An American journalist’s friendship with Mahatma Gandhi gave India a megaphone around the world

An admirer of the Mahatma, William Shirer presented India’s message to his readers in the US and Europe, who until then had been fed on the British narrative.

An American journalist’s friendship with Mahatma Gandhi gave India a megaphone around the world

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In 1944, as the world marked Mahatma Gandhi’s 75th birthday on October 2, a group of illustrious public figures gathered at the Town Hall in Manhattan for a celebration organised by the India League of America. Among the list of speakers at the function were Chinese-American painter and writer Mai-mai Sze, Indian poet and playwright Krishnalal Sridharani and William L Shirer, a well-known American foreign correspondent.

Shirer had long been an admirer of the Mahatma. Almost a decade and a half before that October celebration in New York, he had first set foot on Indian soil to work as a correspondent for the Chicago Tribune.

“For years, ever since I read of his first imprisonment in India in 1922 and had been overwhelmed by the eloquence of his words in his own defence at that famous trial, and then more recently read his autobiography and followed as best as I could in the Western press his efforts to free India, I had a feeling that perhaps he was the greatest living man on our planet,” Shirer wrote in his book Gandhi: A Memoir (1979).

One of Shirer’s goals in coming to India in 1930 was to interview Gandhi, but that never happened. The Mahatma was locked up in Yerwada Jail and,...

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