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Writer rajesh kumar biography of mahatma gandhi

          Mahatma Gandhi te Modi - Narendra Modi - Political Science by Dr. Rajeshkumar Acharya, Girishchandra Tanna from Only Genuine Products....

          Mahatma Gandhi

          A number of books bears the authorship of M.

          K. Gandhi.

          Mahatma Gandhi authored several books during his lifetime, including his autobiography, "The Story of My Experiments with Truth." He also wrote essays, letters.

        1. Mahatma Gandhi authored several books during his lifetime, including his autobiography, "The Story of My Experiments with Truth." He also wrote essays, letters.
        2. The Story Of My Experiments With Truth: Mahatma Gandhi: An Autobiography (Hindi Edition) Only 11 left in stock (more on the way).
        3. Mahatma Gandhi te Modi - Narendra Modi - Political Science by Dr. Rajeshkumar Acharya, Girishchandra Tanna from Only Genuine Products.
        4. Gandhi also wrote his autobiography, An Autobiography of My Experiments with Truth, Satyagraha in South Africa about his struggle there, Hind Swaraj or Indian.
        5. The main character of the play, Gaay, is not an animal but a group of humans a point of irony that Lucknow-based playwright Rajesh Kumar recreates from real-.
        6. Majority of them were not written in a book form. They were collections of his articles and speeches on truth and ahimsa, swadeshi and charkha or of his addresses to women, students and princes.

          Gandhi was accepted as a very good writer.

          He never aimed at a style nor used flowery words merely to please the ears. He had a forceful style of his own which mirrored his hopes and faith, his sorrows and disappointments. His style of writing was simple, precise, clear and as devoid of artificialities as the life of its author.

          The author dwells on certain sociological aspects of Indian life.

          Some English Viceroys admitted that Gandhi was direct and expressed himself in excellent English with a fine appreciation of the value of words he used. Gandhi claimed that a thoughtless word never escaped his lips or pen. A professor at the Oxford University, who assisted on drafting some of Gandhi's statements made at the the Round Table Conference, said: "I have never met an Indian w