Civil disobedience : two freedom struggles, one life
Material type: TextPublication details: New Delhi Book Review Literary Trust 2010Description: 266 p. ill. (some col.)ISBN: 9788188434053; 8188434051Subject(s): India | politics and governmentDDC classification: 352.63092254 Summary: Lakshmi Chand Jain (1925-2010) was a child of India's first freedom movement. He spent much of his life as an impassioned crusader of what Gandhi called the second freedom struggle, for a just and equitable India. In Civil Disobedience, he tells the riveting story of the personal influences and experiences that shaped his beliefs. Told mostly through Jain's vivid memory, the book is based on a series of interviews by the Nehru Memorial Museum and Library as part of their video/oral history project, and by his son Sreenivasan Jain, the journalist. These interviews have been shaped into a narrative that describes the making of a gentle revolutionary. A luminous guide to all those engaged in a struggle for India's second freedom. Table of Content Preface Introduction Chandni Chowk, 1932 Codename: Santosh Lost Heart of Asia Delhi Burning Gandhi, in the Flames The (Un)making of Chattarpur City of Hope The Basnkura Horse A People's Bazaar Unto the Last Democracy Died at Midnight Janata' Bhawan Witnessing What Gandhi Started: South Africa 1997-98 Epilogue: The Thirty Rupee Wedding Acknowledgements Selected WritingsItem type | Current library | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode |
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BK | Stack | 352.63092254 JAI/C (Browse shelf (Opens below)) | Available | 53119 |
Lakshmi Chand Jain (1925-2010) was a child of India's first freedom movement. He spent much of his life as an impassioned crusader of what Gandhi called the second freedom struggle, for a just and equitable India. In Civil Disobedience, he tells the riveting story of the personal influences and experiences that shaped his beliefs.
Told mostly through Jain's vivid memory, the book is based on a series of interviews by the Nehru Memorial Museum and Library as part of their video/oral history project, and by his son Sreenivasan Jain, the journalist. These interviews have been shaped into a narrative that describes the making of a gentle revolutionary. A luminous guide to all those engaged in a struggle for India's second freedom.
Table of Content
Preface
Introduction
Chandni Chowk, 1932
Codename: Santosh
Lost Heart of Asia
Delhi Burning
Gandhi, in the Flames
The (Un)making of Chattarpur
City of Hope
The Basnkura Horse
A People's Bazaar
Unto the Last
Democracy Died at Midnight
Janata' Bhawan
Witnessing What Gandhi Started: South Africa 1997-98
Epilogue: The Thirty Rupee Wedding
Acknowledgements
Selected Writings
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