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Pandit Nehru, Gandhi among sources of influence: Suu Kyi

Myanmar’s pro-democracy icon Aung San Suu Kyi has described Mahatma Gandhi and Jawaharlal Nehru among her ‘greatest sources’ of influence, as she encouraged American students to read the works of India’s Father of the Nation. Suu Kyi, said Gandhi, civil rights activist Martin Luther King and her father ad ‘political mentor’ Aung San were all men of principles and she read works by them to keep herself disciplined when she was placed under house arrest by her country’s military dictators.

Addressing a packed hall of students at Columbia University in New York on Saturday, where she got a standing ovation, the 67-year-old Nobel Peace Prize winner said she has been very inspired by Gandhi’s writings and strongly urged the students to read his works.

‘Gandhi is somebody really phenomenal. I think you must all read his works, the more you read Gandhi, the more impressed you are by who he was and what he was,’ Suu Kyi said when asked who her greatest sources of influence have been in keeping her disciplined as she moved ahead toward her goals during her years as a prisoner of conscience.

‘You must remember that change through non-violent means was not ever thought of before Gandhi. He was the one who started it, he was the one who decided that it is possible to bring about revolutionary change without violence,’ she said.

India-educated Suu Kyi said she ‘felt a little bit closer’ to Nehru since she had a similar education pattern as he had, having being educated in London, besides sharing a same kind of intellectual background with India’s first Prime Minister.

Nehru had also been a personal friend of her father’s and given the Indian independence movement had taken place around the same time as the Burmese movement for freedom, there were ‘very close links’ between the leaders of the two countries, she said.

As Suu Kyi, who is now a member of the Myanmar Parliament and opposition leader, begins her political journey, she said she envisions a future for Myanmar that includes ‘some of the good things we had in past, but we must also move on with the times.’

She said she was born in a different Burma which was run as a parliamentary democracy after it gained independence in 1948. But when the military regime took over in 1962, symbols of a free democratic society like newspapers, free to represent different points of views, became a thing of the past.
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