The Ambedkar-Gandhi Debate: A Reply to Arundhati Roy
Remembering a prince
The Hindu reviews Rajmohan Gandhi’s new book, “The Prince of Gujarat”, which, it says, "brings the story of Darbar Gopaldas Desai to life".
UP 2014, like Punjab 1947
Not long ago, while working on a history of undivided Punjab, I found that in 1914 that vast province was seen as the subcontinent’s hope for economic progress and inter-communal understanding. Yet, in 1947, both halves of divided Punjab saw carnage that no part of the world should witness.
Reviews of 'Punjab: A History from Aurangzeb to Mountbatten'
Excerpts from several reviews are available in this PDF file.
‘Understanding undivided Punjab vital for comprehending India, Pakistan’
The Institute of Strategic Studies Islamabad (ISSI) hosted the launching ceremony of the book Punjab: a History from Aurangzeb to Mountbatten, authored by Rajmohan Gandhi, the grandson of Mahatma Gandhi. The session included a public talk centred around understanding modern Pakistan and India through the prism of undivided Punjab.
Further events in Lahore
As part of his visit to Lahore, Prof Gandhi took part in an all-day interaction at Lahore University of Management Sciences’ humanities and social sciences department, and an international conference organised by the Trust for History, Art and Architecture of Pakistan.
http://www.dawn.com/news/1061862/dr-gandhi-for-promoting-people-to-peop…
http://www.dawn.com/news/1060591/indian-professor-goes-down-the-history…
Non-violence: Rajmohan Gandhi pays tribute to Bacha Khan
As many as 1,000 students from the Lahore College of Women University, the Government College University, Kinnaird College and the University of Engineering and Technology welcomed Dr Gandhi as he walked up to the podium to deliver a lecture on the life of Bacha Khan at Sinclair Hall at the Forman Christian College.
Patil launches Rajmohan Gandhi’s book on history of Punjab
He said that in the history of every nation, two forces remained at work — the unifying and the divisive. "The divisive forces destroy and the unifying forces lead to progress. We need to focus on the unifying forces," he said.
Lincoln and Gandhi
In this video Professor Andrew MacIntyre, Dean of the ANU College of Asia and the Pacific, talks to Professor Rajmohan Gandhi about his grandfather Mahatma Gandhi and what he shares in common with Abraham Lincoln.