South Africans take part in annual Gandhi Walk

South Africans should take a deep look within themselves to continue the legacy of Mahatma Gandhi, an NGO here said, underlining the need to counter claims that call him ‘racist’.

By :  migrator
Update: 2017-04-24 16:12 GMT
Participants during the annual Gandhi Walk in Johannesburg

Johannesburg

“We have to think very carefully about this – what does Gandhi represent; who best represents him, and how do we defend him from attacks that come against him from different places calling him a sell-out and racist,” said Nishan Balton, the executive director of the Ahmed Kathrada Foundation, said. 

“Nobody has countered those things effectively and it is something that we want to discuss with the Indian Consul General here, because if we don’t respond to that, the loud, false interpretations of Gandhiji take hold,” Balton added.He was speaking at the annual Gandhi Walk in the Indian suburb of Lenasia here. 

Balton was referring to comments in South Africa that resurface regularly about Gandhi being racist during his tenure in the country. The annual walk, which is accompanied by a fair, attracted more than 3,000 people who participated in fun runs in three distance categories. 

Families, many pushing babies in prams, senior citizens and children participated in the walk organised by an arm of the Hindu Seva Samaj, comprising the Gujarati community of the Gauteng province of South Africa. 

The Gandhi Walk was initiated more than three decades ago to raise funds for the completion of the Gandhi Hall in Lenasia, where the Indian-origin community of Johannesburg was forcibly resettled in the apartheid era in the 1950s.

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