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Gandhi and India’s freedom movement: Special exhibition
Rare, archival images and documents capturing Gandhi’s contribution to India’s freedom movement and his views on diverse issues from caste to religion are part of a special exhibition
Updated: Aug 04, 2017 20:31 IST
By HT Correspondent, Hindustan Times
Mahatma Gandhi and Sarojini Naidu during salt satyagraha Nonviolence was the cornerstone of Gandhis philosophy in the fight against British colonial rule
Mahatma Gandhi and Sarojini Naidu during salt satyagraha. Non-violence was the cornerstone of Gandhi’s philosophy in the fight against British colonial rule. (National Gandhi Museum/picture credit)
As the country’s 70th independence day comes closer, a special exhibition has been organized at the India International Centre, Gandhi’s Vision: Freedom and Beyond, which focuses on the Mahatma’s dream of a free India. Along with it is another exhibition that – through photographs and documents – presents the country’s freedom movement. The exhibitions have been curated by former History professor Dr Aparna Basu, who is now the chairperson of the National Gandhi Museum.
The exhibition showing Gandhi’s leadership of the freedom struggle sweeps from his arrival in India right up to 1947, covering all the mass movements, from the Non-Cooperation movement of 1920 to the Dandi March of 1930 and the Quit India movement of 1942. There is a prelude which revolves around India before Gandhi – the 19th century social reforms, the formation of the Congress in 1885 and the Swadeshi movement.
The India of My Dreams exhibition depicts Gandhi’s views on myriad issues, from caste to the environment. All the panels have evocative black-and-white archival photographs along with selected quotes of Gandhi’s and other relevant text. In the panel Religious Harmony: All Men Are Brothers, there is a quote, which could well apply to the times we live in: “Let us respect other religions even as we respect our own. Mere tolerance thereof is not enough.”
Before the exhibition goes up at the India International Centre, you can also catch it at the National Gandhi Museum at Rajghat.