Social Sciences, asked by Anonymous, 10 months ago

what kind of society Mahatma Gandhi want to see in India​

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Answered by prabhleen2411
1

His non-violent resistance helped end British rule in India and has influenced modern civil disobedience movements across the globe. Widely referred to as Mahatma, meaning great soul or saint in Sanskrit, Gandhi helped India reach independence through a philosophy of non-violent non-cooperation

Answered by mittalshaurya144
1

Answer:

Few would dispute the notion that Mahatma K. Gandhi was one of the

twentieth century’s transformative political and spiritual leaders. Among

his many notable contributions, Gandhi is rightly credited with pioneering

Satyagraha, resistance to tyranny though mass civil disobedience, and vocalizing a transcendent message that helped the Indian National Congress acquire independence from the British in August 1947. Often forgotten or

omitted by standard histories, however, are Gandhi’s idealistic leanings that

in fact compromised the universality of his appeal and confounded the ideological underpinnings of the Indian nation. His vision for India’s future

was highly unorthodox. In Gandhi’s idealized state, there would be no representative government, no constitution, no army or police force; there

would be no industrialization, no machines and certainly no modern cities.

There would be no capitalism, no communism, no exploitation and no religious violence. Instead, a future Indian nation would be modeled off the

India of the past. It would feature an agrarian economy, self-sustaining villages, an absence of civil law and a moral framework that would express

the collective will of the people. In many ways, Gandhi’s writings reflect anarchic principles in that they call for a pre-modern, morally-enlightened and  apolitical Indian state

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