Sunday, August 18, 2019
Nationalists :: essays papers
Nationalists    The extent to which Nationalists should pursue their goals is a complex   issue. The possible changes as well as the losses must be weighed.      There is a myriad of complex issues surrounding the situation.  Without   Nationalists making changes, Italy would not be unified, Apartheid would   still exist in South Africa, and many other changes would not have   occurred on this planet.  I believe that Nationalists should try to   solve their problems and get what they want without using violence as a   tool.    Guseppe Mazzini was a major factor in the unification of Italy.  He   started his fight for unity with non-violent means.  He tried wearing   black clothing to mourn the persecuted, and he attempted to educate the   people about the dangers of foreign rule in Italy.  Gradually however he   escalated to more violent means of getting his way.  He stirred feelings   of Nationalism, brotherhood and religion.  In 1848 he started a   revolution in Rome.  The Pope was forced to flee the city, and Mazzini   established a Roman Republic.  The entire republic was built upon the   one-time rage of the masses.      Mazzini simply stirred the emotions of the people, but they didn't   really feel that strongly about it. The population of Rome didn't care   enough to fight for the retention of the city.  The French were easily   able to re-take the city, and return it to the Pope.     Mahatma Gandhi represents the other side of the spectrum, throughout   his life he used only non-violent means to get what he wanted.  His main   goal was to get Moslems and Hindus to live peacefully together.  He was   quoted as saying "All religions are almost as dear to me as my   Hinduism".  One instance of his attempts to use non-violent means to   accomplish his goal was his two hundred and thirty-kilometer march to   the ocean in order to extract salt illegally.  This was in protest of   Britain's salt monopoly in India.  Other non-violent acts that he used   as tools to persuade the government to listen to his goals were his six   to twenty-one day fasts. At one time Gandhi used a fast to force his   release from prison.  The prison would have been held responsible for   his death and would have major pressure put on it to close down.  Gandhi   had become such a hero to the population that, if the government allowed     					    
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