Home | MyGov

Accessibility
ऐक्सेसिबिलिटी टूल
कलर एडजस्टमेंट
टेक्स्ट साइज़
नेविगेशन एडजस्टमेंट

How will you celebrate #BapuAt150?

आरंभ करने की तिथि :
Mar 08, 2019
अंतिम तिथि :
May 31, 2019
00:00 AM IST (GMT +5.30 Hrs)
प्रस्तुतियाँ समाप्त हो चुके

2019 is the year of Bapu’s 150th Birth Anniversary. What do the teachings and work of the Mahatma mean to you? How will you inculcate Bapu’s work in your daily life and ...

2019 is the year of Bapu’s 150th Birth Anniversary. What do the teachings and work of the Mahatma mean to you? How will you inculcate Bapu’s work in your daily life and celebrate this year? How will you put Bapu’s thoughts into action in your home, your community and society at large and make #Bapu150 a mass movement? Share your stories, thoughts and ideas here!

फिर से कायम कर देना
3015 सबमिशन दिखा रहा है
Mitul Kansal
Mitul Kansal 7 साल 1 महीना पहले
American historian, Will Durant, best known for writing The Story of Civilization, spoke some of the most inspirational words ever about the Mahatma: “Not since Buddha has India so revered any man. Not since St. Francis of Assissi has any life known to history been so marked by gentleness, disinterestedness, simplicity of soul and forgiveness of enemies. We have the astonishing phenomenon of a revolution led by a saint.”
Mitul Kansal
Mitul Kansal 7 साल 1 महीना पहले
The third Secretary General of the United Nations, U Thant: “Many of his principles have universal application and eternal validity, and I hope the passing years will show that his faith in the efficacy of nonviolent pressure as an agent for peaceful change is as justified today all over the world as it was in his time in India.”
Mitul Kansal
Mitul Kansal 7 साल 1 महीना पहले
Noted American writer and novelist, Pearl S. Buck, had this to say after the assassination of Mahatma Gandhi: “He was right, he knew he was right, we all knew he was right. The man who killed him knew he was right. However long the follies of the violent continue, they but prove that Gandhi was right. ‘Resist to the very end’, he said, ‘but without violence’. Of violence the world is sick. Oh, India, dare to be worthy of your Gandhi.”
Mitul Kansal
Mitul Kansal 7 साल 1 महीना पहले
Although Rabindranath Tagore and Gandhi had some sharp differences, the former was the first notable contemporary to refer to the latter as Mahatma. “Mahatma Gandhi came and stood at the door of India’s destitute millions…who else has so unreservedly accepted the vast masses of the Indian people as his flesh and blood…Truth awakened Truth,” he said.
Mitul Kansal
Mitul Kansal 7 साल 1 महीना पहले
When Steve Jobs started his second innings at Apple in the year 1997, he stood before a giant portrait of Mahatma Gandhi and said these words before a packed audience: “Here’s to the crazy ones. The misfits. The rebels. The troublemakers…because the people who are crazy enough to think they can change the world, are the ones who do.” It is believed that Mahatma Gandhi inspired these words.
RAHUL VERMA
RAHUL VERMA 7 साल 1 महीना पहले
Shiv Jayanti was started by Mahatma Jotiba Phule with the first event in Pune. Rama (or Ramacandra) is the seventh avatar of the Hindu god Vishnu. His adventures, notably the slaying of the demon king Ravana, are recounted in the Vana Parva of the Mahabharata and in the Ramayana, the oldest Sanskrit epic, written sometime in the 5th century BCE but with some later additions.
RAHUL VERMA
RAHUL VERMA 7 साल 1 महीना पहले
Employing nonviolent civil disobedience, Gandhi led India to independence and inspired movements for civil rights and freedom across the world. ... After his return to India in 1915, he set about organising peasants, farmers, and urban labourers to protest against excessive land-tax and discrimination.
RAHUL VERMA
RAHUL VERMA 7 साल 1 महीना पहले
In addition, Gandhi was inspired by Raychandbhai, a Jain poet and philosopher. He was Gandhi's spiritual guide, and the two corresponded when Gandhi was living in South Africa. Ruskin, the British art historian, also influenced Gandhi. Ruskin's book Unto this Last had a profound effect on Gandhi.