A Quote by Mahatma Gandhi

No stone should be left unturned to bring home to the family members that untouchability is a sin and a blot on Hinduism. — © Mahatma Gandhi
No stone should be left unturned to bring home to the family members that untouchability is a sin and a blot on Hinduism.
Untouchability is a blot on Hinduism. It is a canker eating into its vitals.
Hinduism dies if untouchability lives, and untouchability has to die if Hinduism is to live.
If untouchability lives, Hinduism perishes and even India perishes, but if untouchability is eradicated from the Hindu heart, root and branch, then Hinduism has a definite message for the world.
The more I study Hindu scriptures, and the more I discuss them with Brahmins, the more I feel convinced that untouchability is the greatest blot upon Hinduism.
It... is the best opportunity we've had in the last 25 years to bring about a settlement in Northern Ireland, and I think we should leave no stone unturned to achieve that.
Untouchability of foreign cloth is as much a virtue with all of us as untouchability of the suppressed classes must be a sin with every devout Hindu.
I lift weights, but that's not my main focus. I'm a fighter now, and I want to evolve and make myself a well-rounded fighter, so obviously I'm not going to leave any stone unturned, when it comes to submissions, submission defense, striking, knees, leg kicks, and also learning to defend everything. It's not just an offensive sport because you're going to take some punches and you're going to give some punches. You've got to be able to handle both sides of the spectrum. I've brought in a number of highly trained trainers to help me evolve, and I believe we've left no stone unturned.
When I get old and slow down I want to look behind me and see all the fire and the wreckage and no stone left unturned.
The removal of untouchability is a question of the purification of Hinduism.
Hinduism has sinned in giving sanction to untouchability.
The untouchability of Hinduism is probably worse than that of the modern imperialists.
Lawyers like to leave no stone unturned, provided they can charge by the stone.
If untouchability is an integral part of Hinduism, the latter is a spent bullet.
I would rather be erring on the side of common-sense pragmatism and doing everything possible so that I felt that no stone was left unturned in terms of trying to protect school children.
To remove untouchability is a penance that caste Hindus owe to Hinduism and to themselves.
I would far rather that Hinduism died than that untouchability lived.
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