Young India, 22 October 1925
Mahatma Gandhi
Gandhi's assertion of nonviolence as both the cornerstone and capstone of his beliefs underscores a radical departure from conventional strategies of change. During the early 1920s, as the world watched India's push for independence, Gandhi's approach baffled colonial powers accustomed to quelling violent uprisings. His strategy was not just a tactic but an all-encompassing philosophy, compelling enough to destabilize an empire's confidence in its conventional tools of repression.