Nehru: The Invention of IndiaSimon and Schuster, 17/10/2011 - 304 من الصفحات Shashi Tharoor delivers an incisive biography of the great secularist who—alongside his spiritual father, Mahatma Gandhi—led the movement for India’s independence from British rule and ushered his newly independent country into the modern world. The man who would one day help topple British rule and become India’s first prime minister started out as a surprisingly unremarkable student. Born into a wealthy, politically influential Indian family in the waning years of the Raj, Jawaharlal Nehru was raised on Western secularism and the humanist ideas of the Enlightenment. Once he met Gandhi in 1916, Nehru threw himself into the nonviolent struggle for India’s independence, a struggle that wasn’t won until 1947. India had found a perfect political complement to her more spiritual advocate, but neither Nehru nor Gandhi could prevent the horrific price for independence: partition. This fascinating biography casts an unflinching eye on Nehru’s heroic efforts for, and stewardship of, independent India and gives us a careful appraisal of his legacy to the world. |
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... Muslims, Christians, and Parsis among the first two dozen presidents. Around the cusp of the century a schism ... Muslim masses and to promote HinduMuslim unity, Gandhi committed the party to supporting the Khilafat movement, A ...
... Muslims, Christians, and Parsis among the first two dozen presidents. Around the cusp of the century a schism ... Muslim masses and to promote HinduMuslim unity, Gandhi committed the party to supporting the Khilafat movement, A ...
الصفحة
The Invention of India Shashi Tharoor. Muslim unity, Gandhi committed the party to supporting the Khilafat movement, which organized anti-British demonstrations around ... Muslim notables called on the viceroy to affirm their loyalty.
The Invention of India Shashi Tharoor. Muslim unity, Gandhi committed the party to supporting the Khilafat movement, which organized anti-British demonstrations around ... Muslim notables called on the viceroy to affirm their loyalty.
الصفحة
... Muslim leaders (notably Maulana Abul Kalam Azad, its president from 1940 to 1946, and Khan Abdul Ghaffar Khan, the “Frontier Gandhi”), the League increasingly asserted that it alone spoke for India's Muslims. Though various regional ...
... Muslim leaders (notably Maulana Abul Kalam Azad, its president from 1940 to 1946, and Khan Abdul Ghaffar Khan, the “Frontier Gandhi”), the League increasingly asserted that it alone spoke for India's Muslims. Though various regional ...
الصفحة
... Muslims outnumbered them thirteen to one; they had no history of casteist quarrels, since the non-Brahmin castes of Kashmir, and several of the Brahmins, had converted to Islam; they were comfortable with Muslim culture, with the ...
... Muslims outnumbered them thirteen to one; they had no history of casteist quarrels, since the non-Brahmin castes of Kashmir, and several of the Brahmins, had converted to Islam; they were comfortable with Muslim culture, with the ...
الصفحة
... Muslim pact was concluded between the Indian National Congress and the Muslim League, a party of Muslim notables that had been established in 1905 to advance Muslim interests (though several leading Congressmen, including three of the ...
... Muslim pact was concluded between the Indian National Congress and the Muslim League, a party of Muslim notables that had been established in 1905 to advance Muslim interests (though several leading Congressmen, including three of the ...
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