On the Ghandi story - and at the risk of putting myself in the firing line here - does it matter?
I'm quite sure history is littered with examples of people doing the right thing, but initially for less-than-perfect reasons. Few ideas are born full grown. They start with a seed, grow and are refined over time.
Even if intially prompted by a fit of pique (and I wouldn't know one way or the other with absolute certainty as I was not there), to my mind it should only succeed in making Ghandi's legacy greater - that upon sober reflection he recognised there were even bigger issues in play than at first realised.
For me it would be a message of hope and encouragement, that "ordinary" people can grow and do great things.
And become great - and best remembered at their best.
I'm quite sure history is littered with examples of people doing the right thing, but initially for less-than-perfect reasons. Few ideas are born full grown. They start with a seed, grow and are refined over time.
Even if intially prompted by a fit of pique (and I wouldn't know one way or the other with absolute certainty as I was not there), to my mind it should only succeed in making Ghandi's legacy greater - that upon sober reflection he recognised there were even bigger issues in play than at first realised.
For me it would be a message of hope and encouragement, that "ordinary" people can grow and do great things.
And become great - and best remembered at their best.
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