English, asked by litika2004, 1 year ago

essay on an ideal indian village as vission by mahatma gandhi would be- 700 words​

Answers

Answered by Anonymous
12

Answer:

Mahatma Gandhis dream villege

Explanation:

Mahatma Gandhi was one of the greatest man we ever had.He was the father of the nation in true sense .He always dreamt of India to become one of the greatest countries

in the world.He imaged that even the poorest man would be educated and empolyed.His dream villege would have schools for free education.

According to Mahatma Gandhi,the villegers can earn by becoming self employed.He inspired farmers and rise of small scale industries in colleges so that villege people are not left unemployed.

But in reality,the farmers had to suffer a lot because of unexpected weather conditions,therefore now the government has started various NGOs that help poor villege people to get education and start saving by creating account in banks.This would help them to save money for future.

Government has also started to create more employment opportunities for villegers by promoting handicraft and weaving.

Answered by smartbrainz
0

‘An Ideal Indian Village as Envisioned by Mahatma Gandhi Would be’:

An ideal Indian village, as conceived by Mahatma Gandhi, must be a village where people are not discriminated against on the basis of what religion or caste they belong to, they do some work that is successful in nature and everyone gets a minimum education, they don't fight with each other by means of violence, if possible to protest, then the path of non-violence is taken. Citizens are aware of democracy and the value of voting and are interested in voting and electing their representatives.

It must be a village where there are enough schools to provide quality education as it always supports education. It's going to be a village where help each other. It's a village where people help each other, and like cleanliness and keeping their environment clean, it's going to be a village where everyone respects rules and regulations and a village free from corruption. In fact, villagers wouldn't be boring, they'd be all consciousness. Men and women, ready to face the whole world, will live in freedom.

The ideal village can be considered a reformed one, where everyone wears khadi and produces all the khadi they need, where every dweller spends some of his time in one or more cotton-related processes, using only oil produced in indigenous oil presses, which consumes only jaggery produced in the village itself or in its neighbourhood, and only hand-pounded and hand-milled rice. In other words, the village where the greatest possible number of rural businesses flourish, where no one is illiterate, where the roads are dry, where there is a fixed place for evacuation, where the wells are clean, where there is peace between the various communities and where there is no untouchability, where everyone gets cow's milk, ghee, etc., in small quantities, in which everybody has work, and which is free from thefts and quarrels and thefts, and where the people accept the sevak's advice in all matters.

His concept of village Swaraj was to be a full republic, independent of its neighbours for their own essential needs, and yet interdependent for many others in which dependency is a requirement. Each village will therefore have the first concern to grow its own food crops and cotton for its cloth. It must have reserve for cattle, playground and recreation. Instead, if more land is available, useful money crops should expand, except opium, ganja, tobacco, and the like. A village theatre, school and public hall must be operated by the municipality. It will have its own waterworks to ensure the supply of clean water.

This can be attained by wells/tanks that are monitored. Up to the final basic course, education must be compulsory. Each operation must be carried out on a collaborative basis as far as possible. With their graded untouchability, there must be no castes like we have today. Non-violence with its Satyagraha strategy and non-cooperation must be approved by the village government. There must be a 'compulsory service of village guards' who must be selected by 'rotation from the register maintained by the village'. The village government must be led by a five-person Panchayat, elected annually by the male and female adult villagers, with minimum prescribed qualifications.

These must have all the requisite authority and jurisdiction. Since in the accepted sense there must be no system of punishment, this Panchayat must be the combined legislature, judiciary and executive to operate for its year of office. Any village can today become such a republic without much intervention from the existing government, whose only effective contact with the 'villages is the exaction of the income of the village'. Gandhiji’s outlook was that we must first serve the village, then the neighborhood, then the district and then the province

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