Gandhi is arrested while leading a march in South Africa

November 6, 1913: Gandhi is arrested while leading a march in South Africa
On November 6, 1913, Gandhi was arrested while leading a march in South Africa.
Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi (October 2, 1869 – January 30, 1948), nicknamed “Mahatma Gandhi”, was the leader of the Indian National Liberation Movement , Leader of the Indian National Congress.
Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi was born into a Hindu family, his father was the Prime Minister of the local state. Gandhi went to England to study law at the age of 19. In 1893, Gandhi came to South Africa under British rule and led the South African Indians for their rights. He combined Hinduism’s ideas of benevolence, vegetarianism and non-killing with the benevolence thought in the Bible and the Koran, and absorbed the ideological essence of Solon, Tolstoy and others, and gradually formed a non-violent non-violent Cooperation Theory.
In 1915, Gandhi returned to India and soon became the actual leader of the Congress Party, making “non-violence and non-cooperation” the guiding ideology of the Congress Party, and began to run for the independence of India. After World War II, India was divided into two countries, India and Pakistan. In the face of the conflict between the two countries, Gandhi, who had an important influence on both sides, used hunger strikes to influence them many times and called for unity. On January 30, 1948, Gandhi was assassinated by a Hindu diehard.
Gandhi is the founding father of India and the founder of Gandhism, a modern political doctrine that advocates nonviolent resistance. His spiritual thinking led the country towards independence from British colonial rule. His philosophy of “non-violence” has influenced nationalists and international movements for peaceful change around the world.
Gandhi was born in India under the shackles of British colonialism. His family devoutly followed the Hinduism of benevolence, vegetarianism, non-killing and asceticism. He was shy, shy and well-behaved. At the age of 13, Gandhi was ordered by his parents to marry an illiterate girl of the same age. He lost his father at the age of 16 and died shortly after the birth of his first child. The two later had five children together.
Gandhi experienced many hardships and ups and downs in his life. Born in India under the shackles of British colonialism, he grew up in a Hindu family that devotes himself to benevolence, non-killing, vegetarianism, and asceticism. She was shy, shy and well behaved since childhood. At the age of 13, he married an illiterate girl of the same age at the behest of his parents. At the age of 16, he lost his father and his first child was born. From elementary school to middle school, Gandhi was mediocre. In his youth, although he was influenced by the innovative wind at that time, he tried to break the vegetarian diet to strengthen his body and revitalize the nation, but he gave up halfway because he could not get rid of the education he received since childhood.
At the age of 19, he did not hesitate to be expelled from his caste status and traveled far and wide to study in London. The alien civilization once caused Gandhi to have a profound sense of inferiority and fell at his feet, and the constraints of religious stereotypes made him at a loss in a new environment. After a short period of confusion and exploration, he finally gave up the blind imitation of Western civilization, adhered to his original religious beliefs and embraced other religious teachings, accepted the education of British legal system, and obtained the qualification of lawyer of the University of London. After returning from his studies, he began to engage in lawyer business in Mumbai, but he suffered setbacks.
The first time I filed a lawsuit for someone, I fell into the pot because of stage fright. After half a year, he returned to his hometown and maintained his lawyer business in his hometown of Lachkot with the support of his brother, relatives and friends. The lack of improvement and the suffocating environment of the lawyer’s business is extremely depressing and depressing. When a case from an Indian in South Africa asked him to handle, he embarked on a journey to South Africa without hesitation. Gandhi was arrested on November 6, 1913, as he was leading a parade of Indian miners through South Africa.