Thoughts of Mahatma Gandhi

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  • The pangs of hunger are not relieved by filling the stomach. They can be overcome by taking a limited quantity of food, like medicine, and remaining content with it.

    "August 17, 1945", CWMG, vol. LXXXI, p. 457.
  • Fear vanishes only with the annihilation of the ego.

    "August 18, 1945", CWMG, vol. LXXXI, p. 457.
  • It is an ordeal nowadays to read the newspapers. They do not give correct news. Nothing would be lost by not reading them.

    "August 19, 1945", CWMG, vol. LXXXI, p. 457.
  • It is as difficult to make the impossible possible, as it is easy to make the possible impossible.

    "August 20, 1945", CWMG, vol. LXXXI, p. 457.
  • What seems impossible is not always really so.

    "August 21, 1945", CWMG, vol. LXXXI, p. 457.
  • One person has God on his side; millions have Satan on theirs. Must, therefore, one fear the millions?

    "August 22, 1945", CWMG, vol. LXXXI, p. 457.
  • Supposing God is on the side of both, then who should fear whom?

    "August 23, 1945", CWMG, vol. LXXXI, p. 457.
  • He who remembers God can afford to forget everything else.

    "August 24, 1945", CWMG, vol. LXXXI, p. 457.
  • He who remembers everything else but forgets God, really remembers nothing.

    "August 25, 1945", CWMG, vol. LXXXI, p. 457.
  • He who forgets God, forgets himself.

    "August 26, 1945", CWMG, vol. LXXXI, p. 457.
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