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The Bhagavad Gita According to Gandhi Paperback – September 5, 2012

4.5 out of 5 stars 483

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My first acquaintance with the Gita began in 1888-89 with the verse translation by Sir Edwin Arnold known as the Song Celestial. On reading it, I felt a keen desire to read a Gujarati translation. And I read as many translations as I could lay hold of. But all such reading can give me no passport for presenting my own translation. Then again my knowledge of Sanskrit is limited, my knowledge of Gujarati too is in no way scholarly. How could I then dare present the public with my translation? It has been my endeavor, as also that of some companions, to reduce to practice the teaching of the Gita as I have understood it. The Gita has become for us a spiritual reference book. I am aware that we ever fail to act in perfect accord with the teaching. The failure is not due to want of effort, but is in spite of it. Even though the failures we seem to see rays of hope. The accompanying rendering contains the meaning of the Gita message which this little band is trying to enforce in its daily conduct.--Mahatma Gandhi Wilder Publications is a green publisher. All of our books are printed to order. This reduces waste and helps us keep prices low while greatly reducing our impact on the environment.

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Product details

  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ Wilder Publications (September 5, 2012)
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • Paperback ‏ : ‎ 80 pages
  • ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 1617203335
  • ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-1617203336
  • Item Weight ‏ : ‎ 4.5 ounces
  • Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 6 x 0.2 x 9 inches
  • Customer Reviews:
    4.5 out of 5 stars 483

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Mohandas K. Gandhi
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4.5 out of 5 stars
4.5 out of 5
483 global ratings
Comparison of three versions of "The Gita According to Gandhi"
5 Stars
Comparison of three versions of "The Gita According to Gandhi"
Many versions of The Gita According to Gandhi have been published. This review compares three that I have read (cf. thumbnail image at bottom of review).As far as the Gita verses themselves are concerned, they are the same or nearly so in all three books. In other respects, the books differ substantially. Here is a brief chronology followed by a comparison.1926-27: Gandhi translated the Gita from Sanskrit to Gujarati. In 1926 he gave a nine month series of teachings to members of his ashram. Mahadev Desai and another ashram member took notes on these teachings.1929: Gandhi wrote an introduction to his translation in Gujarati, and the whole was published in Gujarati.1931: Gandhi translated his introduction into English while serving a prison term. The introduction was published in English in Young India in 1931.1933-34: Mahadev Desai, while in prison, translated Gandhi’s Gujarati version of the Gita into English. Desai also wrote a long supplementary introduction (“My Submission”), and added extensive notes of his own to the brief notes that Gandhi had interleaved with the Gita verses, in order to make the Gita more accessible to the English-speaking public.1942: Desai died before his English translation was published.1946: Gandhi explains in a Foreword how a collaborator of Desai proof-read Desai’s manuscript after his death and readied it for publication. Gandhi vouches for the accuracy of the English translation. The first edition of Desai’s posthumously published book – complete with Gandhi’s introduction and brief notes; Desai’s supplementary introduction and lengthy notes; and Gandhi’s Foreword – appeared in August 1946. I bought the fifteenth reprint, published in 2012. This version (with orange cover) is still available on Amazon.The edition with the most reviews on Amazon is a stripped-down version from Wilder Publications. This is the first edition that I purchased and read. It contains Gandhi’s Foreword, Introduction, and brief notes, but it completely omits Desai’s supplementary introduction and all of Desai's notes. Most of what Gandhi praises in the Foreword has been left out. As other reviewers here have pointed out, the Wilder Publications edition suffers from the fact that the notes are not set off from the Gita verses by line spaces, indentation, or a smaller font. To make matters worse, nowhere is it explicitly stated that all of the notes are due to Gandhi. I believe they are (i.e., none of the notes are due to Desai), but this fact should have been made clear by the publisher. The Wilder edition does not have a Glossary or Index.The Desai edition is superior in both form and content. It gives each verse in Gandhi’s Gujarati; then Desai’s English translation of Gandhi’s Gujarati; followed by Gandhi’s notes (if any) in a smaller font; followed by Desai’s notes in square brackets and a yet smaller font. You can read all of it, or easily skip the parts that don’t interest you. Desai’s supplementary introduction alone is worth the price of the book. At 120 pp., “My Submission” is a book within a book. It contains a wealth of helpful information, presented in an accessible way. Desai’s writing style reminds me somewhat of Montaigne: - by liberal use of quotes, he connects the Gita, Ghandi, and his own thoughts with the whole universe of eastern and western thought. You will find quotes from the Bible and the Koran; Buddha and Lao Tze; philosophers from Plato to Plotinus to Hume to William James; mystics like Meister Eckhart and Shankara; poets from Shakespeare to Browning to Keats. Even a few scientists are mentioned. (How many other Gita commentaries quote Max Planck?!) All in all, Desai’s contributions make for challenging and delightful reading. This edition has a good Index.The last edition reviewed here makes a wonderful companion volume and complement to Desai. It was edited by John Strohmeier and published by North Atlantic Books in 2009. Strohmeier went back to the notes that Desai and another ashram member took in real time while Gandhi was giving his nine-month-long course in 1926. These transcripts first appeared in English in "The Collected Works of Mahatma Gandhi" (1969). Strohmeier’s edition is based on these transcripts. In his own words:“In an effort to bring forward and clarify the essence of Gandhi’s teaching, I have abridged the commentary considerably, and rearranged it in a few sections. The original presentation of the material was unrehearsed and relatively spontaneous, and includes many of the redundancies, contradictions, ellipses, false starts, and situational digressions of everyday conversation. Some of these I have deleted after pursuing the trail of Gandhi’s thought carefully and respectfully… Others I have let stand where they illuminated important ideas, or explained the context in which he made his remarks. For example, his references to an impending flood, the killing of a snake, and the tormenting of a dog by some boys, although quite specific to ashram events, carry lessons that apply to the world beyond the ashram walls.”The comments and illustrations in Strohmeier are more spontaneous, less polished than the comments in the other books. The reader gets to be the proverbial “fly on the wall” at the ashram in 1926. This book has a combined Glossary and Index.
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Top reviews from the United States

Reviewed in the United States on December 20, 2016
Many versions of The Gita According to Gandhi have been published. This review compares three that I have read (cf. thumbnail image at bottom of review).

As far as the Gita verses themselves are concerned, they are the same or nearly so in all three books. In other respects, the books differ substantially. Here is a brief chronology followed by a comparison.

1926-27: Gandhi translated the Gita from Sanskrit to Gujarati. In 1926 he gave a nine month series of teachings to members of his ashram. Mahadev Desai and another ashram member took notes on these teachings.
1929: Gandhi wrote an introduction to his translation in Gujarati, and the whole was published in Gujarati.
1931: Gandhi translated his introduction into English while serving a prison term. The introduction was published in English in Young India in 1931.
1933-34: Mahadev Desai, while in prison, translated Gandhi’s Gujarati version of the Gita into English. Desai also wrote a long supplementary introduction (“My Submission”), and added extensive notes of his own to the brief notes that Gandhi had interleaved with the Gita verses, in order to make the Gita more accessible to the English-speaking public.
1942: Desai died before his English translation was published.
1946: Gandhi explains in a Foreword how a collaborator of Desai proof-read Desai’s manuscript after his death and readied it for publication. Gandhi vouches for the accuracy of the English translation. The first edition of Desai’s posthumously published book – complete with Gandhi’s introduction and brief notes; Desai’s supplementary introduction and lengthy notes; and Gandhi’s Foreword – appeared in August 1946. I bought the fifteenth reprint, published in 2012. This version (with orange cover) is still available on Amazon.

The edition with the most reviews on Amazon is a stripped-down version from Wilder Publications. This is the first edition that I purchased and read. It contains Gandhi’s Foreword, Introduction, and brief notes, but it completely omits Desai’s supplementary introduction and all of Desai's notes. Most of what Gandhi praises in the Foreword has been left out. As other reviewers here have pointed out, the Wilder Publications edition suffers from the fact that the notes are not set off from the Gita verses by line spaces, indentation, or a smaller font. To make matters worse, nowhere is it explicitly stated that all of the notes are due to Gandhi. I believe they are (i.e., none of the notes are due to Desai), but this fact should have been made clear by the publisher. The Wilder edition does not have a Glossary or Index.

The Desai edition is superior in both form and content. It gives each verse in Gandhi’s Gujarati; then Desai’s English translation of Gandhi’s Gujarati; followed by Gandhi’s notes (if any) in a smaller font; followed by Desai’s notes in square brackets and a yet smaller font. You can read all of it, or easily skip the parts that don’t interest you. Desai’s supplementary introduction alone is worth the price of the book. At 120 pp., “My Submission” is a book within a book. It contains a wealth of helpful information, presented in an accessible way. Desai’s writing style reminds me somewhat of Montaigne: - by liberal use of quotes, he connects the Gita, Ghandi, and his own thoughts with the whole universe of eastern and western thought. You will find quotes from the Bible and the Koran; Buddha and Lao Tze; philosophers from Plato to Plotinus to Hume to William James; mystics like Meister Eckhart and Shankara; poets from Shakespeare to Browning to Keats. Even a few scientists are mentioned. (How many other Gita commentaries quote Max Planck?!) All in all, Desai’s contributions make for challenging and delightful reading. This edition has a good Index.

The last edition reviewed here makes a wonderful companion volume and complement to Desai. It was edited by John Strohmeier and published by North Atlantic Books in 2009. Strohmeier went back to the notes that Desai and another ashram member took in real time while Gandhi was giving his nine-month-long course in 1926. These transcripts first appeared in English in "The Collected Works of Mahatma Gandhi" (1969). Strohmeier’s edition is based on these transcripts. In his own words:
“In an effort to bring forward and clarify the essence of Gandhi’s teaching, I have abridged the commentary considerably, and rearranged it in a few sections. The original presentation of the material was unrehearsed and relatively spontaneous, and includes many of the redundancies, contradictions, ellipses, false starts, and situational digressions of everyday conversation. Some of these I have deleted after pursuing the trail of Gandhi’s thought carefully and respectfully… Others I have let stand where they illuminated important ideas, or explained the context in which he made his remarks. For example, his references to an impending flood, the killing of a snake, and the tormenting of a dog by some boys, although quite specific to ashram events, carry lessons that apply to the world beyond the ashram walls.”

The comments and illustrations in Strohmeier are more spontaneous, less polished than the comments in the other books. The reader gets to be the proverbial “fly on the wall” at the ashram in 1926. This book has a combined Glossary and Index.
Customer image
5.0 out of 5 stars Comparison of three versions of "The Gita According to Gandhi"
Reviewed in the United States on December 20, 2016
Many versions of The Gita According to Gandhi have been published. This review compares three that I have read (cf. thumbnail image at bottom of review).

As far as the Gita verses themselves are concerned, they are the same or nearly so in all three books. In other respects, the books differ substantially. Here is a brief chronology followed by a comparison.

1926-27: Gandhi translated the Gita from Sanskrit to Gujarati. In 1926 he gave a nine month series of teachings to members of his ashram. Mahadev Desai and another ashram member took notes on these teachings.
1929: Gandhi wrote an introduction to his translation in Gujarati, and the whole was published in Gujarati.
1931: Gandhi translated his introduction into English while serving a prison term. The introduction was published in English in Young India in 1931.
1933-34: Mahadev Desai, while in prison, translated Gandhi’s Gujarati version of the Gita into English. Desai also wrote a long supplementary introduction (“My Submission”), and added extensive notes of his own to the brief notes that Gandhi had interleaved with the Gita verses, in order to make the Gita more accessible to the English-speaking public.
1942: Desai died before his English translation was published.
1946: Gandhi explains in a Foreword how a collaborator of Desai proof-read Desai’s manuscript after his death and readied it for publication. Gandhi vouches for the accuracy of the English translation. The first edition of Desai’s posthumously published book – complete with Gandhi’s introduction and brief notes; Desai’s supplementary introduction and lengthy notes; and Gandhi’s Foreword – appeared in August 1946. I bought the fifteenth reprint, published in 2012. This version (with orange cover) is still available on Amazon.

The edition with the most reviews on Amazon is a stripped-down version from Wilder Publications. This is the first edition that I purchased and read. It contains Gandhi’s Foreword, Introduction, and brief notes, but it completely omits Desai’s supplementary introduction and all of Desai's notes. Most of what Gandhi praises in the Foreword has been left out. As other reviewers here have pointed out, the Wilder Publications edition suffers from the fact that the notes are not set off from the Gita verses by line spaces, indentation, or a smaller font. To make matters worse, nowhere is it explicitly stated that all of the notes are due to Gandhi. I believe they are (i.e., none of the notes are due to Desai), but this fact should have been made clear by the publisher. The Wilder edition does not have a Glossary or Index.

The Desai edition is superior in both form and content. It gives each verse in Gandhi’s Gujarati; then Desai’s English translation of Gandhi’s Gujarati; followed by Gandhi’s notes (if any) in a smaller font; followed by Desai’s notes in square brackets and a yet smaller font. You can read all of it, or easily skip the parts that don’t interest you. Desai’s supplementary introduction alone is worth the price of the book. At 120 pp., “My Submission” is a book within a book. It contains a wealth of helpful information, presented in an accessible way. Desai’s writing style reminds me somewhat of Montaigne: - by liberal use of quotes, he connects the Gita, Ghandi, and his own thoughts with the whole universe of eastern and western thought. You will find quotes from the Bible and the Koran; Buddha and Lao Tze; philosophers from Plato to Plotinus to Hume to William James; mystics like Meister Eckhart and Shankara; poets from Shakespeare to Browning to Keats. Even a few scientists are mentioned. (How many other Gita commentaries quote Max Planck?!) All in all, Desai’s contributions make for challenging and delightful reading. This edition has a good Index.

The last edition reviewed here makes a wonderful companion volume and complement to Desai. It was edited by John Strohmeier and published by North Atlantic Books in 2009. Strohmeier went back to the notes that Desai and another ashram member took in real time while Gandhi was giving his nine-month-long course in 1926. These transcripts first appeared in English in "The Collected Works of Mahatma Gandhi" (1969). Strohmeier’s edition is based on these transcripts. In his own words:
“In an effort to bring forward and clarify the essence of Gandhi’s teaching, I have abridged the commentary considerably, and rearranged it in a few sections. The original presentation of the material was unrehearsed and relatively spontaneous, and includes many of the redundancies, contradictions, ellipses, false starts, and situational digressions of everyday conversation. Some of these I have deleted after pursuing the trail of Gandhi’s thought carefully and respectfully… Others I have let stand where they illuminated important ideas, or explained the context in which he made his remarks. For example, his references to an impending flood, the killing of a snake, and the tormenting of a dog by some boys, although quite specific to ashram events, carry lessons that apply to the world beyond the ashram walls.”

The comments and illustrations in Strohmeier are more spontaneous, less polished than the comments in the other books. The reader gets to be the proverbial “fly on the wall” at the ashram in 1926. This book has a combined Glossary and Index.
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60 people found this helpful
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Reviewed in the United States on September 25, 2013
It is written, though a long time ago, in current day format which easily facilitates interaction with the material. This is written in a question-answer format in how best to gain from the material and what we want to take home from each segment of the book. It promotes gain from the wisdomic interpretation of Gandhi instantaneously because of this format of writing style. It is blatant about society's wrongs relative to the Bhagavad Gita and relative to nonknowledge and erroneous interpretation of religion which also helps bring attention to societal ills and problems. This book however has in-built solutions if one wants to take advantage of the wisdom gained from the book. It makes for fast continuous reading while simultaneously assimilating the information and the essence of the Gita. It also promotes discussion with loved ones because of its question-answer format thereby enganging everyone in the discussion. An outstanding work from a phenomenal person. Additional reading: My Experiments with Truth by M.K.Gandhi.
6 people found this helpful
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Reviewed in the United States on October 28, 2018
Gandhi’s commentary is one of the great commentaries of the Gita from the last century. I purchased this volume thinking it was Gandhi’s commentary on the Bhagavad Gita. It is not. This is an edition published shortly after his assassination, presenting his ADAPTION of the Gita, with commentaries of selected slokas based on the notes Gandhi wrote while in prison in the 1930s. Essentially, it is the Bhagavad Gita, the Mahatma’s version of the Gita, with a little commentary. This book is not to be confused with his own comprehensive, more complete commentary of most of the slokas of the Gita. This book here is good as an abridged version, but that’s it.
13 people found this helpful
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Reviewed in the United States on November 1, 2013
Very worth while reading this. From my perspective not having a background into the sacred scripture The Bhagavad Gita, Gandhi's translation is eloquent and explained many things to me. I always appreciate such intelligence within a text and marvel how the writer, in this case Gandhi, translated the text so that I can understand the text as well as benefit from the text. The Bhagavad Gita has many lessons that apply to everyday life. I read also that Gandhi would read a portion of the text each day an admiral practice and one that I follow. When you enrich your mind daily with wisdom it has a most profound effect within you.
4 people found this helpful
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Reviewed in the United States on March 13, 2015
The Wilder Publications printed edition could greatly benefit from improved formatting. Each page is a single block of text running from one side of the page to the other without spacing between slokas (or groups of slokas) and commentary. The text near the spine is especially hard to read; I have to pull the sides of the book apart and tilt the pages to see the text and this is enough to really throw me off as I try to get back to the start of the next line without the benefit of any spacing to help me keep my place. Some might not be bothered by any this but I did want to share this info.
Of more than ten translations and commentaries in my collection I would humbly recommend "The Living Gita" by Sri Swami Satchidananda to any reader seeking an easy-to-read and immensely rich edition of this precious treasure.
11 people found this helpful
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Reviewed in the United States on June 23, 2022
Beautifully simple exposition of the lessons of an ancient classic.
Reviewed in the United States on May 21, 2014
I have no rights to comment or give feedback on Holy book all I am doing is sharing my experience. After reading many self help books this is the last book that gave the proper Guidence. Its core concept if Detachment of action, Recouncement of Fruits of action and Even Mindness in any condition is what makes a real person. Dedicating all work as a work to god with devotion gives you the true essence of Karma Yoga. This book answer al you querries. With help of Mahatma Gandhijis Lucid explanation it makes reading more interesting.
5 people found this helpful
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Top reviews from other countries

Chandra Shekher Mishra
5.0 out of 5 stars Who am I to review this book ?
Reviewed in India on October 10, 2019
Should be read with the Original Geeta in hindi, just for better understanding.

Product was delivered on time. So appreciate it !
Karen Colquhoun
5.0 out of 5 stars Two greats in one book
Reviewed in Australia on August 26, 2023
Gandhi plus the Bhagavad Gita in one book! Mind blowing!!!
Tathagat-Michael Vincent
5.0 out of 5 stars My favourite version of Bhagavad Gita remains the one recommended by ...
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on January 24, 2016
My favourite version of Bhagavad Gita remains the one recommended by Mahatma Gandhi as the best English translation: 'The Song Celestial' by Sir Edwin Arnold. So it is of great interest to discover that Gandhi has himself translated this sacred text, a cornerstone to the ancient and challenging Practice of Self Enquiry. It is a text fundamental to his teaching and philosophy throughout his life and Gandhi reminds us of its central message: to be free from sin all action must be desireless with no expectation of reward. Most of us are unable to read the original Sanskrit translation of this beautiful poem. We must therefore place our trust in those who present us with English translations, a trust that is not misplaced in Mahadev Desai's translation of Gandhi's version which when read alongside Arnold's 'Song Celestial' appears to ring true. Gandhi's interpretations placed within the text are also worthy of our attention: sincere,not too wordy or self-opinionated giving us further insight into this sacred and profound poem. Highly recommended as essential reading for those with a serious interest in Self Enquiry.
12 people found this helpful
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pussykins
5.0 out of 5 stars Enlightening .
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on February 24, 2019
I am new to the spiritual path, having been absorbed in A Course In Miracles for two years, but the Gita holds the same message in concentrated form. Devotion to Him. Recognize the illusion of attachment to transitory objects - including our own ( or that which we take to be our own ) body. And walk the path to find the truth within us, only the eternal ' I am.' What an incredible, fascinating journey.
4 people found this helpful
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Mukund
5.0 out of 5 stars Best version of Bhagavad Gita ever
Reviewed in India on March 20, 2018
The best version of Bhagavad Gita available today - Most authentic, beautifully designed and forever collectible.
2 people found this helpful
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