Indian political geniuses Mahatma Gandhi and Emperor Akbar have been listed among the Top 25 Political Icons of all time by TIME magazine,along with Tibetan spiritual leader the Dalai Lama and Mao Zedong,the father of modern China.
Released on the 100th birth anniversary of the late US President Ronald Reagan,the TIME list figures names like the great conqueror Alexander the Great and some of historys most polarising figures like Adolf Hitler and Benito Mussolini.
Gandhis experiments with satyagrahathe genesis of the non-violent methods of protest pioneered by himand his leadership of Indias freedom movement that has inspired many revolutionaries of later years,led him to the top of the list of the 25 all time greats.
Describing Mohandas Gandhi as a figure few will ever forget,the prestigious magazine said his struggle paved the way for other social movements including Americas struggle for civil rights.
While working as a lawyer in South Africa,he pioneered the concept of satyagraha,or,civil disobedience in response to tyranny,helping Indians there campaign for civil rights, it said. Working with Jawaharlal Nehru,the nations future prime minister,Gandhi led the country in peaceful protest against foreign domination,exemplified by the 1930 Salt March in protest to a British salt tax. His rise paved the way for Indias independence in 1947, it said.
Gandhi,who left behind a universal influence,has inspired leaders like American civil rights movement leader Martin Luther King and South Africas anti-apartheid champion Nelson Mandela,and also US President Barack Obama.
The 16th century Mughal Emperor Jalaluddin Mohammad Akbar,a figure who played a major role in unifying the largely scattered fiefdoms in northern India,also finds a place in the elite list.
The ethos of pluralism and tolerance pioneered by the Muslim ruler in a Hindu-majority India underline the values of the modern republic of India,the magazine said.
The third Mughal ruler of India presided over a flourishing of the arts,sponsoring artisans,poets,engineers and philosophers at a time when Europe was still in its pre-Renaissance stage.
If ever a leader merited a tautology,it was the Mughal Emperor Akbar the Great. Under Akbar,a fragile collection of fiefs around Delhi grew into the great Mughal Empire,a diverse and sprawling kingdom across northern India, the magazine said.
The Dalai Lama,who has often admitted the Mahatmas influence on him,has also been lauded for the non-violence and tolerance message that he has passed on to the generations.
The magazine described Hitler as possibly the most reviled man in the history of human existence,a universal symbol for evil.
The other figures mentioned in the list are Alexander the Great,Mao Zedong,Winston Churchill,Genghis Khan,Nelson Mandela,and Abraham Lincoln.