History, asked by smritigautam4938, 10 months ago

Essay on mahatma gandhi's ideology and its relevance today

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Answered by ydtodkar25
3

G- andhiji not only gave India its freedom but also gave the world and us a new thought on nonviolence and sustainable living. His teachings and experiments are more valid today than ever before, especially when we are trying to find solutions to worldwide greed, corruption, violence and runaway consumptive lifestyle which are putting a very heavy burden on the world’s resources.

Through ages India has time and again given to the world a new thought. Thus Buddhism, Jainism, Yogic system, Sikhism are part of the great spiritual thought given by India from time to time. Gandhiji’s message of nonviolence and sustainable living is a continuation of that long tradition.

To my mind Gandhiji’s greatest contribution to sustainable development was two fold. Firstly his experiments in simple living and high thinking. He believed that with simple living the resources of the planet earth can sustain us comfortably and his famous saying that earth provides us enough for our needs but not for our greed is extremely apt today. Secondly his insistence on all inclusive growth of the society and hence his focus on rural development.

Answered by ybsv2004
1

Answer:

Explanation:

Modern exponential growth in various fields has seemingly enabled human beings to skim over the fundamental failings of our society and, as each day progresses, our values are being drastically degraded. In these disturbing and difficult times, it might do us good to look back upon one of the greatest peace activists to have ever lived on this earth and discuss whether his principles have any place in today’s world.

It doesn’t need much thought to see that each one of Gandhi’s actions had an underlying premise behind them. His, at first, solitary fight against the mighty British empire could have been just one of the innumerable nameless struggles of that time. Yet, Gandhi succeeded where others could not. His methodology appealed to the conscience of the people; it stirred the masses into a huge Satyagraha. It worked because it was on the assumption of the existence of rudimentary human goodwill. And this is precisely what we require today. In this era of nuclear arms and biological weapons, it is a testament to the relevance of the Gandhian principle that India retains the no-first-use clause in the tenets of its foreign policy regarding the nuclear arena.  

The Gandhi approach is not just national based either; with his call for sustainable development, by using just what we need, being recognized globally. Along with this philosophy, at the core of his concept was ‘self-sustainability’. As a leader, Gandhi made firm decisions based on his vision while respecting other’s views and opinions at the same time. It is extremely crucial that we get rid of the homogeneous prescriptions for growth and implanting models irrespective of ecological diversities which have increased the problems in every society.  

As the problems in our society assume larger dimensions and greater repercussions, it is up to us now to “be the change we want to see in the world”. Mahatma Gandhi is as relevant today as he ever was, and perhaps it is now, more than ever, in every tragedy and disaster, in every dark and distressing incident, and every moment of weakness that we recognize the Gandhian principle as a shining beacon, a sign of hope for all of us.

Satyameva Jayate!

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