Gandhi letters up for auction
Three explosive letters that highlight Mahatma Gandhi's deep concerns over the behaviour of his eldest son, Harilal, will go under the hammer at an auction in England next week.
Mullock's Auctioneers based in Shropshire county are hoping to fetch between £50,000 and £60,000 for a set of three letters written by Gandhi in June 1935.
“You should know that your problem has become much more difficult for me even then our national freedom,” says Gandhi in one of the letters in reference to allegations of inappropriate behaviour by Harilal.
“Manu is telling me number of dangerous things about you. She says that you had raped her before eight years and she was so much hurt that medical treatment was also to be taken,” the letter reads, in reference to Harilal's daughter Manu who had come to stay with her grandfather at Sabarmati Ashram.
“Please let me have pure truth please tell me if still you are interested in alcohol and debauchery. I wish that you better die rather than resort to alcohol in any manner,” adds another autographed letter.
Harilal Gandhi had wanted to go to England to study and become a barrister like his father but Gandhi had firmly opposed this believing a Western education would not be helpful in the struggle against British Raj. This led to Harilal renouncing all family ties in 1911 and his troubled relationship with his father continued throughout his life.
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