TRUTH ABOUT SERGEANT MAJOR MOHANDAS GANDHI NOT COVERED IN THE MOVIE OR HIS AUTOBIOGRAPHY, A British Secret Service Agent – (Credits to Patrick Scrivener – Edited and Enhanced for General Reading by – Deepak Sarkar, Victoria, BC, www.kolki.com)  

Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi was born on October 2, 1868, in Gujarat, Western India. His father was a poor Hindu merchant who died in 1885. Gandhi received the Indian equivalent of a U.S. High School Diploma in 1887:

In his own words, “I passed the matriculation examination in 1887. It then used to be held at two centers, Ahmedabad and Bombay. The general poverty of the country naturally led Kathiawad students to prefer the nearer and the cheaper center. The poverty of my family likewise dictated to me the same choice. This was my first journey from Rajkot to Ahmedbad and that too without a companion”. (Gandhi, An Autobiography: The Story of My Experiments With Truth, p. 35).

Gandhi attended Samaldas College in Bhavnagar but after the end of the first term he had to drop out because he could not understand the English language. Here is an excerpt from a biography of Spouse Kastur Gandhi:

“The months passed but not quickly enough for Mohan. He had realized almost from the day of his arrival at Samaldas College that he was floundering. He understood little that was said in classes. Lessons were conducted in English; his marks were abominable; he was fighting loneliness, frustration, and an oppressive awareness that he was soon to assume the responsibilities of parenthood. When his first term ended in May, he quit the college and went home to Kastubai determined never to return to Samaldas College”. (Gandhi, The Forgotten Woman: The Untold Story of Kastur, Wife of Mahatma Gandhi, pp. 34-34).

It was soon after he dropped out of college that a "friend"(??) suggested that he go to England and study to become a "barrister."

Coat of Arms of the Inns of Court.
Coat of Arms of the Inns of Court.

 

A university degree, and a knowledge of English, are minimum requirements to enter the Inns of Court in London.

Gandhi was a college dropout and he came from a poor family.

He spent his 3 years at the school for spies . . . and definitely not at the aristocratic, expensive Inns of Court.

 

The Inns of Court where
The Inns of Court where
barristers train.

Like fellow spy Muhammad Ali Jinnah, Gandhi could have entered the Inns of Court after graduating from a university in India, but he had neither the brains nor the money to pursue a legal career.

Mohandas Gandhi
Mohandas Gandhi
(1869–1948).

 

In 1887, Mohandas Gandhi began his training as a British Secret Service agent in the capital of the Empire.

His cover was "barrister" or "lawyer."

The British were determined to retain the "Jewel in the Crown" at any cost and that necessitated saturating India with British trained spies.

 

Gandhi with some of his fellow spies.
Gandhi with some of his
fellow spies in London..

Two (2) committed British imperialists were responsible for recruiting Gandhi as a spy and paying for his expenses while undergoing training in London.

Lord Roberts of Kandahar
Lord Roberts of Kandahar
(1832–1914).

 

Lord Roberts of Kandahar ("Mr. British Empire") was stationed in India for most of his military career.

He recruited Gandhi for training as a spy.

Aristocratic admiral Edmond Slade provided the finances for Gandhi's training in London.

His daughter Madeline (later Mirabehn) fell "madly in love" with Gandhi!!

 

Admiral Edmond Slade
Admiral Edmond Slade
(1859–1928).

Gandhi was not charged any tuition while he studied at the spying school so admiral Slade was only responsible for his living expenses while in London. Adolf Hitler was another famous or infamous graduate of that school.

The "Apostle of Non-violence" had the backing of two (2) of the top military men in the British Empire....While he was staying in London, Gandhi forgot to mention his benefactor admiral Slade . . . or staying at his country mansion, Milton Heath.

In June 1891, his spy training completed, he sailed home to India. When he arrived home to Bombay, no adoring crowds greeted him because the Gandhi legend was not yet born:

The voyage home was a sad one, and his homecoming even more dismal. The Bombay docks were bathed in a misting monsoon rain as he landed on July 5, 1891. Not even the reunion with Kasturbai and his family could lift the gloom–or a growing "sense of helplessness and fear." Within a few months of trying to start his own law practice in Rajkot, he confesses in his autobiography, "I had serious doubts as to whether I should be able even to earn a living." (Herman, Gandhi & Churchill, p. 82).

Gandhi need not have worried about his future as a "lawyer" because admiral Slade and the British Raj was committed to taking care of the financial needs of all of their spies!!.

Gandhi fought for the British during the brutal Boer War!!

In 1893, Gandhi sailed for South Africa. Until the discovery of gold in South Africa, the Cape Colony was just a stopover on the passage to India.

Gandhi in South Africa.
Gandhi in South Africa.

In 1893, Mohandas Gandhi arrived in South Africa without his wife and 2 children.

South Africa already had a large Indian population so he was more successful as an "attorney" there than in India.

Gandhi as an "attorney" in South Africa.
Gandhi as an "attorney" in South Africa.

Upon arriving in South Africa, Gandhi started practicing law. He returned to India on July 4, 1896, to collect his family from Jajkot. In 1899, the very man who had recommended him for training in Britain, Lord Roberts, arrived in Cape Town determined to steal the gold from the Boers.

Gandhi with the Indian Ambulance Corps.
Gandhi with the Indian Ambulance Corps.

In 1899, Lord Roberts commanded the British Empire during the Gold War.

Gandhi was part of a special ambulance corps that assisted the British Empire forces.

Lord Roberts commanded the
Lord Roberts commanded the
Empire army during the Boer War.

Lord Roberts was the architect of the brutal concentration camp system for Boer women and children. Gandhi never seemed to be bothered by the abysmal treatment of innocent women and children . . . as long as it was for the good of the British Empire! Just imagine if Gandhi was a real Indian Lawyer why he would Volunteer as Sergeant Major to fight as British Soldier to colonize native African Zulu!

Once the British Empire defeated the Boers, the vast quantity of gold was shipped to the Bank of England in London. That gold was used by the British to finance the Kaiser and the German military buildup prior to WWI. The gold was also used to finance the Russian Revolution!!

Sergeant major Gandhi.
Sergeant major Gandhi.

 

After the British conquered South Africa, the Zulus felt the iron heel of oppression.

In desperation, they rose in revolt, which was brutally crushed.

Sergeant major Gandhi commanded an ambulance brigade during the uneven contest.

Chief Bambhatha
Chief Bambhatha
(1860–1906).

The Bambatha Uprising was a Zulu revolt against British rule and taxation in Natal, South Africa, in 1906. The revolt was led by Bambhatha kaMancinza, leader of the amaZondi clan of the Zulu people, who lived in the Mpanza Valley, a district near Greytown, KwaZulu-Natal.

Unlike the Boers, the natives fought with swords and spears and they were no match for the superior firepower of the British Empire. The death of Chief Bambhatha brought an end to the conflict.

Mohandas Gandhi sailed for England in July 1914–just in time for World War I.

1914 Indian Ambulance Corps with Gandhi
1914 Indian Ambulance Corps with Gandhi seated in the center.

It never occurred to Gandhi that WW I was financed by South African gold!!

Gandhi during WWI, as organizer of the Indian Volunteer Corps, London, 1914.
Gandhi during WWI, as organizer of the Indian Volunteer Corps, London, 1914.

He raised a battalion of ambulance drivers but fell ill with pleurisy and was unable to serve on the Western Front.

To his big disappointment, Gandhi never served on the Western Front because he fell ill with pleurisy and was unable to fill his command tasks. He sailed for India on December 19, and reached Bombay on January 9, 1915.

Gandhi's propaganda press had preceded him and this time he was hailed as a hero of non-violence and civil rights for the oppressed. The legend of Gandhi was born and a Nobel prize winning poet named Rabindranath Tagore gave him the flattering title Mahatma or "great soul."

Mirabehn (Madeline Slade) was Gandhi's liaison with the British Secret Service!!

Madeline Slade followed in the footsteps of her "intelligence officer" father. According to her biography, she fell in love with Gandhi after a French writer named Romain Rolland called him "another Christ" and the greatest figure of the 20th century....Nothing could be further from the TRUTH, she met Gandhi while he was training in London.

Madeline Slade
Madeline Slade
(1892–1982) aged 14.

 

Madeline traveled all the way to India to be with her hero Mahatma Gandhi.

She called him "Bapu" (father in Gujarati) and he changed her name to Mirabehn, after Meera Bai, an Indian goddess.

It was a meeting of old friends.

 

Madeline with admiral Slade can
Madeline with admiral Slade can
be seen in the background.

Madeline Slade sailed for India in October 1925, and she arrived at Gandhi's Ashram on November 7. Madeline provided the funds from the Bank of England for Gandhi's passive resistance or satyagraha. G. D. Birla was also a Liaison between Winston Churchill and Gandhi to promote the Harijan movement, to further division against unity!  

Gandhi's adoring devotee claimed that the relationship was purely platonic!!

Gandhi and Mirabehn before leaving India for the 1931 Round Table Conference in London.
Gandhi and Mirabehn before leaving India for the 1931 Round Table Conference in London.

 

In 1931, Gandhi left for Britain to discuss Indian "independence."

He was accompanied by his political adviser Mirabehn.

 

  

Gandhi and Mirabehn on board SS Rajputana on the way to London. Gandhi and Mirabehn on board SS Rajputana on the way to London.

Gandhi was treated like a celebrity when he arrived in London in 1931. He met Prime Minister Ramsey MacDonald, and he had tea with the king at Buckingham Palace. He toured the Lancashire linen mills that supplied the huge Indian market.

Gandhi at 10 Downing St.
Gandhi at 10 Downing St.

 

Gandhi was treated like a celebrity during his stay in Britain.

He visited the textile workers in Lancashire which manufactured most of the clothing worn in India.

 

 

Mirabehn with Gandhi at Darwen, Lancashire, 1931.
Mirabehn with Gandhi at Darwen, Lancashire, 1931.

The financial stakes were enormous for Britain because India was a "captive market" and dumping ground for most of her manufactured goods. As expected, Gandhi played his part as a spy very well and he returned to India empty handed.

Gandhi fasted to keep the British in India!!

Winston Churchill was determined to keep India a part of the British Empire at any cost. He overlooked no weapon–no matter how insignificant–to accomplish this.

As well as being a master of disguise, Gandhi had another unique talent for a spy: the ability to fast....Churchill loved the idea of fasting and non-violence because it would accomplish absolutely nothing to free India . . . except help his spy Gandhi to lose weight . . . and live longer.

Gandhi fasting unto death to
Gandhi fasting unto death to
keep the British in India.

 

Gandhi went on several long fasts to keep the British in India.

His emaciated homespun frame became an icon around the world.

Emaciated Gandhi spinning a yarn.
Emaciated homespun Gandhi
spinning a yarn.

The emaciated frame of Gandhi spinning a yarn became famous throughout the world.

Gandhi forced Subhas Chandra Bose to resign from the INC Presidency!!

Subhas Chandra Bose was the real hero of Indian independence and the true FATHER of the Indian Republic. From the very beginning of his quest for Indian freedom from British oppression, he was mightily opposed by Gandhi . . . even to the stratagem of having him poisoned.

Bose as President of Congress
Bose as President of Congress in1938.

In February 1938, Subhas Chandra Bose was elected President of the 51st session of the Indian National Congress.

Under his leadership, a united India was on the road to true freedom.

Gandhi opposed him mightily . . . even resorting to poison!!

 

 

Gandhi trying to put his best face on his relationship with Bose.
Gandhi trying to put his best face on his relationship with Bose.

As Congress President, Bose worked tirelessly to lay the groundwork for Indian independence and unity:

As Congress president, Bose pursued the deep interest in international affairs he had developed during his European exile. He sent a Congress medical mission to China as a symbol of solidarity against Japanese aggression. He encouraged cultural troupes, such as the dancers Uday Shankar and Amala Shankar, to visit Europe and disseminate Indian arts. He closely monitored political and military developments in Europe as the Third Reich spread its tentacles, and he sharply criticized the British and French betrayal of Czechoslovakia in 1938. On the death of Kemal Atatürk in November 1938, he held up the father of modern Turkey as "a magnificent example of the dictum that those who strive for liberty and win it should also put into effect the program of post-war reconstruction. (Bose, His Majesty's Opponent, p. 152).

In January 1939, Mr. Bose was reelected to Congress for another year. Gandhi was highly displeased with the result of the election. After visiting him, Bose fell dangerously ill:

Bose headed to Wardha for a meeting with Gandhi. He hoped that a face-to-face meeting would clear the air, but no breakthrough was to be achieved during their talks on February 15. On his way back by train to Calcutta the next day, Bose fell ill with a high fever. When he asked for a postponement of the Congress Working Committee scheduled for February 22, Vallabhbhai Patel led all the members–except for Jawaharlal Nehru and Sarat Chandra Bose–to resign. Nehru issued an ambiguous separate statement, which led many to believe that he too had joined Patel in leaving the Working Committee (Bose, His Majesty's Opponent, pp. 157-158).

Unable to get any cooperation from Gandhi, Bose resigned from the Presidency on April 29, 1939. This was a momentous moment for India, as World War II was about to erupt in Europe, and a chance for India to gain independence from Britain. [British Got Everything They Needed For WW II Support from Gandhi – who eventually will ask Indians to Volunteer for the British Army – recruiting 2.5 Million Indians as British Soldiers who fought with courage for British Victory – without knowing their efforts will only help post WAR Cruel Partitioning of India which will Massacre 1+ Million and Displace 10+ Million Indians from their cozy home, community, city and secured livelihoods! IMAGINE UNITED FREE INDIA, IF GANDHI RATHER ASKED THOSE 2.5 MILLION INDIAN FIGHTERS TO JOIN SUBHAS BOSE’S FREEDOM FIGHTING which already hoisted the Indian Flag in Andaman and Nicobar Islands!  Gandhi couldn’t do it as British Secret Agent – The Mighty Raj would expose him disfiguring Bapu as traitor!

Gandhi presided over the partition of India in 1947!!

[British Empire Already Had Post WW II Partitioning of India Proposed by the House of LORDS with details of two (2) Dominions with guaranteed loyalty to Royalty, all it needed to sell it to Nehru and Zinnah – using Gandhi as a faithful Mediator, who always fought for British with Pledge of Allegiance.]

Subhas Chandra Bose would never have agreed to the partition of India into warring factions. The partition of India caused a dreadful civil war between Hindus and Muslims. Gandhi's answer to the millions who were uprooted from their homes was to FAST. [That’s why Nehru, knowing Subhas is still alive, urged Lord Mountbatten to ensure Partitioning done before Subhas’s Return – so that he can be the Prime Minister of Partitioned India!]

Gandhi and Jawaharlar Nehru.
Gandhi and Jawaharlar Nehru.

 

Jawaharlar Nehru worked with Gandhi for the partition of India and he was Prime Minister from 1947 to 1964.

 

Gandhi and Muhammad Ali Jinnah.
Gandhi and Muhammad Ali Jinnah.

Muhammad Ali Jinnah was the first "Muslim" governor-general of the newly created nation of Pakistan as British Dominion. Both men trained as spies in Britain!!

In 1947, India was partitioned and 2 hostile nations were created where one nation had existed for 4,000 years. The British divide and rule strategy was applied, with Hindus, Sikhs, and Muslims divided along ethnic lines.

After the partition in 1947, a further partition took place in 1971 with the creation of Bangladesh. More countries mean more wars and wasteful military expenditures which could be used to improve the lives of the people.

Raj Ghat Gandhi Memorial, Delhi.
Raj Ghat Gandhi Memorial, Delhi.

 

British Secret Service agent Gandhi underwent cremation on January 31, 1948 Following Assassination by Secret Service! Bled to death at Birla House!

 

Saint Gandhi.
"Saint" Gandhi.

A memorial to the spot where he was cremated now exists at Raj Ghat. Subsequently, mighty man Mahatma Gandhi was canonized by most of the World's Religions.

[Gandhi knew his death was imminent, he mentioned many times during the day if I can survive this evening. Even his top secret plan to travel to Karachi next morning was already printed by BBC, [Probably Mirabehn who was always a British Secret Agent sitting right in the Gandhi’s movement and happenings inside Congress]. Two (2) BBC Reporters were already strolling around for the right moment to confirm and report Gandhi’s Death! Gandhi rejected the idea of secret service around him for security but eventually gave in to Nehru administration’s desire! That evening secret service was missing as the Nathuram Godse patsy team was freely moving around near the prayer area taking positions. Secret service people re-appear at the back of Gandhi once Godse started firing towards him, probably firing few rounds in the back of Gandhi to ensure death! That is the only reason why Gandhi left to bleed towards death in Birla House (now Gandhi Smriti, on Tees January Road, formerly Albuquerque Road) instead of rushing to nearby Willingdon Hospital (founded 1932) (now Ram Manohar Lohia Hospital) – only less than 10 minutes away! Satyameva Jayate – Kolki         

References

Bose, Sugata. His Majesty's Opponent. Subhas Chandra Bose and India's Struggle for Independence. Harvard University Press, 2011.

Gandhi, Mohandas K. An Autobiography: The Story of My Experiments With Truth. Beacon Press, Boston, 1957.

Gandhi, Arun & Sunanda. The Forgotten Woman: The Untold Story of Kastur, Wife of Mahatma Gandhi. Ozark Mountains Books, Huntsville, Alabama, 1998.

Herman, Arthur. Gandhi & Churchill: The Epic Rivalry That Destroyed An Empire and Forged Our Age. Bantam Books, New York, 2008.

Mirabehn, The Spirit's Pilgrimage. Great Ocean Publishers, Arlington, Virginia, 1960.

Roberts, Frederick Sleigh. Forty-One Years in India, From Subaltern to Commander-in-Chief. R. Bentley, London, 1897.

Singh, G.B. Gandhi: Behind the Mask of Divinity. Prometheus Books, Amherst, New York, 2004.

ADDITIONAL READING: NEHRU MOUNTBATTEN FALSE FLAG PLOY TO DECLARE NETAJI SUBHAS BOSE DEAD: http://www.kolki.com/Nehru-Mountbatten-Ploy.htm

KOLKI PEACE FOUNDATION: Truth is the Real Peace Foundation:  http://www.kolki.com/peace/KPF-Worldwide-PT-Links.htm