The much-awaited Mahatma Gandhi’s bronze statue at Britain’s historic Parliament Square here will be unveiled on March 14, Prime Minister David Cameron announced today.
The announcement came as the Gandhi Statue Memorial Trust surpassed the 1-million pound mark in donations, with steel tycoon Lakshmi N Mittal adding 100,000 pounds and the Infosys Board chaired by K V Kamath 250,000 pounds in the last few weeks.
Finance Minister Arun Jaitley is expected to be the special guest at the ceremony to install the statue which will be the last one to be up in the square alongside South African anti-apartheid leader Nelson Mandela and Britain’s war-time Prime Minister Winston Churchill.
“The statue in Parliament Square not only marks his huge importance in the history of both our countries, but will enrich the firm bond of friendship between the world’s oldest democracy and its largest,” Cameron said in a statement.
“Mahatma Gandhi is an inspiration. His approach of non-violence will resonate forever as a positive legacy — not just for the UK and India, but the world over. He was a man of great insight and many of his observations remain as fresh and relevant today as when he first made them — that we should be the change we wish to see in the world is timeless advice, well worth following,” he said.
Elaborating on the close India-UK ties, the British PM said the relationship “continued to go from strength to strength — through mutual respect as equals, through cooperation, trade, and of course through the one-and-a-half million Indian diaspora living in Britain today who bring our two nations closer, to the benefit of both”.
The bronze statue by leading British sculptor Philip Jackson will be the focal point for the commemoration of the 100th anniversary of Gandhi’s return to India from South Africa to kick-start India’s independence movement.
The sculpture will portray the Father of the Indian Nation draped in a shawl based on pictures from his last visit to the UK in 1931.
“It is great that there will be a monument honouring Gandhi in London’s Parliament Square, which was one of his favourite cities. He is the first Indian and the only person honoured with a statue in the Square who never held public office,” said NRI economist Lord Meghnad Desai, the founder-chair of the Gandhi Statue Memorial Trust.
“Generous donors have contributed sums from a pound up to hundreds of thousands of pounds from UK, India and around the world. On behalf of the Gandhi Statue Memorial Trust we thank all who made it possible for us to exceed our target of a million pounds within six months. As Gandhi said ‘If the cause is right the means will come’,” he said.