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Gandhi


            Mahatma Gandhi was one person who had many ideas concerning politics around the world. He also had many ideas of forming new governments in foreign countries. Gandhi knew that he wanted to understand the people under the different governments as well. He traveled to many different countries so he could understand the politics that surround these people. Gandhi's father and his religious background played an important role in Gandhi's approach to politics. If you remember one thing about Gandhi, that one thing is that he believed in non-violence. Gandhi was a believer in peace not violence. In India his non-violence approach led to India's freedom from Britain. He believed that non-violence was going to help him gain his political goals. .
             Gandhi had a big problem that greatly troubled him; it was the atomic bomb. The atomic bomb clashed with his most prized belief of non-violence. However, he never spoke out about the atomic bomb, but he didn't trust Stalin, Churchill, and Roosevelt because they could crush India's freedoms which he worked very hard for. He believed the atomic energy that destroyed Japan could be used humanely to help out the oppressed, which was one of his many views on the atomic bomb. He didn't believe that the atomic bomb was now going to put fear in the oppressed, but instead cause his view of non-violence to now be in full effect.
             One of Gandhi's campaigns was to at the least gain dominion status for India. Gandhi wanted to attempt and do this non-violently. But young radicals wanted at least dominion status granted immediately. Gandhi completely disagreed with the young generation leaders Subhas Chandra Bose and Jawaharlal Nehru. Eventually Gandhi's .
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             approach of non-violence worked and Britain's congress passed its independence resolution. Gandhi then came up with the Eleven Point Programme which if Britain granted would basically grant India its freedom. The one point that the right to bear arms be granted to India's people, was the one that stood out due to Gandhi's non-violence views.


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