Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi (October 1869 – 30 January 1948) was an Indian lawyer, anti-colonial nationalist, and political ethicist who pioneered nonviolent resistance to successfully lead India’s quest for independence from British rule. His methods inspired global movements for civil rights and freedom. The honorific “Mahātmā” (Sanskrit for “great-souled” or “venerable”), first bestowed upon him in South Africa in 1914, is now universally recognized.
Speaking from spirit through Leslie Flint on June 21, 1961, Gandhi explains that we are living in a world fear. A transcript follows the audio controls.
You can support this effort to give people the truth about the reality of the afterlife with your $6 contribution.
Transcript of Gandhi Speaking
It grieves us when we see how in your world there so much malice, so much hatred, so much intolerance, so much unhappiness, so much fear, so much doubt. Your world is full of fear: fear in its religious aspect, fear in its realization, as it feels, of the things that they know.
. . .
There is much we want to release man from; above all, fear. Life in your world is full of fear. People fear so many things.
. . .
We are very concerned with your world today. It does not get better, it gets worse. Much worse. It only needs a touch of a finger to set your world ablaze. This I do not think needs expressing too strongly. It is obvious. There is too much fear in the world.
Mahatma Gandhi speaking in a Leslie Flint seance
Leslie Flint Educational Foundation