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From what little I have read about Gandhi, I gather that he was a seeker of truth and a believer of love. He was also a human being and a product of his place and time, but one who managed to transcend so many limitations despite it all. His written thoughts are intimate, frank, reassuring, and altogether inspiring. This was a man who truly knew how to love, in the best sense of the word.
I used to think that people who imagined that love would save us all were delusional. I still do. I have begun to realize that all of us are, in one way or another, imagining the world out of what little we know. The search for truth merely provides a way to make sense of it all, and different people search for different things. The previous owner of the book wrote an interesting question at the very last page: "Why does Gandhi believe love is the strongest force in the world?" I cannot help but ask myself the same question. After some thought, I have come to the conclusion that the answer entirely depends on one's ever-changing definition of love, and this is the best answer I can think of at the moment: love is a compulsion to create and sustain life - and life is the very reason why we are all here.
2 comments:
love... the concept is so simple, yet so difficult to do.
you should watch imelda! "here lies love."
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