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Arun Manilal Gandhi

Arun Manilal Gandhi (14 April 1934 – 2 May 2023) was a South African-born Indian-American author, socio-political activist and son of Manilal Gandhi, thus a grandson of nationalist leader Mahatma Gandhi. In 2017, he published The Gift of Anger: And Other Lessons From My Grandfather Mahatma Gandhi (New York: Gallery Books/Jeter Publishing 2017).

Arun Gandhi
2012
Born
Arun Manilal Gandhi

(1934-04-14)14 April 1934
Died2 May 2023(2023-05-02) (aged 89)
NationalityIndian, South African, American
CitizenshipAmerican
Spouse
Sunanda Gandhi
(m. 1957; died 2007)
Children2, including Tushar
Parent(s)Manilal Gandhi
Sushila Mashruwala
RelativesEla Gandhi (sister)
Mahatma Gandhi (grandfather)
Kasturba Gandhi (grandmother)

Gandhi criticized the Indian government in an article he wrote after they subsidized a 1982 film based on his grandfather's life with $25 million. He immigrated to the United States with his family in 1987 where he studied at the University of Mississippi. They later moved to Memphis, Tennessee, where they founded a nonviolence institute hosted by the Christian Brothers University.

Early life edit

Arun Manilal Gandhi was born on 14 April 1934, in Durban, to Manilal Gandhi and Sushila Mashruwala. His father was an editor and his mother was a publisher for the Indian Opinion. Arun had seen his grandfather Mahatma Gandhi once briefly at age 5 and didn't see him again until 1946 when he lived with Mahatma Gandhi at the Sevagram ashram in India. Arun returned to the Union of South Africa in 1947, just weeks before his grandfather was assassinated.[1]

While living at Sevagram, Arun had the advantage of education over the illiterate farm families who worked the surrounding fields. His grandfather urged him to play with the neighboring children after school in order to "learn what it was like to live in poverty", as well as to teach those children what he learned in class each day, which Arun Gandhi later described as "the most creative and enlightening experience for me." Eventually, crowds of children and their parents started showing up for lessons with the young Gandhi, which taught him compassion and the need to share.[2]

Career edit

In 1982, when Columbia Pictures released the feature film, Gandhi, based on his grandfather's life, Gandhi wrote an article criticizing the Indian government for subsidizing the film with $25 million, arguing that there were more important things to spend such money on. Though his article was widely reprinted and celebrated, after attending a special screening of the film, Gandhi included that it accurately conveyed his grandfather's philosophy and legacy (despite its historical inaccuracies), and was so moved by it that he wrote another article retracting the first one.[3]

In 1987, Arun Gandhi moved to the United States along with his wife, Sunanda, to work on a study at the University of Mississippi. This study examined and contrasted the sorts of prejudices that existed in India, the U.S., and South Africa. Afterward, they moved to Memphis, Tennessee, and founded the M. K. Gandhi Institute for Nonviolence hosted by the Christian Brothers University, a Catholic academic institution. This institute was dedicated to applying the principles of nonviolence at both local and global scales. As co-founders of the institute, both husband and wife received the Peace Abbey Courage of Conscience Award "for bringing the legacy of Gandhi to America"[4] which was awarded at the John F. Kennedy Library in Boston. In 1996, he cofounded the Season for Nonviolence as a yearly celebration of the philosophies and lives of Mohandas Gandhi and Martin Luther King Jr.[5][6]

In 2003, Gandhi was one of the signatories to Humanism and Its Aspirations (Humanist Manifesto III).[7]

In late 2007, Gandhi co-taught a course entitled "Gandhi on Personal Leadership and Nonviolence" at Salisbury University in Salisbury, Maryland.[8] On 12 November 2007, Gandhi gave a lecture for the Salisbury University Center for Conflict Resolution's “One Person Can Make a Difference” Lecture Series, entitled “Nonviolence in the Age of Terrorism”.[9] In late 2008, Gandhi returned to Salisbury University to co-teach a course entitled "The Global Impact of Gandhi".[10]

In 2007, after the passing of his wife Sunanda [ml] on 21 February, the institute moved to Rochester, New York, and is currently located on the University of Rochester River Campus.[11] After January 2008 op-ed in The Washington Post's "On Faith" section where Gandhi said that Israelis talked too much about the Holocaust and were losing world sympathy and that Israel and the U.S. were the biggest contributors to the world-threatening "culture of violence", his ties to Rochester were imperiled. He claimed that dwelling on the past wouldn't allow them to move forward. Gandhi apologized by saying he had only meant to say right-wing Likud supporters were part of the problem, but the university did not accept his explanation and informed him that the institute would be closed unless he resigned from it. Gandhi then quit, making an erroneous prediction that he would be able to return in several months when the furor over his actions died down (he never came back in any capacity before his death in 2023).[citation needed]

Gandhi had given many speeches about nonviolence in many countries. During his tour to Israel, he urged the Palestinians to resist Israeli occupation peacefully to assure their freedom. In August 2004, Gandhi proposed to the Palestinian Parliament a peaceful march of 50,000 refugees across the Jordan River to return to their homeland and said MPs should lead the way. Gandhi also claimed that the fate of Palestinians is ten times worse than that of blacks in apartheid South Africa. He asked: "What would happen? Maybe the Israeli army would shoot and kill several. They may kill 100. They may kill 200 men, women and children. And that would shock the world. The world will get up and say, 'What is going on?'."[12]

On 12 October 2009 Gandhi visited the Brunton Theatre in Musselburgh to talk to P7's from all over East Lothian in Scotland.[citation needed] On 11 November 2009 Gandhi visited Chattanooga State Technical Community College in Chattanooga, Tennessee, to speak and spread his message of peace.[citation needed] On 13 November 2009, Gandhi visited Cleveland State Community College in Cleveland, Tennessee, to speak and spread his message of peace. On 16 November 2010, Gandhi visited The University of Wyoming in Laramie, Wyoming, to speak and spread his message of peace.[13]

On 2 March 2011, Arun Gandhi spoke at the East West Center on the campus of the University of Hawaii at Manoa, Honolulu, Hawaii. He spoke about Nonviolence: A Means for Social Change. On the same day, he also spoke at Iolani School in Honolulu, on the subject of The Wisdom of Choosing Peace. On 3 March 2011, Gandhi spoke at the University of Hawaii Architecture Building, in an event sponsored by the Spark Matsunaga Institute for Peace and Conflict Resolution in Honolulu, Hawaii. On 4 March 2011 spoke at the Pacific Buddhist Academy in Honolulu, Hawaii. He also spoke at the Hawaii State Capitol (public auditorium) on the subject of "The Power of Peace to Create a Culture of Human Rights in Hawaii and the World." This was part of the Human Rights Week, sponsored by the State of Hawaii. He also spoke at the Pioneer Plaza Club in downtown Honolulu on the subject of "Gandhian Peace (Nonviolence) A Pathway for Resolving Modern Day Conflict." On 5 March 2011, Gandhi visited The International Society for Krishna Consciousness Temple in Honolulu, Hawaii, to speak and spread his message of peace. He also spoke at To Ho No Hikari Church in Honolulu, in an event sponsored by Dr. Terry Shintani, on the subject of "The Way of Nonviolence Towards All Living Beings", and at the Hawaii Convention Center as part of the PAAAC Youth Conference. On 6 March 2011 Gandhi spoke at Unity Church, Diamond Head, Honolulu, on the subject of "Lessons I Learned With My Grandfather".[14]

 
From left to right: Gandhi, his Grandfather Gandhi co-author Bethany Hegedus, and Ilyasah Shabazz, daughter of Malcolm X, speaking on the "Peace: The Next Generation" panel at the 2014 Brooklyn Book Festival on the topic of growing up a child of a political figure

Gandhi's 2011 tour of Honolulu was sponsored by Barbara Altemus of the We Are One Foundation and by the Gandhian International Institute for Peace. Gandhi is featured in "THE CALLING: Heal Ourselves Heal our Planet" a Documentary Film in Production created by Barbara Altemus, directed by Oscar-nominated William Gazecki.[citation needed]

On 23 March 2012, Gandhi was the keynote speaker at the first annual Engaging Peace Conference at Arcadia University in Glenside, Pennsylvania.[15]

In March 2014, Atheneum Books for Young Readers published Grandfather Gandhi, a children's book that Arun Gandhi co-authored with Bethany Hegedus, and illustrated by Evan Turk.[16] The picture book memoir, which carries a pro-peace message, tells the story of how Arun's grandfather, likening anger to lightning that could either destroy or illuminate, taught Arun to respond to injustice using peaceful methods, in order to "turn darkness into light". The book also focuses on how Arun, jealous of the other people who commanded his grandfather's attention, frustrated with his schoolwork, and embarrassed at his inability to control his anger, strove to make his grandfather proud. The book was met with positive reviews for its use of a child's point of view in order to make a complex historical issue understandable to child readers, and for Turk's use of cut-paper abstract images to create illustrations with emotional resonance.[17][18][19] He also published Legacy of Love: My Education in the Path of Nonviolence.[citation needed]

Personal life and death edit

Gandhi considered himself to be a Hindu but expressed universalist views.[20] Gandhi had worked closely with Christian priests and his philosophies were strongly influenced by Buddhist, Hindu, and Muslim and Christian concepts. Like his grandfather, he also believed in the concept of 'non-violence' (Ahimsa).[21] Gandhi claimed to be more Unitarian than anything else. He took his prayers public and did not practice Hinduism in the traditional sense.[citation needed]

Gandhi met nurse Sunanda in a hospital and they married in 1957. The couple had 2 children, Tushar, born on 17 January 1960, and Archana. Gandhi and Sunanda stayed married until her death on 21 February 2007.[citation needed]

As of 2016, Gandhi resided in Rochester, New York.[2]

Gandhi died at the Sunanda Gandhi Home for Girls in Kolhapur, on 2 May 2023. He was 89.[22]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Arun Gandhi: 'My grandfather saw my anger as fuel for change'". The Guardian. 30 September 2017. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 7 May 2023.
  2. ^ a b Hewitt, Scott (18 January 2015). "Gandhi's grandson urges change from within". The Columbian.
  3. ^ (18 January 2015) Arun Gandhi on movie "Gandhi"
  4. ^ Peace Abbey Awards, list of recipients
  5. ^ Housden, R. (1999) Sacred America: The emerging spirit of the people. Simon & Schuster. p 201.
  6. ^ Morrissey, M.M. (2003) New Thought: A Practical Spirituality. Penguin.
  7. ^ (8 May 2018) Human Manifesto III Signers
  8. ^ "Dr. Brian Polkinghorn Wins Prestigious Elkins Award". Salisbury University. 17 July 2007. Archived from the original on 5 August 2012. Retrieved 22 June 2020.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  9. ^ "Dr. Arun Gandhi Speaks on Nonviolence November 12". Salisbury University. 23 October 2007. Archived from the original on 5 August 2012. Retrieved 22 June 2020.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  10. ^ "SU's Polkinghorn Receives Second Elkins Professorship". Salisbury University. 12 September 2008. Archived from the original on 5 August 2012. Retrieved 22 June 2020.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  11. ^ Gandhi Institute for Nonviolence Relocates to University of Rochester, 1 June 2007 press release, University of Rochester.
  12. ^ March home, urges Gandhi grandson, 31 August 2004.
  13. ^ "UW Social Justice Research Center Hosts Gandhi's Grandson Nov. 16 | News | University of Wyoming".
  14. ^ (7 March 2011) "Gandhi's talk in Honolulu"
  15. ^ (23 March 2012) Engaging Peace Conference
  16. ^ Rule, Adi (16 April 2014). "Bethany Hegedus, Arun Gandhi, and GRANDFATHER GANDHI" 19 October 2017 at the Wayback Machine. "the MFA in Writing for Children & Young Adults Author Blog", Vermont College of Fine Arts.
  17. ^ Bird, Elizabeth (8 April 2014). "Review of the Day: Grandfather Gandhi by Arun Gandhi and Bethany Hegedus". School Library Journal.
  18. ^ Smith, Robin (4 November 2014). "Grandfather Gandhi". The Horn Book Magazine.
  19. ^ "Grandfather Gandhi". Publishers Weekly. Retrieved 6 September 2015.
  20. ^ Arun Gandhi reaches beyond Hindu religious traditions
  21. ^ (8 May 2018) Arun Gandhi Biography 4 March 2019 at the Wayback Machine
  22. ^ "Mahatma Gandhi's grandson Arun Gandhi passes away at 89". The Times of India. 2 May 2023. Retrieved 2 May 2023.

External links edit

  • Official Arun Gandhi Blog & Contact Site
  • Arun Gandhi Philanthropic Tours
  • Gandhi Worldwide Education Institute (Arun Gandhi President)
  • M.K. Gandhi institute (Founded by Arun Gandhi)

arun, manilal, gandhi, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, 2023. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Arun Manilal Gandhi news newspapers books scholar JSTOR May 2023 Learn how and when to remove this message Arun Manilal Gandhi 14 April 1934 2 May 2023 was a South African born Indian American author socio political activist and son of Manilal Gandhi thus a grandson of nationalist leader Mahatma Gandhi In 2017 he published The Gift of Anger And Other Lessons From My Grandfather Mahatma Gandhi New York Gallery Books Jeter Publishing 2017 Arun Gandhi2012BornArun Manilal Gandhi 1934 04 14 14 April 1934Durban Natal Province South AfricaDied2 May 2023 2023 05 02 aged 89 Kolhapur Maharashtra IndiaNationalityIndian South African AmericanCitizenshipAmericanSpouseSunanda Gandhi m 1957 died 2007 wbr Children2 including TusharParent s Manilal GandhiSushila MashruwalaRelativesEla Gandhi sister Mahatma Gandhi grandfather Kasturba Gandhi grandmother Gandhi criticized the Indian government in an article he wrote after they subsidized a 1982 film based on his grandfather s life with 25 million He immigrated to the United States with his family in 1987 where he studied at the University of Mississippi They later moved to Memphis Tennessee where they founded a nonviolence institute hosted by the Christian Brothers University Contents 1 Early life 2 Career 3 Personal life and death 4 See also 5 References 6 External linksEarly life editArun Manilal Gandhi was born on 14 April 1934 in Durban to Manilal Gandhi and Sushila Mashruwala His father was an editor and his mother was a publisher for the Indian Opinion Arun had seen his grandfather Mahatma Gandhi once briefly at age 5 and didn t see him again until 1946 when he lived with Mahatma Gandhi at the Sevagram ashram in India Arun returned to the Union of South Africa in 1947 just weeks before his grandfather was assassinated 1 While living at Sevagram Arun had the advantage of education over the illiterate farm families who worked the surrounding fields His grandfather urged him to play with the neighboring children after school in order to learn what it was like to live in poverty as well as to teach those children what he learned in class each day which Arun Gandhi later described as the most creative and enlightening experience for me Eventually crowds of children and their parents started showing up for lessons with the young Gandhi which taught him compassion and the need to share 2 Career editIn 1982 when Columbia Pictures released the feature film Gandhi based on his grandfather s life Gandhi wrote an article criticizing the Indian government for subsidizing the film with 25 million arguing that there were more important things to spend such money on Though his article was widely reprinted and celebrated after attending a special screening of the film Gandhi included that it accurately conveyed his grandfather s philosophy and legacy despite its historical inaccuracies and was so moved by it that he wrote another article retracting the first one 3 In 1987 Arun Gandhi moved to the United States along with his wife Sunanda to work on a study at the University of Mississippi This study examined and contrasted the sorts of prejudices that existed in India the U S and South Africa Afterward they moved to Memphis Tennessee and founded the M K Gandhi Institute for Nonviolence hosted by the Christian Brothers University a Catholic academic institution This institute was dedicated to applying the principles of nonviolence at both local and global scales As co founders of the institute both husband and wife received the Peace Abbey Courage of Conscience Award for bringing the legacy of Gandhi to America 4 which was awarded at the John F Kennedy Library in Boston In 1996 he cofounded the Season for Nonviolence as a yearly celebration of the philosophies and lives of Mohandas Gandhi and Martin Luther King Jr 5 6 In 2003 Gandhi was one of the signatories to Humanism and Its Aspirations Humanist Manifesto III 7 In late 2007 Gandhi co taught a course entitled Gandhi on Personal Leadership and Nonviolence at Salisbury University in Salisbury Maryland 8 On 12 November 2007 Gandhi gave a lecture for the Salisbury University Center for Conflict Resolution s One Person Can Make a Difference Lecture Series entitled Nonviolence in the Age of Terrorism 9 In late 2008 Gandhi returned to Salisbury University to co teach a course entitled The Global Impact of Gandhi 10 In 2007 after the passing of his wife Sunanda ml on 21 February the institute moved to Rochester New York and is currently located on the University of Rochester River Campus 11 After January 2008 op ed in The Washington Post s On Faith section where Gandhi said that Israelis talked too much about the Holocaust and were losing world sympathy and that Israel and the U S were the biggest contributors to the world threatening culture of violence his ties to Rochester were imperiled He claimed that dwelling on the past wouldn t allow them to move forward Gandhi apologized by saying he had only meant to say right wing Likud supporters were part of the problem but the university did not accept his explanation and informed him that the institute would be closed unless he resigned from it Gandhi then quit making an erroneous prediction that he would be able to return in several months when the furor over his actions died down he never came back in any capacity before his death in 2023 citation needed Gandhi had given many speeches about nonviolence in many countries During his tour to Israel he urged the Palestinians to resist Israeli occupation peacefully to assure their freedom In August 2004 Gandhi proposed to the Palestinian Parliament a peaceful march of 50 000 refugees across the Jordan River to return to their homeland and said MPs should lead the way Gandhi also claimed that the fate of Palestinians is ten times worse than that of blacks in apartheid South Africa He asked What would happen Maybe the Israeli army would shoot and kill several They may kill 100 They may kill 200 men women and children And that would shock the world The world will get up and say What is going on 12 On 12 October 2009 Gandhi visited the Brunton Theatre in Musselburgh to talk to P7 s from all over East Lothian in Scotland citation needed On 11 November 2009 Gandhi visited Chattanooga State Technical Community College in Chattanooga Tennessee to speak and spread his message of peace citation needed On 13 November 2009 Gandhi visited Cleveland State Community College in Cleveland Tennessee to speak and spread his message of peace On 16 November 2010 Gandhi visited The University of Wyoming in Laramie Wyoming to speak and spread his message of peace 13 On 2 March 2011 Arun Gandhi spoke at the East West Center on the campus of the University of Hawaii at Manoa Honolulu Hawaii He spoke about Nonviolence A Means for Social Change On the same day he also spoke at Iolani School in Honolulu on the subject of The Wisdom of Choosing Peace On 3 March 2011 Gandhi spoke at the University of Hawaii Architecture Building in an event sponsored by the Spark Matsunaga Institute for Peace and Conflict Resolution in Honolulu Hawaii On 4 March 2011 spoke at the Pacific Buddhist Academy in Honolulu Hawaii He also spoke at the Hawaii State Capitol public auditorium on the subject of The Power of Peace to Create a Culture of Human Rights in Hawaii and the World This was part of the Human Rights Week sponsored by the State of Hawaii He also spoke at the Pioneer Plaza Club in downtown Honolulu on the subject of Gandhian Peace Nonviolence A Pathway for Resolving Modern Day Conflict On 5 March 2011 Gandhi visited The International Society for Krishna Consciousness Temple in Honolulu Hawaii to speak and spread his message of peace He also spoke at To Ho No Hikari Church in Honolulu in an event sponsored by Dr Terry Shintani on the subject of The Way of Nonviolence Towards All Living Beings and at the Hawaii Convention Center as part of the PAAAC Youth Conference On 6 March 2011 Gandhi spoke at Unity Church Diamond Head Honolulu on the subject of Lessons I Learned With My Grandfather 14 nbsp From left to right Gandhi his Grandfather Gandhi co author Bethany Hegedus and Ilyasah Shabazz daughter of Malcolm X speaking on the Peace The Next Generation panel at the 2014 Brooklyn Book Festival on the topic of growing up a child of a political figure Gandhi s 2011 tour of Honolulu was sponsored by Barbara Altemus of the We Are One Foundation and by the Gandhian International Institute for Peace Gandhi is featured in THE CALLING Heal Ourselves Heal our Planet a Documentary Film in Production created by Barbara Altemus directed by Oscar nominated William Gazecki citation needed On 23 March 2012 Gandhi was the keynote speaker at the first annual Engaging Peace Conference at Arcadia University in Glenside Pennsylvania 15 In March 2014 Atheneum Books for Young Readers published Grandfather Gandhi a children s book that Arun Gandhi co authored with Bethany Hegedus and illustrated by Evan Turk 16 The picture book memoir which carries a pro peace message tells the story of how Arun s grandfather likening anger to lightning that could either destroy or illuminate taught Arun to respond to injustice using peaceful methods in order to turn darkness into light The book also focuses on how Arun jealous of the other people who commanded his grandfather s attention frustrated with his schoolwork and embarrassed at his inability to control his anger strove to make his grandfather proud The book was met with positive reviews for its use of a child s point of view in order to make a complex historical issue understandable to child readers and for Turk s use of cut paper abstract images to create illustrations with emotional resonance 17 18 19 He also published Legacy of Love My Education in the Path of Nonviolence citation needed Personal life and death editGandhi considered himself to be a Hindu but expressed universalist views 20 Gandhi had worked closely with Christian priests and his philosophies were strongly influenced by Buddhist Hindu and Muslim and Christian concepts Like his grandfather he also believed in the concept of non violence Ahimsa 21 Gandhi claimed to be more Unitarian than anything else He took his prayers public and did not practice Hinduism in the traditional sense citation needed Gandhi met nurse Sunanda in a hospital and they married in 1957 The couple had 2 children Tushar born on 17 January 1960 and Archana Gandhi and Sunanda stayed married until her death on 21 February 2007 citation needed As of 2016 Gandhi resided in Rochester New York 2 Gandhi died at the Sunanda Gandhi Home for Girls in Kolhapur on 2 May 2023 He was 89 22 See also editList of peace activistsReferences edit Arun Gandhi My grandfather saw my anger as fuel for change The Guardian 30 September 2017 ISSN 0261 3077 Retrieved 7 May 2023 a b Hewitt Scott 18 January 2015 Gandhi s grandson urges change from within The Columbian 18 January 2015 Arun Gandhi on movie Gandhi Peace Abbey Awards list of recipients Housden R 1999 Sacred America The emerging spirit of the people Simon amp Schuster p 201 Morrissey M M 2003 New Thought A Practical Spirituality Penguin 8 May 2018 Human Manifesto III Signers Dr Brian Polkinghorn Wins Prestigious Elkins Award Salisbury University 17 July 2007 Archived from the original on 5 August 2012 Retrieved 22 June 2020 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint unfit URL link Dr Arun Gandhi Speaks on Nonviolence November 12 Salisbury University 23 October 2007 Archived from the original on 5 August 2012 Retrieved 22 June 2020 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint unfit URL link SU s Polkinghorn Receives Second Elkins Professorship Salisbury University 12 September 2008 Archived from the original on 5 August 2012 Retrieved 22 June 2020 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint unfit URL link Gandhi Institute for Nonviolence Relocates to University of Rochester 1 June 2007 press release University of Rochester March home urges Gandhi grandson 31 August 2004 UW Social Justice Research Center Hosts Gandhi s Grandson Nov 16 News University of Wyoming 7 March 2011 Gandhi s talk in Honolulu 23 March 2012 Engaging Peace Conference Rule Adi 16 April 2014 Bethany Hegedus Arun Gandhi and GRANDFATHER GANDHI Archived 19 October 2017 at the Wayback Machine the MFA in Writing for Children amp Young Adults Author Blog Vermont College of Fine Arts Bird Elizabeth 8 April 2014 Review of the Day Grandfather Gandhi by Arun Gandhi and Bethany Hegedus School Library Journal Smith Robin 4 November 2014 Grandfather Gandhi The Horn Book Magazine Grandfather Gandhi Publishers Weekly Retrieved 6 September 2015 Arun Gandhi reaches beyond Hindu religious traditions 8 May 2018 Arun Gandhi Biography Archived 4 March 2019 at the Wayback Machine Mahatma Gandhi s grandson Arun Gandhi passes away at 89 The Times of India 2 May 2023 Retrieved 2 May 2023 External links edit nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Arun Manilal Gandhi nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Arun Manilal Gandhi Official Arun Gandhi Blog amp Contact Site Arun Gandhi Philanthropic Tours Gandhi Worldwide Education Institute Arun Gandhi President M K Gandhi institute Founded by Arun Gandhi Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Arun Manilal Gandhi amp oldid 1216871444, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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