English, asked by vivekp19, 9 months ago

Speech on “curiculate exhibition on the journey of Mahatma Gandhi”
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Answered by xItzKhushix
2

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The journey from Mohandas to Mahatma started within the confines of a modest home in this Gujarat town, where a child grew from a conflicted youth to a man who would shape India's destiny and inspire millions across the globe.

If they could speak, the walls of 'Kaba Gandhi no Delo', the house where Mahatma Gandhi spent most of his formative years, would tell the tale of the making of the Mahatma.

But they don't, and now a museum at the house named after his father Karamchand Gandhi, fondly known as Kaba Gandhi, is where visitors can begin to unravel Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi's story - and life.

Many years before he became Mahatma Gandhi, a young Mohandas did things considered outrageous for an orthodox Hindu family of the early 19th century.

The house in a narrow bylane of old Rajkot is mute witness to events that laid the foundation of the beliefs that shaped the character of the Mahatma, a man who committed mistakes but overcame them and later earned the title of Father of the Nation.

Gandhi came to Rajkot when he was seven, stayed till he was 22, spending most his youth here, travelling to England and South Africa, but returning to base every now and then.

"Porbandar is the birthplace of Mahatma Gandhi and Ahmedabad his karmabhoomi (where he worked), but Rajkot is definitely his sanskarbhoomi (where he got values). Here he started his journey from Mohan to Mahatma," said Heliben Trivedi, managing trustee of the 'Kaba Gandhi no Delo'.

His belief that everything can be achieved by non-violence and truth gained roots in Rajkot, she said as India and the world celebrate the 150th birth anniversary of Mahatma Gandhi.

"He made mistakes and felt guilty about it and had the courage to accept them in front of his fathe

"You name it and he had done that. Like stealing gold of the family to pay debts, eating meat without informing his vegetarian family, stealing copper coins of servants to smoke and even visiting brothels," Trivedi said.

Gandhi also tried to enforce his will on wife Kasturba and at one point even made a feeble attempt to commit suicide for feeling he did not have enough freedom to do things as he wished.

Jolly Pravasi, a Gandhian, can recount the minutest detail of Gandhi's life in Rajkot.

"He feared the dark and could not sleep without keeping the lights on in his younger days. His maid taught him to chant the name of Lord Rama to keep off his fear and he used to do that. In the latter part of his life, he was not afraid of taking on the might of the British Empire," said Pravasi.

Answered by Ruchadeshmukh1
0

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