An Autobiography by M. K. Gandhi

Overview of An Autobiography
Gandhi's "My Experiments with Truth" - the revolutionary autobiography that inspired Martin Luther King Jr. and Nelson Mandela's non-violent resistance movements. What spiritual transformation turned a shy lawyer into history's most influential peaceful revolutionary?
About its author - M. K. Gandhi
Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi (1869–1948), revered as Mahatma Gandhi, authored The Story of My Experiments with Truth, a seminal autobiography chronicling his philosophy of nonviolent resistance and spiritual evolution.
A London-trained lawyer, Gandhi honed his doctrine of satyagraha (truth-force) during his 21-year tenure in South Africa, where he championed civil rights through peaceful protest—a methodology later pivotal in India’s independence movement.
His works, including Hind Swaraj (1909), which critiques Western industrialization, and Satyagraha in South Africa (1924), reflect his commitment to self-reliance and social justice. As the preeminent leader of India’s nationalist struggle, Gandhi advocated for religious harmony, economic equity, and the abolition of caste discrimination.
The Story of My Experiments with Truth has been translated into over 50 languages, solidifying its status as a global classic on ethics and activism. His principles continue to inspire movements for freedom and human dignity worldwide.
Key Takeaways of An Autobiography
- Truth is God: The ultimate moral compass in Gandhi's life philosophy
- Satyagraha (truth-force) transforms civil resistance into spiritual warfare without violence
- Childhood vows to vegetarianism and honesty became foundations for revolutionary ethics
- British rule crumbles when Indians achieve moral readiness through self-purification
- Ahimsa (non-violence) demands greater courage than armed rebellion against oppression
- Swadeshi movement's khadi cloth symbolized economic independence and cultural rebirth
- Spiritual autobiography redefines politics through fasting, prayer, and voluntary poverty
- South Africa's racial laws ignited Gandhi's first experiments with mass civil disobedience
- Journalism became weaponized through Young India to mobilize nonviolent revolution
- Eleven vows - from celibacy to fearlessness - forge satyagrahis' inner strength
- Jallianwala Bagh massacre proved British brutality must be met with soul-force
- Swaraj means self-rule for all Indians, not just political elite replacement