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  1. Gandhi and Muslims: Some Urdu Accounts. Mohammad Sajjad. 2019, Draft Paper. This essay attempts at looking into certain Urdu writings, mostly prose, to explore about the ways Gandhi was looked upon by Muslims of different ideological orientations and persuasions.

    • Mohammad Sajjad
  2. The egalitarian principles of Islam appealed to him in the context of untouchability prevalent in Indian society. Gandhi observed that there was creative interaction between Hinduism and Islam in medieval India as he tried to explore the commonalities between faqirs and yogis. He learnt Urdu to read Islamic theology and urged his League rivals to

  3. Aug 17, 2010 · It was through Carlyle's sensational essay that Gandhi got the perception that Islam affirmed self-denial. Carlyle said: "Islam means in its way Denial of Self, Annihilation of Self ... This is yet the highest Wisdom that heaven has revealed to our Earth."

  4. Dec 11, 2020 · In 1947, as India and Pakistan came into being as independent countries, few people dominated the headlines more than Gandhi and Jinnah. The representation of Gandhi in Jinnah’s New Delhi-based newspaper Dawn provides crucial insight into how the dominant idea...

    • Gopa Sabharwal
    • 2020
  5. Although Gandhiji opposed the forcible conversion, he did not disapprove of voluntary conversion. If a person desires to convert to faith other than his own, then it should be for his inner satisfaction and growth. When his eldest son Harilal got himself converted to Islam, Gandhiji was very upset. He

    • 207KB
    • 30
  6. In this section, I will explore specifically how and why Gandhi added the “new” word of ahiṃsā to his previous cosmopolitan lexicon represented by dayā and prem after his return to India, and how and why the former eventually came to occupy a central place in his satyāgraha philosophy.

  7. Jan 1, 2018 · Gandhi thought that India’s Hindus needed to learn more about Islam’s contribution to India’s culture, arguing that India’s Muslims, mainly descended from Hindu converts, were Indian and did not represent a separate nation . In contrast, the League found it difficult to recruit traditional scholars or many Muslim scholars at all ...

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