Womankind

The Gandhi effect

Hua,” Indira’s grandmother said to relatives awaiting news of the birth. “It has happened.” She didn’t have the heart to announce the sex; the baby wasn’t a boy.

Indira Nehru’s earliest memory was of velvets, satins, silks, chiffons, and Savile Row suits piled upon the veranda of their family mansion, ready to feed bonfires. From this moment on, the family would wear only traditional handwoven cloth, khadi. It was early 20th century India, and activist Mahatma Gandhi’s ideas had come into their lives: their whole way of living was changing overnight. Indira’s wealthy parents, Jawaharlal and Kamala Nehru, were getting rid of their crystal, china, silver, carpets, and carriages.

By 1920, Indian nationalists had

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Womankind

Womankind6 min read
My Journey To Bliss
Until I embraced yoga, my education centred on cultivating my mind. If salvation was ever to come, it would come from the knowledge that I was building up there. It never dawned on me that some of the questions that made me most curious might find th
Womankind4 min read
The Creative Path
In life, we think we know what it is we wish to pursue and why, and off we go in that direction. But alongside this major goal in life there can also exist quiet loves or joys that trail behind us like a smitten lover. Leimomi Oakes wanted a job that
Womankind1 min read
The Path Of Bliss
Alan Parry worked as a commercial artist in London before leaving city life to paint and illustrate books from the country. Today he lives in a small village not far from Stratfordupon-Avon, his house standing alone down a leafy lane. The countryside

Related Books & Audiobooks