Inspiring course taught by my bro Adeola on Brooklyn . Reminds me of cool public school
courses!
https://thebrooklyninstitute.com/bisr_course/love-is-a-weapon-gandhi-tolsto…
Love is a Weapon: Gandhi, Tolstoy, Kallenbach and nonviolence | The Brooklyn Institute for
Social Research
Before Gandhi became the Mahatma, he was Mohandas. Living in South Africa for over twenty
years, the young lawyer-turned-activist campaigned for the rights of migrant workers from
India, fighting alongside the British in wars against the Boers and the Zulu Kingdom. It
was in these harshest of racist, imperialist battles that young Gandhi began to develop
the thought and practice that would become his signature in later years.
During these years in South Africa, Gandhi formed friendships with the Russian writer Leo
Tolstoy and Prussian-Jewish architect, Hermann Kallenbach. Out of their unlikely
friendship, Kallenbach and Gandhi founded the Tolstoy Farm, a retreat which acted as a
laboratory for experimenting with techniques of nonviolence both as theory and as a
practical way of living.
In this course we look closely at Gandhi’s South Africa years―a time of both racial
warfare, and great love and friendship―to understand the source of the philosophies and
practices that would later inspire many currents of the civil rights movement in the
United States. While many analyses of Gandhi and his thought focus on ideas and influences
from Braminical and Jain sources, this course will focus on the South African moment and
this archive in particular.
Main texts for the course will include the collected writings of Gandhi, The South African
Gandhi: Stretcher-bearer of Empire, by Desai & Vahed, Tolstoy’s The Kingdom of God is
Within You, correspondence between Tolstoy and Gandhi, and Gandhi and Kallenbach. We will
also read supplementary texts, which provided inspiration for Gandhi’s practice, such as
Thoreau on civil disobedience, John Ruskin’s “Unto this Last,” and Plato’s Apology.
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