Mahatma Gandhi
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Gandhi later recorded the early years of his life in his extraordinary
autobiography, The Story of My Experimentswith Truth. His
father died before Gandhi could finish his schooling, and at thirteen
he was married to Kasturba [or Kasturbai],
who was of the same age as Mohandas himself . In 1888 Gandhi set sail for England, where he had
decided to pursue a degree in law. Though his elders objected, Gandhi
could not be prevented from leaving; and it is said that his mother, a
devout woman, made him promise that he would keep away from wine, women,
and meat during his stay abroad. Gandhi left behind his son Harilal, then
a few months old.
In London, Gandhi encountered theosophists, vegetarians, and
others who were disenchanted not only with industrialism, but with the
legacy of Enlightenment thought. They themselves represented the fringe
elements of English society. Gandhi was powerfully attracted to them,
as he was to the texts of the major religious traditions; and ironically
it is in London that he was introduced to the Bhagavad Gita. Here, too,
Gandhi showed determination and single-minded pursuit of his purpose,
and accomplished his objective of finishing his degree from the Inner
Temple. He was called to the bar in 1891, and even enrolled in the High
Court of London; but later that year he left for India.



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