Mahatma Gandhi, the Congress, and the partition of India
Material type: TextPublication details: New Delhi India Research Press 2004Description: 201pISBN: 9788187943419Subject(s): India | Mahatma gandhi | Indian National CongressDDC classification: 954.035 Summary: Mahatma Gandhi's quest to preserve India's unity and prevent the dismemberment of India along communal lines is revealed in this insightful look into the era. Tracing the progression of Indian independence from the end of World War II to its inception, this work details Gandhi's willingness to cede power to Jinnah and his futile pleas to both the British government and Indian leaders. A comprehensive appendix including Gandhi's last will and testament; his letters to General Chiang Kai-shek, Satis Mukherji, Rajendra Prasad, and President Franklin D. Roosevelt; and the British prime minister's statement of February 20, 1947, enhance the presentation of Gandhi's positions and the times.Item type | Current library | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode |
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BK | Stack | 954.035 JHA/M (Browse shelf (Opens below)) | Available | 53368 |
Browsing Kannur University Central Library shelves, Shelving location: Stack Close shelf browser (Hides shelf browser)
954.035 IRF/N The national movement : Part 2,. The struggle for freedom, 1919-1947 | 954.035 JAH/I India revisited : | 954.035 JAT/F A farewell to Ambedkar | 954.035 JHA/M Mahatma Gandhi, the Congress, and the partition of India | 954.035 JOY/U Understanding nation and nationalism : in Indian context | 954.035 KAU/M Mahatma on the pitch : Gandhi & cricket in India | 954.035 KON/G Gandhi's dharma |
Mahatma Gandhi's quest to preserve India's unity and prevent the dismemberment of India along communal lines is revealed in this insightful look into the era. Tracing the progression of Indian independence from the end of World War II to its inception, this work details Gandhi's willingness to cede power to Jinnah and his futile pleas to both the British government and Indian leaders. A comprehensive appendix including Gandhi's last will and testament; his letters to General Chiang Kai-shek, Satis Mukherji, Rajendra Prasad, and President Franklin D. Roosevelt; and the British prime minister's statement of February 20, 1947, enhance the presentation of Gandhi's positions and the times.
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