Anar­CapLib has a post about the Nobel foundation’s jus­ti­fi­ca­tion for the egre­gious omis­sion of Mahatma Gandhi from its list of peace prize winners.

Mahatma Gandhi, the Miss­ing Laureate

There is no hint in the archives that the Nor­we­gian Nobel Com­mit­tee ever took into con­sid­er­a­tion the pos­si­bil­ity of an adverse British reac­tion to an award to Gandhi. Thus it seems that the hypoth­e­sis that the Committee’s omis­sion of Gandhi was due to its mem­bers’ not want­ing to pro­voke British author­i­ties, may be rejected.

Dur­ing the last months of his life, Gandhi worked hard to end the vio­lence between Hin­dus and Moslems which fol­lowed the par­ti­tion of India. We know lit­tle about the Nor­we­gian Nobel Committee’s dis­cus­sions on Gandhi’s can­di­da­ture in 1948 – other than the above quoted entry of Novem­ber 18 in Gun­nar Jahn’s diary – but it seems clear that they seri­ously con­sid­ered a posthu­mous award. When the com­mit­tee, for for­mal rea­sons, ended up not mak­ing such an award, they decided to reserve the prize, and then, one year later, not to spend the prize money for 1948 at all. What many thought should have been Mahatma Gandhi’s place on the list of Lau­re­ates was silently but respect­fully left open.

Excuses.

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