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Gandhi (1982, UK)
In director Richard Attenborough's Best Picture-winning
biopic about India's spiritual and political leader in the 20th century:
- the opening sequence of 79 year-old Mahatma Gandhi's
(Ben Kingsley) sudden shooting assassination by bystander Nathuram
Godse (Harsh Nayyar) who shot him in the chest at close range in
late January 1948 - including his subsequent flower-draped corpse
for his funeral procession (one of the most massive scenes ever
filmed), attended by large numbers of worshippers; one Commentator
(Shane Rimmer) remarked: "The object of this massive tribute
died as he had always lived: A private man without wealth, without
property, without official title or office. Mahatma Gandhi is not
the commander of armies nor a ruler of vast lands. He could not
boast any scientific achievement or artistic gift. Yet men, governments,
dignitaries from all over the world have joined hands today to
pay homage to this little brown man in the loincloth who led his
country to freedom. In the words of General George C. Marshall,
the American Secretary of State: 'Mahatma Gandhi has become the
spokesman for the conscience of all mankind. He was a man who made
humility and simple truth more powerful than empires.' And Albert
Einstein added: 'Generations to come will scarce believe that such
a one as this ever in flesh and blood walked upon this earth.'"
Gandhi's Funeral Procession - and Commentary
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- the many flashbacks of his life including Gandhi,
a British-trained attorney, given racist treatment in 1893 when
he was traveling in a compartment on a South African Railways train
to Pretoria with a first-class ticket, and was asked: "Just
what are you doing in this car, coolie?...There are no coloured
attorneys in South Africa"; when Gandhi resisted, he was threatened: "Just
move your black ass back to third class or I'll have you thrown
off at the next station" - and he was literally dumped off
at the next station
- the sequence of another issue with racial discrimination
when Gandhi escorted Rev. Charlie Andrews (Ian Charleson) from India
along the street, and they were confronted by three white racist
bullies, including young thug Colin (a young Daniel Day-Lewis); Gandhi
bravely assured the Reverend as they were confronted by the gang
with words from the New Testament: "Doesn't the New Testament
say: 'If your enemy strikes you on the right cheek, offer him the
left?'...I have thought about it a great deal and I suspect He meant
you must show courage, be willing to take a blow, several blows,
to show you will not strike back, nor will you be turned aside. And
when you do that, it calls on something in human nature, something
that makes his hatred for you decrease and his respect increase.
I think Christ grasped that, and I have seen it work"; when
he came upon the youth face-to-face, he asserted: "You'll find
there's room for us all"
- the scene of Gandhi's informal interview with NY
Times reporter Vince Walker (Martin Sheen) during a visit to
Gandhi's humble and diverse ashram (community), when Gandhi asserted
his philosophy about resisting unjust laws: "There are unjust
laws as there are unjust men"; when Walker queried: "You're
a small minority to take on the South African government not to
mention the British Empire," Gandhi predictably replied: "If
you are a minority of one, the truth is the truth"
- the sequence of Gandhi's rousing speech in which he
advocated non-violent resistance to unjust South African laws:
"...In this cause, I too am prepared to die. But, my friend, there
is no cause for which I am prepared to kill. Whatever they do to us,
we will attack no one, kill no one. But we will not give our fingerprints,
not one of us. They will imprison us. They will fine us. They will
seize our possessions. But they cannot take away our self-respect if
we do not give it to them.... I am asking you to fight. To fight against
their anger, not to provoke it. We will not strike a blow. But we will
receive them. And through our pain, we will make them see their injustice.
And it will hurt as all fighting hurts. But we cannot lose. We cannot.
They may torture my body, break my bones, even kill me. Then, they
will have my dead body, not my obedience. (applause) We are Hindu and
Muslim, children of God, each one of us. Let us take a solemn oath
in His name that, come what may, we will not submit to this law"
- in a London conference Gandhi's harsh words against
the British government represented by Mr. Kinnoch (Nigel Hawthorne),
arguing for the British to leave India in order to establish Indian
independence: "If you will excuse me, Your Excellency, it is
our view that matters have gone beyond legislation. We think it is
time you recognized that you are masters in someone else's home.
Despite the best intentions of the best of you, you must, in the
nature of things, humiliate us to control us....It is time you left...I
beg you to accept that there is no people on Earth who would not
prefer their own bad government to the good government of an alien
power...In the end you will walk out because 100,000 Englishmen simply
cannot control 350 million Indians if those Indians refuse to cooperate.
And that is what we intend to achieve. Peaceful, nonviolent noncooperation
till you yourself see the wisdom of leaving, Your Excellency"
- the sequence of the brutal Amritsar Massacre in 1919,
when troops of the British Indian Army commanded by Colonel Reginald
Dyer (Edward Fox) fired their rifles into a crowd of Indians, assembled
to peacefully protest, for about 10 minutes
The Massacre at Jallianwala Bagh,
Amritsar, India, April 1919
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- the historical depiction of speeches during the
nonviolent "non-cooperation campaign," around 1921, when
first Gandhi's wife Kasturba (Rohini Hattangady) and then Gandhi
spoke - he exhorted Indians to burn English cloth as a protest:
("To gain independence we must prove worthy of it. There must
be Hindu-Muslim unity always. Second: No Indian must be treated
as the English treat us. We must remove untouchability from our
hearts and from our lives. Third: We must defy the British. Not
with violence that will inflame their will, but with a firmness
that will open their eyes. English factories make the cloth that
makes our poverty. All those who wish to make the English see bring
me the cloth from Manchester and Leeds that you wear today and
we will light a fire that will be seen in Delhi and in London.
And if, like me, you are left with only one piece of homespun,
wear it with dignity")
- the sequence depicting the 1930 protest against the
British-imposed salt tax with the highly symbolic Salt March and
its subsequent beating by British police of hundreds of nonviolent
protesters in Dharasana, witnessed and reported by NYT journalist
Walker by phone: "'They walked both Hindu and Muslim alike with
heads held high without any hope of escape from injury or death.
It went on and on into the night.' Stop. 'Women carried the wounded
and broken bodies from the road until they dropped from exhaustion.'
Stop. 'But still, it went on and on. Whatever moral ascendancy the
West held was lost here today. India is free for she has taken all
that steel and cruelty can give and she has neither cringed nor retreated'"
The Salt March's Beating of Protestors
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- after religious tensions erupted when the Partition
of India occurred, Gandhi (considered "the father of the nation"),
declared a hunger strike, saying he would not eat until the fighting
stopped ("An eye for an eye only ends up making the whole
world blind...If we obtain our freedom by murder and bloodshed,
I want no part of it....And I will fast as a penance for my part
in arousing such emotions. And I will not stop until they stop...If
I die, perhaps they will stop")
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Gandhi's Assassination: "Oh God"
Gandhi Questioned on Train For Traveling With Ticket in
First-Class Compartment
"Move your black ass back to third class..."
Dumped at Train Station
Gandhi to Bullies: "You'll find there's room
for us all"
With NYT Reporter Vince Walker
Speech: "We will not submit to this law"
To the British government: "It is time you
left"
"We must defy the British..."
Bonfire of British Cloth
News of Riots - Gandhi's Declaration of Hunger Strike
Penance
Gandhi - Weakened and Fasting
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