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41 " However, it’s usually random acts of good intent, like this one, which get you into the worst trouble in the long run. They say that if you want to change the world then you should be that change you want to see. Well that’s what Gandhi said and see what they did to him. Ya, random acts of good intent are the ones that just might get you killed. The further you stick your neck out for others the more likely it’s going to chopped, or at least get a large heavy albatross around it. "
― Andrew James Pritchard , Sukiyaki
42 " He was Lenin in a Lamborghini. He was Gandhi with a gun "
― Soroosh Shahrivar , The Rise of Shams
43 " While in Bombay, I began, on one hand, my study of Indian law and, on the other, my experiments in dietetics in which Virchand Gandhi, a friend, joined me. My brother, for his part was trying his best to get me briefs. The study of India law was a tedious business. The Civil Procedure Code I could in no way get on with. Not so however, with the Evidence Act. Virchand Gandhi was reading for the Solicitor's Examination and would tell me all sorts of stories about Barristers and Vakils. "
― Mahatma Gandhi , Gandhi: An Autobiography
44 " Wherever Gandhi went, he transformed situations and lives. As one friend and biographer wrote, " He...changed human beings by regarding them not as what they thought they were but as though they were what they wished to be, and as though the good in them was all of them "
45 " [Nicholson] Baker can't seem to get enough of the wisdom of Gandhi and cites at length an open letter he wrote to the British people on 3 July 1940. " Your soldiers are doing the same work of destruction as the Germans," wrote the Mahatma. " I want you to fight Nazism without arms." He went on to say: " Let them take possession of your beautiful island, with your many beautiful buildings. You will give all these, but neither your souls, nor your minds. If these gentlemen choose to occupy your homes, you will vacate them. If they do not give you free passage out, you will allow yourself, man, woman and child, to be slaughtered, but you will refuse to owe allegiance to them." I must say that everything in me declines to be addressed in that tone of voice "
46 " Even Mahatma Gandhi - hardly a comfortable character - always wore a bowler hat with his loin cloth when practising as a barrister in London. "