https://de.wikipedia.org/w/api.php?action=feedcontributions&feedformat=atom&user=216.157.200.254Wikipedia - Benutzerbeiträge [de]2025-05-06T02:55:46ZBenutzerbeiträgeMediaWiki 1.44.0-wmf.27https://de.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Benutzer:Lektor_w/Definition_der_Musik&diff=227646301Benutzer:Lektor w/Definition der Musik2007-04-18T17:01:22Z<p>216.157.200.254: AZ: Der Seiteninhalt wurde durch einen anderen Text ersetzt.</p>
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<div>last one there's a penis pump!</div>216.157.200.254https://de.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Musik&diff=30690073Musik2007-04-18T17:01:22Z<p>216.157.200.254: AZ: Der Seiteninhalt wurde durch einen anderen Text ersetzt.</p>
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<div>last one there's a penis pump!</div>216.157.200.254https://de.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Kasturba_Gandhi&diff=71273699Kasturba Gandhi2007-01-24T19:03:44Z<p>216.157.200.254: </p>
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<div>{{Infobox Biography<br />
|subject_name=''Kastürbā Gāndhi'' <br />
|image_name=Kasturbhai.jpg<br />
|image_caption=<br />
|date_of_birth=[[April 11]], [[1869]]<br />
|place_of_birth=<br />
|dead=dead<br />
|date_of_death=[[22 February]], [[1944]]<br />
|place_of_death=<br />
}}<br />
'''Kastürbā Gāndhi''' ([[April 11]], [[1869]] – [[22 February]], [[1944]]), affectionately called ''Ba'', was the wife of [[Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi]]. <br />
<br />
Born to wealthy businessman [[Gokuladas Makharji]] of [[Porbandar]], Kasturba married Mohandas Gandhi in May [[1882]], through [[arranged marriage|arrangement]]. They were both 13 years old. At the time, she was illiterate, and so Gandhi taught her to read and write — a potentially radical move, given the position of women in India at that time. When Gandhi left to study in [[London]] in [[1888]], she remained in [[India]] to raise their newborn son [[Harilal Gandhi|Harilal]]. She had three more sons - [[Manilal Gandhi|Manilal]] ([[1892]]), [[Ramdas Gandhi|Ramdas]] ([[1897]]), and [[Devdas Gandhi|Devdas]] ([[1900]]).<br />
[[Image:Ba and Bapu 1910.jpg|left|thumb|200px|Ba and Bapu in 1910]]<br />
In [[1906]], Mohandas Gandhi decided to practice [[brahmacharya]], and the couple became celibate. Although she stood by her husband, she did not always easily accept his ideas. Gandhi had to work hard to persuade her to see (and agree to) his side of the viewpoint. Kasturba was deeply religious. Like her husband, she renounced all [[caste]] distinctions and lived in [[ashram]]s.<br />
<br />
Kasturba often joined her husband in [[political protest]]s. She traveled to [[South Africa]] in [[1897]] to be with her husband. From [[1904]] to [[1914]], she was active in the [[Phoenix Settlement]] near [[Durban]]. During the [[1913]] protest against working conditions for Indians in South Africa, Kasturba was [[arrest]]ed and [[Sentence (law)|sentence]]d to three months in a [[hard labour]] [[prison]]. Later, in India, she sometimes took her husband's place when he was under arrest. In [[1915]], when Gandhi returned to India to support indigo planters, Kasturba accompanied him. She taught hygiene, discipline, reading and writing to women and children.<br />
<br />
Kasturba suffered from chronic [[bronchitis]]. Stress from the [[Quit India Movement]]'s arrests and [[ashram]] life caused her to fall ill. After contracting [[pneumonia]], she died from a severe [[heart attack]] on [[February 22]], [[1944]].<br />
<br />
==See also==<br />
* Dr. [[T. S. Soundram]] - co-founder of Gandhigram <br />
<br />
==Further reading==<br />
*''India’s 50 Most Illustrious Women'' (ISBN 81-88086-19-3) by Indra Gupta<br />
<br />
{{IndiaFreedom}}<br />
<br />
[[Category:1869 births|Gandhi, Kasturba]]<br />
[[Category:1944 deaths|Gandhi, Kasturba]]<br />
[[Category:Indian pacifists|Gandhi, Kasturba]]<br />
[[Category:Social justice|Gandhi, Kasturba]]<br />
[[Category:Indian activists|Gandhi, Kasturba]]<br />
[[Category:People from Gujarat|Gandhi, Kasturba]]<br />
[[Category:Mahatma Gandhi]]</div>216.157.200.254https://de.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Kasturba_Gandhi&diff=71273698Kasturba Gandhi2007-01-24T19:02:19Z<p>216.157.200.254: </p>
<hr />
<div>{{Infobox Biography<br />
|subject_name=''Kastürbā Gāndhi'' <br />
|image_name=Kasturbhai.jpg<br />
|image_caption=<br />
|date_of_birth=[[April 11]], [[1869]]<br />
|place_of_birth=<br />
|dead=dead<br />
|date_of_death=[[22 February]], [[1944]]<br />
|place_of_death=<br />
}}<br />
'''Kastürbā Gāndhi''' ([[April 11]], [[1869]] – [[22 February]], [[1944]]), affectionately called ''Ba'', was the wife of [[Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi]]. <br />
<br />
Born to a very weird man named amina Born to wealthy businessman [[Gokuladas Makharji]] of [[Porbandar]], Kasturba married Mohandas Gandhi in May [[1882]], through [[arranged marriage|arrangement]]. They were both 13 years old. At the time, she was illiterate, and so Gandhi taught her to read and write — a potentially radical move, given the position of women in India at that time. When Gandhi left to study in [[London]] in [[1888]], she remained in [[India]] to raise their newborn son [[Harilal Gandhi|Harilal]]. She had three more sons - [[Manilal Gandhi|Manilal]] ([[1892]]), [[Ramdas Gandhi|Ramdas]] ([[1897]]), and [[Devdas Gandhi|Devdas]] ([[1900]]).<br />
[[Image:Ba and Bapu 1910.jpg|left|thumb|200px|Ba and Bapu in 1910]]<br />
In [[1906]], Mohandas Gandhi decided to practice [[brahmacharya]], and the couple became celibate. Although she stood by her husband, she did not always easily accept his ideas. Gandhi had to work hard to persuade her to see (and agree to) his side of the viewpoint. Kasturba was deeply religious. Like her husband, she renounced all [[caste]] distinctions and lived in [[ashram]]s.<br />
<br />
Kasturba often joined her husband in [[political protest]]s. She traveled to [[South Africa]] in [[1897]] to be with her husband. From [[1904]] to [[1914]], she was active in the [[Phoenix Settlement]] near [[Durban]]. During the [[1913]] protest against working conditions for Indians in South Africa, Kasturba was [[arrest]]ed and [[Sentence (law)|sentence]]d to three months in a [[hard labour]] [[prison]]. Later, in India, she sometimes took her husband's place when he was under arrest. In [[1915]], when Gandhi returned to India to support indigo planters, Kasturba accompanied him. She taught hygiene, discipline, reading and writing to women and children.<br />
<br />
Kasturba suffered from chronic [[bronchitis]]. Stress from the [[Quit India Movement]]'s arrests and [[ashram]] life caused her to fall ill. After contracting [[pneumonia]], she died from a severe [[heart attack]] on [[February 22]], [[1944]].<br />
<br />
==See also==<br />
* Dr. [[T. S. Soundram]] - co-founder of Gandhigram <br />
<br />
==Further reading==<br />
*''India’s 50 Most Illustrious Women'' (ISBN 81-88086-19-3) by Indra Gupta<br />
<br />
{{IndiaFreedom}}<br />
<br />
[[Category:1869 births|Gandhi, Kasturba]]<br />
[[Category:1944 deaths|Gandhi, Kasturba]]<br />
[[Category:Indian pacifists|Gandhi, Kasturba]]<br />
[[Category:Social justice|Gandhi, Kasturba]]<br />
[[Category:Indian activists|Gandhi, Kasturba]]<br />
[[Category:People from Gujarat|Gandhi, Kasturba]]<br />
[[Category:Mahatma Gandhi]]</div>216.157.200.254