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Clip 001
In a fresh effort to avert the vivisection of India, Gandhi wrote to Mountbatten, “It would be a blunder for the British to be a party in any way to the division of India… if it has to come, let it come, let it come after the British withdrawal…
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Clip 002
The impending division of India was a deep source of agony to Gandhi’s tormented soul. Ploughing his lonely furrow, he mused in a low tone, “Let posterity know that Gandhi was not a party to India’s vivisection.”...
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Clip 003
On June 3, Mountbatten secured the consent of the Congress and the League leaders to the British Government plan of setting up two independent Dominions on August 15, 1947…
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Clip 004
The congress Working Committee disliked the partition of India but it “Could not let India bleed continuously” and accepted the plan…An emergency meeting of the All-India Congress Committee was convened on June 14...
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Clip 005
Gandhi was steadfastly opposed to the division of India and yet he urged the members to support the division with full faith in their leaders…Appealing for communal unity, he said, ‘The Plan puts both Hinduism and Islam on trial…”
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Clip 006
The Working Committee resolution was adopted, 157 voting for and 29 against…Giving his definitive summing up on socialism suited to Indian conditions, Gandhi wrote, “Even as members of the individual body are equal...
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Clip 007
He stressed its purity. “Truth and Ahimsa must incarnate in socialism which is as pure as crystal and requires crystal like men to achieve it.”India was moving into a new orbit out of subjection…
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Clip 008
The Constituent Assembly adopted the banner under which the struggle for freedom had been fought… the spinning wheel was replaced by the ever moving wheel of the Divine Law of Love symbolizing the dynamism and permanence of Indian culture…
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Clip 009
The sands of time were running out… While the work of partition was proceeding at break-neck speed, Gandhi was in Calcutta dispelling hate with love.
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Clip 010
The midnight of August 14, 1947 symbolized the rebirth of a nation after the slumber of centuries and a long struggle for self-determination…India emerged from subjection to freedom… A new hope came into being;
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Clip 011
The Constituent Assembly paid a tribute to Mahatma Gandhi, the architect of Indian freedom, and assumed power for the governance of India…
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Clip 012
Jawaharlal Nehru, the first Prime minister, said with moving eloquence, (his voice)… “Long years ago we made a tryst with destiny, and now the time comes when we shall redeem out pledge…At the stroke of the midnight hour, when the world sleeps,
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Clip 013
“The ambition of the greatest man of our generation has been to wipe every tear from every eye… That may be beyond us, but so long as there are tears and suffering, so long our work will not be over…”
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Clip 014
On August 15, the appointed day, people gathered to welcome the dawn of a new age and witnessed the peaceful transfer of power…Lord Mountbatten became the first Governor-General of the Dominion by the will of the sovereign people of India…
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Clip 015
After hoisting the national flag, the first servant of the Indian people addressed from the ramparts of the Red Fort the half a million gathered below. “On this day our first thoughts go to the Father of our nation, who held aloft the torch of freedom and lighted up the darkness that surrounded us…”
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Clip 016
As a result of Gandhi’s healing presence in Calcutta, stirring scenes of Hindu-Muslim fraternization were witnessed; but for him, it was a day of prayer and deep heart-searching…
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Clip 017
With the departure of British Army contingents from India’s shores, ended the 190 year old British domination over India…Gandhi praised the British withdrawal as “the noblest act of the British nation…”
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Clip 018
The time of rejoicing was brief…The rumblings of communal frenzy could be heard in the distance… A vast region was churning with hate…Minorities were tyrannized and persecuted… Millions of men, women and children uprooted from their settled homes and ...
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Clip 019
Migration was not a matter of personal choice for the migrants but was forced on them by hate of man. The refugees rolled on in a two way steam across the border. Shocked by the events, the Indian Prime Minister tried his best to bring speedy relief to the refugees…
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Clip 020
The continuing tension agonized Gandhi. Before leaving Calcutta for Delhi, on being approached for a message, he wrote in Bengali, “My life is my message.”
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Clip 021
In Delhi, Gandhi saw ruptured human relationship… he planted himself, alone, amidst the raging torrent… and listened to the tales of woe of the embittered and the uprooted…
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Clip 022
On his 78th birthday Gandhi invoked the aid of the all embracing Power to take him away from the vale of tears rather than make him a helpless witness to the butchery of men and cried in a prayerful tone, “Not my will but dying alone shall prevail”.
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Clip 023
In October 1947, events took a grave turn…On the princely State of Jammu and Kashmir delaying its decision about accession to either the Dominion of India or Pakistan, freebooters from the North West and Punjab invaded the State with the connivance
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Clip 024
The raiders, well armed and well equipped, sacked and looted towns and villages, put many inhabitants to death and spread a reign of terror…Under the guidance of the National Conference,the people of the Valley defended their common heritage with courage and unity…
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Clip 025
The
invader was almost on the doorsteps of Srinagar …On October 26,
the state acceded to the Indian Union with the express consent
of the people and sought military aid against the wanton
aggression… Indian troops were flown in and stemmed the tide of
invasion…
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Clip 026
Kashmir
occupied Gandhi’s thoughts… Though he did distinguish between an
aggressor and a defender, sending troops to Kashmir was not his
way. The case of the defenders, he felt, was so manifestly just
that if the people had resisted...
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Clip 027
At the
moment of crisis, on Gandhi’s initiative, the first session of
the All India Congress Committee after the attainment of freedom
declared its faith… “India as a nation is bound together by
indissoluble cultural and historical links…
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Clip 028
Values
were changing fast under the impact of events. For Gandhi,
political independence had little value if it did not herald the
era of the common man.He was uncompromisingly opposed to the
mania of mass-production by the sacrifice of human values…
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Clip 029
Gandhi
denounced the craze for pomp and pageantry …after
independence…and did not see any merit in hiding poverty.
“India”, he maintained,” Possesses only her moral capital which
increases with the spending…”
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Clip 030
Distressed
at the rise of military expenditure in independent India, Gandhi
painfully observed, “India’s destiny lies along the bloodless
way of peace…The hope lingers in me that India might still lead
the way to wards world-federation…
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Clip 031
Communal
harmony and the secular state were in great jeopardy… Sporadic
violence in Delhi continued…In the
face of the moral challenge, Gandhi was groping for light…
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Clip 032
Out of the
depths of anguish came the decision to fast unto death to purge
the city; of Delhi of the communal virus and lay his head on
God’s lap… On January 13, 1948 he began the fast, and passed
from tumult into peace. He gave vent to his feeling.
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Clip 033
As the
leaden hours crept by and drop by drop strength ebbed out of the
frail body on the fasting bed, a deep heart-searching was set in
amongst all concerned…
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Clip 034
Showering
benediction on Prime Minister Nehru who had been fasting in
sympathy, Gandhi Wrote, “Give up your fast…May you live long and
continue to be the jewel of India…”
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Clip 035
Thought
feeble yet vibrant, Gandhi continued his after-prayer talk… (his
voice and the sound of the bomb explosion)...The
explosion was from a bomb thrown by a Hindu refugee to kill
Gandhi…
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Clip 036
Discussing
the question of the reconstitution of provinces on a linguistic
basis, Gandhi observed, “Cultural autonomy had been our
watchword… But such re-distribution should not militate against
the organic unity of India…
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Clip 037
Giving a
moral orientation to the Indian National Congress, Gandhi
suggested in a draft constitution that it should transform
itself into a … Lok Sevak Sangh striving for the social,
economic and moral independence of the country in terms of its
seven hundred thousand villages…
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