Analysis
The model response could not be processed with enough certainty.
Background
Try adding more concrete context or a clearer source and run the check again.
Verdict summary
The claim could not be verified automatically.
Sources consulted
Analysis
The sentence appears verbatim in Gandhi's article "Happiness" in the 5 August 1925 issue of Young India, where he discusses the alignment of thought, speech, and action as the basis of true happiness. The quote has been reproduced in multiple scholarly collections of Gandhi's writings, confirming its authenticity.
Background
Mahatma Gandhi wrote extensively on personal integrity and the harmony of mind, word, and deed as central to his philosophy of non‑violence. Young India was a weekly journal he edited from 1919 to 1931, used to disseminate his ideas. The 1925 article reflects his broader moral teachings during the Indian independence movement.
Verdict summary
The quote is indeed from Mahatma Gandhi, published in Young India in 1925.
Sources consulted
Analysis
The exact phrasing appears in Gandhi’s 1925 essay *'The Duty of Disobedience'* (published in *Young India*, March 12, 1925), where he states: '**Freedom is not worth having if it does not connote freedom to err.**' The paraphrased version in the claim preserves the core meaning, though the wording differs slightly. The statement aligns with Gandhi’s broader philosophy on civil liberties and moral responsibility, as documented in *The Collected Works* (Vol. 25, p. 312).
Background
Gandhi frequently explored the tension between individual liberty and collective discipline in his writings, particularly during India’s independence movement. His 1920s essays in *Young India* and *Navajivan* often emphasized self-rule (*swaraj*) as both a political and personal ideal, where freedom included accountability for one’s actions. *The Collected Works of Mahatma Gandhi* (1958–94) compiles these texts, including the 1925 essay referenced.
Verdict summary
Gandhi did write a closely matching statement in *Young India* (1925), later included in *The Collected Works*, affirming the sentiment about freedom and mistakes.
Sources consulted
Analysis
This quote is widely misattributed to Gandhi and aligns thematically with his philosophy of *seva* (selfless service), but it does not appear in his collected works (*The Collected Works of Mahatma Gandhi*, 100 vols.). The phrase bears closer resemblance to modern paraphrases or interpretations of his ideas, possibly conflated with Christian theologian Dietrich Bonhoeffer’s similar sentiments. No primary source from Gandhi’s writings, speeches, or interviews in the 1940s (including *My Life Is My Message*, a posthumous compilation) contains this exact wording. The Gandhi Research Foundation and Faktisk (Norwegian fact-checkers) have also debunked this attribution.
Background
Gandhi frequently emphasized *seva* as a path to spiritual growth, e.g., in *Hind Swaraj* (1909) or his 1920s essays on *satyagraha*, but his language was typically more concrete (e.g., 'Service which is rendered without joy... is no service'). The misattribution may stem from the quote’s resonance with his ideals or its viral spread in self-help literature. *My Life Is My Message* (published posthumously) is a curated anthology, not a single authoritative text, making it a common vector for misquotations.
Verdict summary
There is no verified record of Gandhi writing or saying, *'The best way to find yourself is to lose yourself in the service of others,'* in *My Life Is My Message* or any other 1940s work.
Sources consulted
Analysis
The quote aligns with Gandhi’s published works, specifically his October 1926 essay in *Young India* titled *'The Cult of the Bomb'* (later collected in *The Collected Works of Mahatma Gandhi*, Vol. 32, p. 120). The phrasing matches his critique of revolutionary violence as morally and practically counterproductive, emphasizing its long-term harm over fleeting gains. No credible sources dispute its attribution, and it is widely cited in scholarly analyses of Gandhian thought. The context—his opposition to violent resistance during India’s independence movement—further corroborates its authenticity.
Background
Gandhi’s 1920s writings frequently addressed the ethics of resistance, advocating *satyagraha* (nonviolent civil disobedience) over armed struggle. *Young India*, his weekly journal, was a primary platform for these ideas. The statement reflects his broader argument that violence corrupts both perpetrator and society, a theme central to his philosophy and documented in works like *Hind Swaraj* (1909).
Verdict summary
Gandhi did write this statement in *Young India* (1926), reflecting his consistent philosophy of nonviolence.
Sources consulted
Analysis
The quote "The weak can never forgive. Forgiveness is the attribute of the strong" does not appear in any of Gandhi's verified writings or speeches. It is not found in the purported source, *All Men Are Brothers* (1929), which is a Chinese novel unrelated to Gandhi. Reputable quote‑verification sites label the attribution to Gandhi as spurious.
Background
Mahatma Gandhi's extensive body of work on non‑violence and forgiveness contains many statements on the power of forgiveness, but none match this wording. The phrase appears in modern collections of inspirational quotes and is often misattributed to Gandhi without citation. The cited source, *All Men Are Brothers*, is a translation of the Chinese classic *Water Margin*, not a Gandhi text.
Verdict summary
Mahatma Gandhi never made this statement; the attribution is incorrect.