Gandhi on Fire is a rigorous, archive-driven examination of India's transition to independence—probing how moral authority shaped politics, how compressed decisions magnified human cost, and how dissenting voices were acknowledged yet deferred. Drawing on constitutional debates, administrative records, strategic disagreements, and international correspondence, the book challenges sanctified narratives without erasure, restoring plurality to a foundational moment often rendered singular.
Across four integrated volumes, the work analyzes the rise of ethical leadership, the limits of non-violence under mass breakdown, the administrative failures that amplified Partition's toll, and the archival counterpoints that complicate inevitability. The result is not polemic but reckoning—an insistence that respect and scrutiny can coexist, and that democratic memory strengthens when it confronts its own closures.
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