History, asked by coolprogamer001, 4 months ago

What did Mahatma Gandhi mean by 'ahimsa' (non-violence) How could 'Ahimsa' become the basis of struggle? This is what Gandhiji said: Non-violence comes to us through doing good continually without
the slightest expectation of return ... That is the indispensable lesson in non-violence... In South Africa... I succeeded in learning the eternal law of suffering as the only remedy for undoing wrong and injustice. It
means positively the law of non-violence. You have to be prepared to suffer cheerfully at the hands of all and sundry and you will wish ill to no one, not even to those who may have wronged you.


What is the important lesson of non-violence?

What is the eternal law of suffering?

What was the reason for which Mahatma Gandhi fought in South Africa?

When did he return to India from South Africa?

Answers

Answered by samarpoonem6
0

Answer:

For Gandhi, ahimsa means: non-injury, nonviolence, non-harm, the renunciation of the will to kill and the intention to hurt any living thing, the abstention from hostile thought, word or deed, and compassion for all living creature

Explanation:

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