and
composed and with God as
witness.
- Religion is a matter of the
heart. No physical
inconvenience can warrant
abandonment of one's own
religion.
- Non-cooperation is an
attempt to awaken the masses,
to a sense of their dignity and
power. This can only be done by
enabling them to realize that
they need not fear brute force,
if they would but know the soul
within.
- Whenever I see an erring
man, I say to myself I have
also erred; when I see a
lustful man I say to myself, so
was I once; and in this way I
feel kinship with everyone in
the world and feel that I
cannot be happy without the
humblest of us being
happy.
- To forgive is not to
forget. The merit lies in
loving in spite of the vivid
knowledge that the one that
must be loved is not a friend.
There is no merit in loving an
enemy when you forget him for a
friend.
- The moment there is
suspicion about a person's
motives, everything he does
becomes tainted.
- Are creeds such simple
things like the clothes which a
man can change at will and put
on at will? Creeds are such for
which people live for ages and
ages.
- I have but shadowed forth
my intense longing to lose
myself in the Eternal and
become merely a lump of clay in
the Potter's divine hands so
that my service may become more
certain because uninterrupted
by the baser self in me.
- An error does not become
truth by reason of multiplied
propagation, nor does truth
become error because nobody
will see it.
- Suffering cheerfully
endured, ceases to be suffering
and is transmuted into an
ineffable joy.
- As soon as we lose the
moral basis, we cease to be
religious. There is no such
thing as religion over-riding
morality. Man, for
instance,cannot be untruthful,
cruel or incontinent and claim
to have God on his side.
- Even as wisdom often comes
from the mouths of babes, so
does it often come from the
mouths of old people. The
golden rule is to test
everything in the light of
reason and experience, no
matter from where it
comes.
- Non-cooperation is directed
not against men but against
measures. It is not directed
against the Governors, but
against the system they
administer. The roots of
non-cooperation lie not in
hatred but in justice, if not
in love.
- I do not want my house to
be walled in on all sides and
my windows to be stuffed. I
want the cultures of all the
lands to be blown about my
house as freely as possible.
But I refuse to be blown off my
feet by any. I refuse to live
in other people's houses as an
interloper, a beggar or a
slave.
- Measures must always in a
progressive society be held
superior to men, who are after
all imperfect instruments,
working for their
fulfilment.
- I will far rather see the
race of man extinct than that
we should become less than
beasts by making the noblest of
God's creation, woman, the
object of our lust.
- The spirit of non-violence
necessarily leads to humility.
Non-violence means reliance on
God, the rock of ages. If we
would seek his aid, we must
approach Him with a humble and
contrite heart.
- Abstract truth has no value
unless it incarnates in human
beings who represent it, by
proving their readiness to die
for it.
- There is a higher court
than courts of justice and that
is the court of conscience. It
supercedes all other
courts.
- Non-cooperation is beyond
the reach of the bayonet. It
has found an abiding place in
the Indian heart. Workers like
me will go when the hour has
struck, but non-cooperation
will remain.
- Intolerance is itself a
from of violence and an
obstacle to the growth of a
true democratic spirit.
- This campaign of
non-cooperation has no
reference to diplomacy, secret
or open. The only diplomacy it
admits of is the statement and
pursuance of truth at any
cost.
- God is, even though the
whole world deny him. Truth
stands, even if there be no
public support. It is
self-sustained.
- I claim that human mind or
human society is not divided
into watertight compartments
called social, political and
religious. All act and react
upon one another.
- The only virtue I want to
claim is truth and
non-violence. I lay no claim to
superhuman powers. I want none.
I wear the same corruptible
flesh that the weakest of my
fellow beings wears, and am
therefore as liable to err as
any. My services have many
limitations, but God has upto
now blessed them in spite of
the imperfections.
- The human voice can never
reach the distance that is
covered by the still small
voice of conscience.
- If we want to cultivate a
true spirit of democracy we
cannot afford to be intolerant.
Intolerance betrays want of
faith in one's cause.
- When I admire the wonders
of a sunset or the beauty of
the moon, my soul expands in
the worship of the
creator.
- Violent means will give
violent freedom. That would be
a menace to the world and to
India herself.
- Religion is more than life.
Remember that his own religion
is the truest to every man even
if it stands low in the scales
of philosophical
comparison.
- In nature there is
fundamental unity running
through all the diversity we
see about us. Religions are
given to mankind so as to
accelerate the process of
realisation of fundamental
unity.
- However much I may
sympathise with and admire
worthy motives, I am an
uncompromising opponent of
violent methods even to serve
the noblest of causes.
- Birth and death are not two
different states, but they are
different aspects of the same
state. There is as little
reason to deplore the one as
there is to be pleased over the
other.
- For me every ruler is alien
that defies public
opinion.
- Experience convinces me
that permanent good can never
be the outcome of untruth &
violence. Even if my belief is
a fond delusion, it will be
admitted that it is a
fascinating delusion.
- I do not want to foresee
the future. I am concerned with
taking care of the present. God
has given me no control over
the moment following.
- Indeed one's faith in one's
plans and methods is truly
tested when the horizon before
one is the blackest.
- It is my own firm belief
that the strength of the soul
grows in proportion as you
subdue the flesh.
- My trust is solely in god.
And I trust men only because I
trust God. If I had no God to
rely upon, I should be like
Timon, a hater of my
species.
- One's own religion is after
all a matter between oneself
and one's Maker and no one
else's.
- My religion is based on
truth and non-violence. Truth
is my God. Non-violence is the
means of realising Him.
- It is any day better to
stand erect with a broken and
bandaged head then to crawl on
one's belly, in order to be
able to save one's head.
- Better far than cowardice
is killing and being killed in
battle.
- Imitation is the sincerest
flattery.
- Let no one charge me with
ever having abused or
encouraged weakness or
surrendered on matters of
principle. But I have said, as
I say again, that every trifle
must not be dignified into a
principle.
- Violent men have not been
known in history to die to a
man. They die up to a
point.
- Justice that love gives is
a surrender, justice that law
gives is a punishment.
- I am but a poor struggling
soul yearning to be wholly
good, wholly truthful and
wholly non-violent in thought,
word and deed, but ever failing
to reach the ideal which I know
to be true. It is a painful
climb, but the pain of it is a
positive pleasure to me. Each
step upwards makes me feel
stronger and fit for the
next.
- Moral authority is never
retained by any attempt to hold
on to it. It comes without
seeking and is retained without
effort.
- Self-respect knows no
considerations.
- Power is of two kinds. One
is obtained by the fear of
punishment and the other by
acts of love. Power based on
love is a thousand times more
effective and permanent then
the one derived from fear of
punishment.
- A religion that takes no
account of practical affairs
and does not help to solve them
is no religion.
- There is no principle worth
the name if it is not wholly
good.
- No sacrifice is worth the
name unless it is a joy.
Sacrifice and a long face go
ill together. Sacrifice is
'making sacred'. He must be a
poor specimen of humanity who
is in need of sympathy for his
sacrifice.
- That service is the
nobelest which is rendered for
its own sake.
- Every formula of every
religion has in this age of
reason, to submit to the acid
test of reason and universal
assent.
- God tries his votaries
through and through but never
beyond endurance. He gives them
strength enough to go through
the ordeal he prescribes for
them.
- Love never claims, it ever
gives. Love ever suffers, never
resents never revenges
itself.
- I claim to be a simple
individual liable to err like
any other fellow mortal. I own,
however, that I have humility
enough to confess my errors and
to retrace my steps.
- Truth is by nature
self-evident, as soon as you
remove the cobwebs of ignorance
that surround it, it shines
clear.
- Adaptability is not
imitation. It means power of
resistance and
assimilation.
- Man has reason,
discrimination and free-will
such as it is. The brute has no
such thing. It is not a free
agent, and knows no distinction
between virtue and vice, good
and evil. Man, being a free
agent, knows these
distinctions, and when he
follows his higher nature,
shows himself far superior to
the brute, but when he follows
his baser nature can show
himself lower then the
brute.
- Anger is the enemy of
Ahimsa(Non-violence) and pride
is a monster that swallows it
up.
- A principle is the
expression of perfection, and
as imperfect beings like us
cannot practise perfection, we
devise every moment limits of
its compromise in
practice.
- It is easy enough to say,
'I do not believe in God.' For
God permits all things to be
said of Him with impunity. He
looks at our acts. And any
breach of His Law carries with
it not its vindictive, but its
purifying, compelling
punishment.
- He who trifles with truth
cuts at the root of Ahimsa. He
who is angry is guilty of
Himsa.
- Human society is a
ceaseless growth, an unfoldment
in terms of spirituality.
- If patience is worth
anything, it must endure to the
end of time. And a living faith
will last in the midst of the
blackest storm.
- Though we may know Him by a
thousand names, He is one and
the same to us all.
- I have found by experience
that man makes his plans to be
often upset by God, but, at the
same time, where the ultimate
goal is the search of truth, no
matter how a man's plans are
frustrated the issue is never
injurious and often better then
anticipated.
- A 'no' uttered from deepest
conviction is better and
greater than a 'yes' merely
uttered to please, or what is
worse, to avoid trouble.
- Friendship that insists
upon agreement on all matters
is notworth the name.
Friendship to be real must ever
sustain the weight of honest
differences, however sharp they
be.
- A clean confession,
combined with a promise never
to commit thesin again, when
offered before one who has the
right to receiveit, is the
purest type of
repentance.
- Purity of personal life is
the one indispensable condition
for building up a sound
education.
- Perfection is the exclusive
attribute of God, and it is
indescribable, untranslatable.
I do believe that it is
possible for human beings to
become perfect. It is necessary
for all of us to aspire after
that perfection but when that
blessed state is attained, it
becomes indescribable,
indefinable.
- What is true of the
individual will be to-morrow
true of the whole nation if
individuals will but refuse to
lose heart and hope.
- Service which is rendered
without joy helps neither the
servant nor the served. But all
other pleasures and possessions
pale into nothingness before
service which is rendered in a
spirit of joy.
- It has always been a
mystery to me how men can feel
themselves honoured by the
humiliation of their fellow
beings.
- The spirit of democracy is
not a mechanical thing to be
adjusted by abolition of forms.
It requires change of
heart.
- It is quite proper to
resist and attack a system, but
to resist and attack its author
is tantamount to resisting and
attacking oneself, for we are
all tarred with the same brush,
and are children of one and the
same Creator, and as such the
divine powers within us are
infinite. To slight a single
human being, is to slight those
divine powers and thus to harm
not only that Being, but with
Him, the whole world.
- Let us all be brave enough
to die the death of a martyr,
but let no one lust for
martyrdom.
- A True soldier does not
argue as he marches, how
success is going to be
ultimately achieved. But he is
confident that if he only plays
his humble part well, somehow
or other the battle will be
won. It is in that spirit that
every one of us should act. It
is not given to us to know the
future. But it is given to
everyone of us to know how to
do our own part well.
- If co-operation is a duty,
I hold that non-co-operation
also under certain conditions
is equally a duty.
- Of all the animal creation
of God, man is the only animal
who has been created in order
that he may know his Maker.
Man's aim in life is not
therefore to add from day to
day to his material prospects
and to his material
possessions, but his
predominant calling is, from
day to day to come nearer to
his own Maker.
- Spiritual relationship is
far more precious than
physical. Physical relationship
divorced from spiritual is body
without soul.
- Man and his deed are two
distinct things. Whereas a good
deed should call forth
approbation, and a wicked deed
dis-approbation, the doer of
the deed, whether good or
wicked always deserves respect
or pity as the case may be.
Hate the sin and not the sinner
is a precept which though easy
enough to understand is rarely
practised, and that is why the
poison of hatred spreads in the
world.
- All the religions of the
world, while they may differ in
other respects, unitedly
proclaim that nothing lives in
this world but Truth.
- Morality is the basis of
things and truth is the
substance of all
morality.
- Mankind is notoriously too
dense to read the signs that
God sends from time to time. We
require drums to be beaten into
our ears, before we should wake
from our trance and hear the
warning and see that to lose
oneself in all, is the only way
to find oneself.
- I do not want any
patronage, as I do not give
any. I am a lover of my own
liberty, and so I would do
nothing to restrict yours. I
simply want to please my own
conscience, which is God.
- Real suffering, bravely
borne, melts even a heart of
stone. Such is the potency of
suffering. And there lies the
key to Satyagraha.
- But for my faith in God, I
should have been a raving
maniac.
- There is an orderliness in
the universe, there is an
unalterable law governing
everything and every being that
exists or lives. It is no blind
law; for no blind law can
govern the conduct of living
beings.
- The first condition of
humaneness is a little humility
and a little diffidence about
the correctness of one's
conduct and a little
receptiveness.
- Where love is, there God is
also.
- We are merely the
instruments of the Almighty's
will and therefore ignorant of
what helps us forward and what
acts as an impediment. We must
thus rest satisfied with the
knowledge only of the means and
if these are pure, we can
fearlessly leave the end to
take care of itself.
- There will have to be rigid
and iron discipline before we
achieve anything great and
enduring, and that discipline
will not come by mere academic
argument and appeal to reason
and logic. Discipline is learnt
in the school of
adversity
- Non-violence is not a
quality to be evolved or
expressed to order. It is an
inward growth depending for
sustenance upon intense
individual effort.
- Constant development is the
law of life, and a man who
always tries to maintain his
dogmas in order to appear
consistent drives himself into
a false position.
- I believe that cunning is
not only morally wrong but also
politically inexpedient, and
have therefore always
discountenanced its use even
from the practical
standpoint.
- When anything assumes the
strength of a creed, it becomes
self-sustained and derives the
needed support from
within.
- I do dimly perceive that
whilst everything around me is
ever-changing, ever-dying,
there is underlying all that
change a living Power that is
changeless, that holds all
together, that creates,
dissolves and recreates. That
informing power or spirit is
God. And since nothing else I
see merely through the senses
can or will persist, He alone
is.
- Non-violence and cowardice
are contradictory terms.
Non-violence is the greatest
virtue, cowardice the greatest
vice. Non-violence springs from
love, cowardice from hate.
Non-violence always suffers,
cowardice would always inflict
suffering. Perfect non-violence
is the highest bravery.
Non-violent conduct is never
demoralising, cowardice always
is.
- Each one has to find his
peace from within. And peace to
be real must be unaffected by
outside circumstances.
- It is man's social nature
which distinguishes him from
the brute creation. If it is
his privilege to be
independent, it is equally his
duty to be inter-dependent.
Only an arrogant man will claim
to be independent of everybody
else and be
self-contained.
- Healthy discontent is the
prelude to progress.
- Manliness consists not in
bluff, bravado or
lordliness.
It consists in daring
to do the right and facing
consequences whether it is in
matters social, political or
other. It consists in deeds,
not in words.
- Commonsense is the realised
sense of proportion.
- Golden fetters are no less
galling to a self-respecting
man theniron ones; the sting
lies in the fetters, not in the
metal.
- It would conduce to
national progress and save a
great deal of time and trouble
if we cultivated the habit of
never supporting the
resolutions either by speaking
or voting for them if we had
not either the intention or the
ability to carry them
out.
- Breach of promise is a base
surrender of truth.
- Intellect takes us along in
the battle of life to a certain
limit, but at the crucial
moment it fails us. Faith
transcends reason. It is when
the horizon is the darkest and
human reason is beaten down to
the ground that faith shines
brightest and comes to our
rescue.
- I reject any religious
doctrine that does not appeal
to reason and is in conflict
with morality.
- Gentleness, self-sacrifice
and generosity are the
exclusive possession of no one
race or religion.
- Each one prays to God
according to his own
light.
- The world is touched by
sacrifice. It does not then
discriminate about the merits
of a cause. Not so God - He is
all seeing. He insists on the
purity of the cause and on
adequate sacrifice
thereof.
- Breach of promise is no
less an act of insolvency than
a refusal to pay one's
debt.
- Prayer is not asking. It is
a longing of the soul. It is
daily admission of one's
weakness. It is better in
prayer to have a heart without
words than words without a
heart.
- The law of sacrifice is
uniform throughout the world.
To be effective it demands the
sacrifice of the bravest and
the most spotless.
- Man becomes great exactly
in the degree in which he works
for the welfare of his
fellow-men.
- We may have our private
opinions but why should they be
a bar to the meeting of
hearts?
- There should be truth in
thought, truth in speech, and
truth in action. To the man who
has realised this truth in
perfection, nothing else
remains to be known because all
knowledge is necessarily
included in it.
- I would heartily welcome
the union of East and West
provided it is not based on
brute force.
- I saw that nations like
individuals could only be made
through the agony of the Cross
and in no other way. Joy comes
not out of infliction of pain
on others but out of pain
voluntarily borne by
oneself.
- An ounce of practice is
worth more then tons of
preaching.
- Courage has never been
known to be a matter of muscle;
it is a matter of the heart.
The toughest muscle has been
known to tremble before an
imaginary fear. It was the
heart that set the muscle
atrembling.
- To me art in order to be
truly great must, like the
beauty of Nature, be universal
in its appeal. It must be
simple in its presentation and
direct in its expression, like
the language of Nature.
- God sometimes does try to
the uttermost those whom he
wishes to bless.
- When restraint and courtesy
are added to strength, the
latter becomes
irresistible.
- Suffering has its
well-defined limits. Suffering
can be both wise and unwise,
and when the limit is reached,
to prolong it would be not
unwise but the height of
folly.
- Have I not gazed at the
marvellous mystery of the
starry vault, hardly ever
tiring of the great
panorama?
- I have worshipped woman as
the living embodiment of the
spirit of service and
sacrifice.
- Proved right should be
capable of being vindicated by
right means as against the rude
i.e. sanguinary means. Man may
and should shed his own blood
for establishing what he
considers to be his right. He
may not shed the blood of his
opponent who disputes his
'right'.
- I look only to the good
qualities of men. Not being
faultless myself, I won't
presume to probe into the
faults of others.
- Woman has a compassionate
heart which melts at the sight
of suffering.
- Everyone who wills can hear
the inner voice. It is within
everyone.
- I have been a willing slave
to this most exacting Master fr
more then half a century. His
voice has been increasingly
audible as years have rolled
by. He has never forsaken me
even in my darkest hour. He has
saved me often against myself
and left me not a vestige of
independence. The greater the
surrender to Him, the greater
has been my joy.
- A certain degree of
physical harmony and comfort is
necessary, but above a certain
level it becomes a hindrance
instead of a help. Therefore
the ideal of creating an
unlimited number of wants and
satisfying them seems to be a
delusion and a snare.
- Evil is, good or truth
misplaced.
- There is no human
institution but has its
dangers. The greater the
institution, the greater the
chances of abuse. Democracy is
a great institution and
therefore it is liable to be
greatly abused. The remedy
therefore is not avoidance of
democracy but reduction of the
possibility of abuse to a
minimum.
- Man can never be a woman's
equal in the spirit of selfless
service with which nature has
endowed her.
- I believe in the
fundamental truth of all great
religions of the world.
- My life is one indivisible
whole, and all my activities
run intoone another, and they
all have their rise in my
insatiable love of
mankind.
- I need no inspiration other
then Nature's. She has never
failed me yet. She mystifies
me, bewilders me, sends me into
ecstasies. Besides God's
handiwork, does not man's fade
into insignificance?
- The real ornament of woman
is her character, her
purity.
- To deprive a man of his
natural liberty and to deny to
him the ordinary amenities of
life is worse then starving the
body; it is starvation of the
soul the dweller in the
body.
- Humility cannot be an
observance by itself. For, it
does not lend itself to being
deliberately practised. It is,
however, an indispensable test
of 'Ahimsa.' For one who has
'Ahimsa' in him it becomes part
of his very nature.
- God, as Truth, has been for
me a treasure beyond price. May
He be so to every one of
us.
- Non-violence is the
greatest force at the disposal
of mankind. It is mightier than
the mightiest weapon of
destruction devised by the
ingenuity of man.
- Destruction is not the law
of humans. Man lives freely
only by his readiness to die,
if need be, at the hands of his
brother, never by killing him.
Every murder or other injury,
no matter for what cause,
committed or inflicted on
another is a crime against
humanity.
- The main purpose of life is
to live rightly, think rightly,
act rightly. The soul must
languish when we give all our
thought to the body.
- Unwearied ceaseless effort
is the price that must be paid
for turning faith into a rich
infallible experience.
- Manliness consists in
making circumstances subserve
to ourselves.
- Those who will not heed
themselves perish. To
understand this principle is
not to be impatient, not to
reproach fate, not to blame
others. He who understands the
doctrine of self-help blames
himself for failure.
- Surely conversion is a
matter between man and his
Maker who alone knows his
creatures' hearts. A conversion
without a clean heart is, in my
opinion, a denial of God and
Religion. Conversion without
cleanliness of heart can only
be a matter of sorrow, not joy,
to a godly person.
- I have not the shadow of a
doubt that any man or woman can
achieve what I have, if he or
she would make the same effort
and cultivate the same hope and
faith. Work without faith is
like an attempt to reach the
bottom of a bottomless
pit.
- Ill-digested principles
are, if anything, worse than
ill-digested food, for the
latter harms the body and there
is cure for it, whereas the
former ruins the soul and there
is no cure for it.
- The essence of all
religions is one. Only their
approaches are different.
- Restraint never ruins one's
health. What ruins it,is not
restraint but outward
suppression. A really
self-restrained person grows
every day from strength to
strength and from peace to more
peace. The very first step in
self-restraint is the restraint
of thoughts.
- We should meet abuse by
forbearance. Human nature is so
constituted that if we take
absolutely no notice of anger
or abuse, the person indulging
in it will soon weary of it and
stop.
- True religion is not a
narrow dogma. It is not
external observance. It is
faith in God and living in the
presence of God. It means faith
in a future life, in truth and
Ahimsa. There prevails today a
sort of apathy towards these
things of the Spirit.
- Only he can take great
resolves who has indomitable
faith in God and has fear of
God.
- A small body of determined
spirits fired by an
unquenchable faith in their
mission can alter the course of
history.
- I may live without air and
water, but not without Him. You
may pluck out my eyes, but that
cannot kill me. You may chop
off my nose but that will not
kill me. But blast my belief in
God, and I am dead.
- Man's nature is not
essentially evil. Brute nature
has been know to yield to the
influence of love. You must
never despair of human
nature.
- Freedom is never dear at
any price. It is the breath of
life. What would a man not pay
for living ?
- I know, to banish anger
altogether from one's breast is
a difficult task. It cannot be
achieved through pure personal
effort. It can be done only by
God's grace.
- Everyone has faith in God
though everyone does not know
it. For everyone has faith in
himself and that multiplied to
the nth degree is God. The sum
total of all that lives is God.
We may not be God, but we are
of God, even as a little drop
of water is of the ocean.
- There is no one without
faults, not even men of God.
They are men of God not because
they are faultless, but because
they know their own faults,
they strive against them, they
do not hide them, and are ever
ready to correct
themselves.
- Non-violence and cowardice
go ill together. I can imagine
a fully armed man to be at
heart a coward. Possession of
arms implies an element of
fear, if not cowardice. But
true non-violence is an
impossibility without the
possession of unadulterated
fearlessness.
- Providence has its
appointed hour for everything.
We cannot command results, we
can only strive.
- The hardest metal yields to
sufficient heat. Even so must
the hardest heart melt before
sufficiency of the heat of non-
violence. And there is no limit
to the capacity of non-violence
to generate heat.
- Rights accrue automatically
to him who duly performs his
duties. In fact the right to
perform one's duties is the
only right that is worth living
for and dying for. It covers
all legitimate rights. All the
rest is grab under one guise or
another and contains in it seed
of Himsa.
- It is good to see ourselves
as others see us. Try as we
may. We are never able to know
ourselves fully as we are,
especially the evil side of us.
This we can do only if we are
not angry with our critics but
will take in good heart
whatever they might have to
say.
- Far more indispensable then
food for the physical body is
spiritual nourishment for the
soul. One can do without food
for a considerable time, but a
man of the spirit cannot exist
for a single second without
spiritual nourishment.
- A dissolute character is
more dissolute in thought than
in deed. And the same is true
of violence. Our violence in
word and deed is but a feeble
echo of the surging violence of
thought in us.
- Democracy must in essence,
therefore, mean the art and
science of mobilising the
entire physical, economic and
spiritual resources of all the
various sections of the people
in the service of the common
good of all.
- A principle is a principle.
and in no case can it be
watered down because of our
incapacity to live it in
practice. We have to strive to
achieve it, and the striving
should be conscious, deliberate
and hard.
- A nation's culture resides
in the hearts and in the soul
of itspeople.
- Who am I? I have no
strength save what God gives
me. I have no authority over my
countrymen save the pure moral.
If He holds me to be a pure
instrument for the spread of
non-violence in place of the
awful violence now ruling the
earth, He will give me the
strength and show me the way.
My greatest weapon is mute
prayer. The cause of peace is
therefore, in God's good
hands.
- I want to see India free in
my life-time. But God may not
consider me fit enough to see
the dream of my life fulfilled.
Then I shall quarrel, not with
Him but with myself.
- All compromise is based on
give and take, but there can be
no give and take on
fundamentals. Any compromise on
mere fundamentals is a
surrender. For it is all give
and no take.
- Between husband and wife
there should be no secrets from
one another. I have a very high
opinion of the marriage tie. I
hold that husband and wife
merge in each other. They are
one in two or two in one.
- It is foolish to think that
by fleeing one can trick the
dread god of death. Let us
treat him as a beneficent angel
rather than a dread god. We
must face and welcome him
whenever he comes.
- It is the law of love that
rules mankind. Had violence,
i.e. hate, ruled us we should
have become extinct long ago.
And yet, the tragedy of it is
that the so-called civilized
men and nations conduct
themselves as if the basis of
society was violence.
- The badge of the violent is
his weapon, spear, sword or
rifle. God is the shield of the
non-violent.
- It is unwise to be too sure
of one's own wisdom. It is
healthy to be reminded that the
strongest might weaken and the
wisest might err.
- It is through truth
non-violence that I can have
some glimpseof God. Truth
non-violence are my God. They
are the obverse and reverse of
the same coin.
- Before the throne of the
Almighty, man will be judged
not by his acts but by his
intentions. For God alone reads
our hearts.
- Morality which depends upon
the helplessness of a man or
woman has not much to recommend
it. Morality is rooted in the
purity of our hearts.
- An opponent is entitled to
the same regard for his
principles as we would expect
others to have for ours.
Non-violence demands that we
should seek every opportunity
to win over opponents.
- Glory lies in the attempt
to reach one's goal and not in
reaching it.
- Just as a man would not
cherish living in a body other
than his own, so do nations not
like to live under other
nations, however noble and
great the latter may be.
- No religion which is narrow
and which cannot satisfy the
test of reason, will survive
the coming reconstruction of
society in which the values
will have changed and
character, not possession of
wealth, title or birth will be
the test of merit.
- How can one be compelled to
accept slavery? I simply refuse
to do the master's bidding. He
may torture me, break my bones
to atoms and even kill me. He
will then have my dead body,
not my obedience. Ultimately,
therefore, it is I who am the
victor and not he, for he has
failed in getting me to do what
he wanted done.
- Non-violence requires a
double faith, faith in God and
also faith in man.
- Man falls from the pursuit
of the ideal of plan living and
high thinking the moment he
wants to multiply his daily
wants. Man's happiness really
lies in contentment.
- Power invariably elects to
go into the hands of the
strong. That strength may be
physical or of the heart or, if
we do not fight shy of the
word, of the spirit. Strength
of the heart connotes
soul-force. Let it be
remembered that physical force
is transitory, even as the body
is transitory. But the power of
the spirit is permanent even as
the spirit is
everlasting.
- Truth quenches untruth,
love quenches anger,
self-suffering quenches
violence. This eternal rule is
a rule not for saints only but
for all.
- My work will be finished if
I succeed in carrying
conviction to the human family,
that every man or woman,
however weak in body, is the
guardian of his or her
self-respect and liberty, and
that this defence prevails,
though the world be against the
individual resister.
- Confession of errors is
like a broom which sweeps away
the dirt and leaves the surface
brighter and clearer. I feel
stronger for confession.
- I worship God as Truth
only. I have not yet found Him,
but I am seeking after Him. I
am prepared to sacrifice the
things dearest to me in pursuit
of this quest. Even if the
sacrifice demanded my very
life, I hope I may be prepared
to give it.
- We do not need to
proselytise either by our
speech or by our writing. We
can only do so really with our
lives. Let our lives be open
books for all to study.
Websites you might be interested
in
-
Mahatma Gandhi
eArchive
-
M K
Gandhi.org
-
Nava Jivan
Trust
-
Gandhi
Bappu
-
Indian Culture
Online
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