Gentelman
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NEW DELHI: A rare collection of letters
between Indian independence icon
Mahatma Gandhi and a South African
bodybuilder with whom he shared a
close relationship is to go on display in
New Delhi on Wednesday.
The archive of letters and photos
belonging to Hermann Kallenbach, a
German-Jewish bodybuilder and architect,
was purchased by the Indian government
last year, just before they were due to be
auctioned by Sothebys in London.
It will be the first time that the Indian
public has been able to view the
collection at the National Archives and
the exhibition opens on the anniversary
of Gandhis death in 1948, when he was
assassinated by a Hindu extremist. These
are important documents and throw light
on the early years of Gandhi, Mushirul
Hasan, chief of the National Archives, told
AFP.
Gandhi lived with Kallenbach in
Johannesburg for about two years from
1907 before leaving South Africa to return
to India in 1914 where he helped unify
the gathering political movement against
British colonial rule. The relationship with
Kallenbach has been a subject of
speculation and gossip for years owing to
their closeness, which was most recently
chronicled in a book by former New York
Times editor Joseph Lelyveld.
How completely you have taken
possession of my body, Gandhi was
quoted as saying in a letter to Kallenbach
in Lelyvelds book, entitled Great Soul:
Mahatma Gandhi And His Struggle With
India. This is slavery with a vengeance,
the man known as the father of the
nation in India is quoted as adding.
Lelyveld was forced to defend his book
against accusations that he had suggested
Gandhi was bisexual. The word bisexual
nowhere appears in the book, he wrote
afterwards.
Hasan of National Archives did not
comment on whether the entire
correspondence between Gandhi and
Kallenbach would be on show for the
public. India has in the past complained
bitterly about private auctions of Gandhis
belongings, saying that they insult the
memory of a man who rejected material
wealth.
India to display intimate Gandhi letters - thenews.com.pk
https://m.facebook.com/photo.php?fb...64161464255:mf_story_key.-2213535517486379280
just want Indian brothers to discuss this matter and clearify the claims as these are creating mis understandings....
well i don't think it can be true....
between Indian independence icon
Mahatma Gandhi and a South African
bodybuilder with whom he shared a
close relationship is to go on display in
New Delhi on Wednesday.
The archive of letters and photos
belonging to Hermann Kallenbach, a
German-Jewish bodybuilder and architect,
was purchased by the Indian government
last year, just before they were due to be
auctioned by Sothebys in London.
It will be the first time that the Indian
public has been able to view the
collection at the National Archives and
the exhibition opens on the anniversary
of Gandhis death in 1948, when he was
assassinated by a Hindu extremist. These
are important documents and throw light
on the early years of Gandhi, Mushirul
Hasan, chief of the National Archives, told
AFP.
Gandhi lived with Kallenbach in
Johannesburg for about two years from
1907 before leaving South Africa to return
to India in 1914 where he helped unify
the gathering political movement against
British colonial rule. The relationship with
Kallenbach has been a subject of
speculation and gossip for years owing to
their closeness, which was most recently
chronicled in a book by former New York
Times editor Joseph Lelyveld.
How completely you have taken
possession of my body, Gandhi was
quoted as saying in a letter to Kallenbach
in Lelyvelds book, entitled Great Soul:
Mahatma Gandhi And His Struggle With
India. This is slavery with a vengeance,
the man known as the father of the
nation in India is quoted as adding.
Lelyveld was forced to defend his book
against accusations that he had suggested
Gandhi was bisexual. The word bisexual
nowhere appears in the book, he wrote
afterwards.
Hasan of National Archives did not
comment on whether the entire
correspondence between Gandhi and
Kallenbach would be on show for the
public. India has in the past complained
bitterly about private auctions of Gandhis
belongings, saying that they insult the
memory of a man who rejected material
wealth.
India to display intimate Gandhi letters - thenews.com.pk
https://m.facebook.com/photo.php?fb...64161464255:mf_story_key.-2213535517486379280
NEW DELHI: A rare collection of letters
between Indian independence icon
Mahatma Gandhi and a South African
bodybuilder with whom he shared a
close relationship is to go on display in
New Delhi on Wednesday.
The archive of letters and photos
belonging to Hermann Kallenbach, a
German-Jewish bodybuilder and architect,
was purchased by the Indian government
last year, just before they were due to be
auctioned by Sothebys in London.
It will be the first time that the Indian
public has been able to view the
collection at the National Archives and
the exhibition opens on the anniversary
of Gandhis death in 1948, when he was
assassinated by a Hindu extremist. These
are important documents and throw light
on the early years of Gandhi, Mushirul
Hasan, chief of the National Archives, told
AFP.
Gandhi lived with Kallenbach in
Johannesburg for about two years from
1907 before leaving South Africa to return
to India in 1914 where he helped unify
the gathering political movement against
British colonial rule. The relationship with
Kallenbach has been a subject of
speculation and gossip for years owing to
their closeness, which was most recently
chronicled in a book by former New York
Times editor Joseph Lelyveld.
How completely you have taken
possession of my body, Gandhi was
quoted as saying in a letter to Kallenbach
in Lelyvelds book, entitled Great Soul:
Mahatma Gandhi And His Struggle With
India. This is slavery with a vengeance,
the man known as the father of the
nation in India is quoted as adding.
Lelyveld was forced to defend his book
against accusations that he had suggested
Gandhi was bisexual. The word bisexual
nowhere appears in the book, he wrote
afterwards.
Hasan of National Archives did not
comment on whether the entire
correspondence between Gandhi and
Kallenbach would be on show for the
public. India has in the past complained
bitterly about private auctions of Gandhis
belongings, saying that they insult the
memory of a man who rejected material
wealth.
India to display intimate Gandhi letters - thenews.com.pk
https://m.facebook.com/photo.php?fb...64161464255:mf_story_key.-2213535517486379280
just want Indian brothers to discuss this matter and clearify the claims as these are creating mis understandings....
well i don't think it can be true....