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nonviolence
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nonviolence

Principle or practice of abstaining from the use of violence. The Indian nationalist leader Mahatma Gandhi adopted a campaign of passive resistance 1907–14 in response to the attempts by the Transvaal government to discriminate against Indians in South Africa. Later, in India, Gandhi again employed nonviolent methods, including the boycotting of British goods and hunger strikes (see noncooperation movement). More recently, non-violent pro-democracy movement was led in the Philippines in 1986 by Corazon Aquino, in Myanmar by Aung San Suu Kyi, and in Indonesia in 1998 by Amien Rais.

Martin Luther King led a nonviolent civil-rights movement in the USA. He organized a boycott in December 1955 against segregated seating on the buses in Montgomery, Alabama. In June 1963 he led a peaceful demonstration in Washington DC and in March 1965 led a civil-rights march from Selma to Montgomery.



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Had he been non-violent by birth, then there would have been no need for him to convince (himself) again and again.
The presence of supporters of Mirhossein Mousavi on the streets are part of the velvet revolution," said Yadollah Javani, head of the Guards' political office, using a term used to describe the 1989 non-violent revolution in Czechoslovakia.
However, society president and Non-Violent Centre founder Mohammed Al Maskati denied that they were planning terrorist attacks and claimed they were targeted for non-criminal activities.
 
 
 
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