The greatest strength in the philosophy of nonviolence
About the eBook
The Greatest Power on the Philosophy of Nonviolence by Mahatma Gandhi... Mahatma Gandhi, the most prominent politician and spiritual leader of India during its independence movement, who advocated Satyagraha, which is resistance to tyranny in India through civil disobedience, influenced the entire world from his rise to this moment and decades after his death. Besides his published books, Gandhi translated the Gita (the holy book of the Hindus) into Gujarati, the Indian language of the state of Gujarat. In 1919 AD, Gandhi published the weekly newspaper Young India, in which he presented his main ideas, until 1931 AD. He also published the weekly newspaper Hari Jan in English in 1933, along with other newspapers. This book derives most of its material from the two newspapers mentioned previously, with the exception of some articles. All of them have not been translated into Arabic before. All the principles that Gandhi applied in political and social life had strong spiritual and religious foundations, and these foundations are what magnified the impact of these principles. Perhaps this book will serve as a shedding light on these solid foundations of Gandhi, to which he completely devoted his life and considered that everything he did on the political level It was only a form of his search for truth and God, and he believed that it was possible to live a spiritual and moral life and apply this to the political sphere as well: "…Therefore we must establish the kingdom of heaven in politics as well."
About the Author
غاندي هو محامي وسياسي هندي بارز والزعيم الروحي للهند خلال حركة استقلال الهند. كان رائدًا للساتياغراها وهي مقاومة الاستبداد من خلال العصيان المدني الشامل، التي تأسست بقوة عقب أهيمسا أو اللاعنف الكامل، والتي أدت إلى استقلال الهند وألهمت الكثير من حركات الحقوق المدنية والحرية في جميع أنحاء العالم.
Product Details
Publisher: أفاق للنشر والتوزيع
Genre: Sprache - Sonstige
Language: ara
Size: 198 Pages
Filesize: 1.4 MB
ISBN: 9789777652988
Published: Sept. 1, 2024