top of page

Gandhi’s Assassination – Who Really Pulled the Strings?

Chains of Unity: Gandhi and Nehru depicted in a symbolic representation of their joint efforts in the struggle for India's independence.
Chains of Unity: Gandhi and Nehru depicted in a symbolic representation of their joint efforts in the struggle for India's independence.

A Murder That Shook the World

On January 30, 1948, Nathuram Godse shot Mahatma Gandhi, a crime that rocked India to its core. History labels Godse a Hindu nationalist killer, but the story’s threads unravel—could Jawaharlal Nehru, India’s first PM, have been complicit? This isn’t just a murder; it’s a question of power, betrayal, and hidden truths. Let’s dissect the evidence.

Godse’s Motive: A Nationalist’s Cry

Godse, born in 1910, was no mere thug. A writer for Agrani and Hindu Rashtra, he lived Savarkar’s Hindutva vision. Gandhi’s nonviolence, he argued, birthed Partition’s carnage—millions dead—and the ₹55 crore to Pakistan in 1948, fueling its Kashmir war, was the final straw. His banned trial defense (until 1968) wasn’t chaos—it was a nationalist’s plea. But was he the only one with a motive?

Gandhi’s Record: A Flawed Icon

Gandhi’s legacy isn’t untouchable. His Boer War support, weak Gandhi-Irwin Pact, and silence during the Great Calcutta Killings show a leader who stumbled. His nonviolence delayed freedom—the 1946 Naval Ratings mutiny, not his marches, ousted Britain. Evicting refugees, arming Pakistan’s war—these deepened India’s wounds. Godse’s act was a reaction—did Nehru share his frustration?

The Trial: Evidence Buried

The 1948–49 Red Fort trial hid more than it revealed—Godse’s words suppressed, media out, a Beretta pistol lost. His 1949 execution was hushed, ashes gone. No autopsy on Gandhi—why? Congress claimed order, but Nehru, unshackled by Gandhi’s “super PM” sway, gained most. Was this a trial, or a cover for a larger hand?

Nehru’s Control: A Darker Agenda?

Nehru’s censorship eclipsed British rule—Godse’s statement locked away, Hyderabad 1948’s toll (27,000–200,000 dead) buried until 2013. Congress’s ruthlessness—sidelining Bose, letting Bhagat Singh hang—shows a party that silenced threats. If they could kill thousands, why not Gandhi? Nehru’s rise post-1948 begs the question: did he pull the strings?

India’s Divide: A Truth Suppressed

Gandhi’s death drew urban tears, but rural voices, scarred by Partition, questioned his path. Godse’s hanging split opinion—justice to some, loss to others. Congress crushed dissent, hiding massacres like Kerala 1921. Nehru’s shadow grows—did he orchestrate this suppression?

Question the Strings

Who really killed Gandhi? Explore at Debating Nathuram Godse: Murderer or Misguided Patriot (insert-your-blog-url-here). It dissects Godse’s cry, Gandhi’s cracks, and Nehru’s agenda with Quora insights and historical depth. A lone gunman, or a PM’s plot? Uncover trial secrets, massacres, and more—join the debate and question the strings.

For More Visit

Watch These Related Videos


Visit previous related blog

 
 
 

Comments


Top Stories

Bring global news straight to your inbox. Sign up for our weekly newsletter.

  • Instagram
  • Facebook
  • Twitter

© 2035 by The Global Morning. Powered and secured by Wix

bottom of page