India: The assassination of Mahatma Gandhi
The Story
His was a life sworn to non-violence, but Mohandas Gandhi's death was the opposite: he was shot to death on his way to daily prayers. Gandhi became a world-renowned figure for his unwavering efforts to achieve India's independence from its colonial master, Great Britain. In this news report from CBC Radio, British Prime Minister Clement Attlee pays tribute to Gandhi and a BBC reporter gives an eyewitness account of Gandhi's last moments. Gandhi's voice is heard in a rebroadcast of a 1947 speech on the atomic bomb, and CBC correspondent Matthew Halton says the assassination may set India on fire.
Program: CBC News Roundup
Broadcast Date: Jan. 30, 1948
Guest(s): Clement Attlee, Mohandas Gandhi
Reporter: Matthew Halton
Duration: 9:32
Did You know?
• Mohandas K. Gandhi was born in the Indian province of Gujarat in 1869. After studying in London and working as a lawyer in South Africa, where his political activism began, he began advocating for Indian nationalism in the early 1920s. By 1948, the year of his death, his dream of an independent India had been achieved, though he was disappointed by the religious division represented by the concurrent creation of Pakistan.
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