I don't know if everything in the following long article is factual, but if only half of it is, that's enough to prove that Gandhi was really a British agent, curbing the Indian independence struggle into non-agression...
Arguably the most important evidence against the myth of Gandhi the "freedom fighter" were his actions in British colony South Africa.
In 1887, Gandhi travelled to London, England for his education, where he reportedly graduated as a lawyer. It isn't clear how he could get in without a proper diploma. It is likely that he was supported (recruited) by the British Secret Intelligence Service.
Gandhi was recruited/supported by 2 British imperialists Lord Roberts of Kandahar (who was stationed in India for most of his career and the aristocratic Admiral Edmond Slade, who financed Gandhi’s eductaion in London, while his daughter Madeline Slade, later followed him to India, acting as a liason to British Intelligence.
See Gandhi with fellow spies (?) in London.
After returning to India without achieving any notoriety, in 1893, Mohandas Gandhi arrived in South Africa, where he started a law practice.
In South Africa, he openly shared the racist (Aryan) beliefs of the Theosophists. Gandhi complained of Indians being locked up in prison alongside Blacks:
Quote:We could understand not being classed with whites, but to be placed on the same level as the Natives seemed too much to put up with. Kaffirs [Blacks] are as a rule uncivilized—the convicts even more so. They are troublesome, very dirty and live like animals.
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In 1899, the man who guided his training in Britain, Lord Roberts, arrived in Cape Town as commander of the British Army during the Gold War, to steal the gold from the Boers (later used to finance the Bolsheviks and WW I).
Sergeant major Gandhi was part of a special ambulance corps that assisted the British Empire forces against the "Kaffirs".
See Gandhi with the Indian Ambulance Corps.
After returning to India, Mohandas Gandhi sailed for England in July 1914, just in time for World War I.
See Gandhi seated in the centre of the Indian Ambulance Corps in 1914.
When Gandhi once again returned to his native India in January 1915, the Theosophical Society with the help of Nobel prize winning author Rabindranath Tagore, got him called the title of "Mahatma" (great soul).
In November 1925, Madeline Slade arrived at Gandhi's Ashram. Madeline with funds from the Bank of England financed Gandhi's non-resistance (?). Gandhi changed her name to Mirabehn (after the Indian goddess Meera Bai).
When Gandhi again arrived in London in 1931, he was treated like a celebrity, meeting PM Ramsey MacDonald, and had tea with the king at Buckingham Palace. He also gave a praised speech at the 1931 "Round Table Conference" in London, organised by Chatham House (Royal Institute of International Affairs) presided over by Lord Lothian (Philip Kerr, leader of Milner's Round Table from 1925 to 1940).
See Gandhi and Mirabehn before leaving India in 1931.
In December 1931, Gandhi also met Mussolini (another British Intelligence agent) and became friendly, with Gandhi praising Il Duce’s “
service to the poor, his opposition to super-urbanization, his efforts to bring about a coordination between Capital and Labour, his passionate love for his people”.
Gandhi also advised the Czechs and Jews to adopt nonviolence toward (not fight against) the Nazis.
Jawaharlar Nehru worked with Gandhi for the partition of India and was PM from 1947 to 1964 and Muhammad Ali Jinnah became the first "Muslim" governor-general of the newly created nation of Pakistan.
Both men were trained as spies in Britain (?)...
"Mahatma" Gandhi was a member of the Fabian Society. Gandhi supported India’s Caliphate Movement and became a member of the Central Khilafat Committee which aimed to restore the Muslim Empire.
Gandhi was also affiliated with freemasonry (maybe even became a member of a lodge).
Gandhi met members of the European Committee at a Masonic Lodge in Johannesburg. He also exchanged letters with the Grand Master of the Grand Lodge of England Lord Ampthill. The author of Gandhi’s biography, Reverend J.J. Doke, was also a mason:
https://himjournals.com/article/articleID=302
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https://archive.is/xPgn0)