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The Mahatma's Final Trial
The Morning Standard
|February 01, 2026
With a daring interpretation of historical texts, the narrative positions Gandhi's life as rooted in philosophy and questions of existence
The story of India's Partition has been told many times, yet it remains incomplete. Historians have long obsessed over causes, while the vast consequences of that decision have been pushed to the margins. Punjab and Bengal became shorthand for Partition's horrors; Sindh and Bihar barely entered the frame.
Millions were uprooted, women brutalised, and the ideal of a humane politics shattered. Amidst this moral wreckage stood a frail, 78-year-old man still clinging to the dream of nonviolence. Manash Firaq Bhattacharjee's Gandhi: The End of Non-Violence is a luminous meditation on that final act of Gandhi's life, his desperate attempt to salvage the idea of peace from the ashes of freedom.
Bhattacharjee focuses on the turbulent years between late 1946 and Gandhi's assassination in January 1948, when communal fires raged through Bengal, Bihar, Delhi, and Punjab. These were the years that tested his creed most cruelly. Having once taught India to resist empire through moral strength, Gandhi now found himself pleading with Indians to resist hatred itself. The book traces his lonely pilgrimages through Noakhali's ravaged villages and Delhi's burning streets, portraying him as both healer and witness.
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