<--- Back to Details
First PageDocument Content
Indian independence activists / Gujarati people / Mahatma Gandhi National Memorial Trust / Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi / Martin Luther King /  Jr. / American Friends Service Committee / Indian people / Activism / Nonviolence
Date: 2006-01-20 09:18:45
Indian independence activists
Gujarati people
Mahatma Gandhi National Memorial Trust
Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi
Martin Luther King
Jr.
American Friends Service Committee
Indian people
Activism
Nonviolence

18 Mar[removed]PPS. We also wondered how the Gandhi Smarak Nidhi felt about the whole experience. I think they were unhappy at certain points, but my impression now is (that) they feel satisfied with the over-all experienc

Add to Reading List

Source URL: mlk-kpp01.stanford.edu

Download Document from Source Website

File Size: 135,23 KB

Share Document on Facebook

Similar Documents

Understanding Nonviolence From Tactical Nonviolence to Satyagraha By Mark Shepard What exactly do we mean when we say we’re committed to nonviolence? Unfortunately, different people mean different things and are often

Understanding Nonviolence From Tactical Nonviolence to Satyagraha By Mark Shepard What exactly do we mean when we say we’re committed to nonviolence? Unfortunately, different people mean different things and are often

DocID: 1vnVi - View Document

Nonviolence versus capitalism  Nonviolence versus capitalism Brian Martin

Nonviolence versus capitalism Nonviolence versus capitalism Brian Martin

DocID: 1vmTS - View Document

Egalitarianism and Nonviolence: Gifts of the Khoe-San By Bernedette Muthien Anthropologists have written for at least a hundred years of the so-called “Bushman.” I am descended of these First Nations people in Southe

Egalitarianism and Nonviolence: Gifts of the Khoe-San By Bernedette Muthien Anthropologists have written for at least a hundred years of the so-called “Bushman.” I am descended of these First Nations people in Southe

DocID: 1vfob - View Document

Building a Culture of Nonviolence: Sixty years after Hiroshima November 11, 2005, Futaba Memorial Lecture Series by Ajan Sulak Sivaraksa Mr. Sulak Sivaraksa is a Buddhist social activist in Siam (Thailand) and well known

Building a Culture of Nonviolence: Sixty years after Hiroshima November 11, 2005, Futaba Memorial Lecture Series by Ajan Sulak Sivaraksa Mr. Sulak Sivaraksa is a Buddhist social activist in Siam (Thailand) and well known

DocID: 1uZcK - View Document

1  Elements of Resistance: Violence, Nonviolence, and the State By Jeriah Bowser  This book is anti-copyrighted. Any and all parts may be republished, reappropriated, taken out of context,

1 Elements of Resistance: Violence, Nonviolence, and the State By Jeriah Bowser This book is anti-copyrighted. Any and all parts may be republished, reappropriated, taken out of context,

DocID: 1uRMr - View Document