Tolerance Gandhi Quotes
Collection of top 20 famous quotes about Tolerance Gandhi
Tolerance Gandhi Quotes & Sayings
Happy to read and share the best inspirational Tolerance Gandhi quotes, sayings and quotations on Wise Famous Quotes.
Tolerance is the only thing that will enable persons belonging to different religions to live as good neighbours and friends.
— Mahatma Gandhi
I want the cultures of all lands to be blown about my house as freely as possible. But I refuse to be blown of my feet by any.
— Mahatma Gandhi
Mutual tolerance is a necessity for all time and for all races.
— Mahatma Gandhi
It seemed longer and redder than any car could be. It had a long gleaming bonnet of polished metal.
— Agatha Christie
Am so deeply impressed with the fair mindedness and tolerance of the American people ...
— Virchand Gandhi
The very first step in nonviolence is that we cultivate in our daily life, as between ourselves, truthfulness, humility, tolerance, loving kindness.
— Mahatma Gandhi
God the Compassionate and the Merciful, Tolerance incarnate, allows Mammon to have his nine days' wonder.
— Mahatma Gandhi
Love is a person's idea about his/her needs in other person what you are attracted to.
— Thomas Hobbes
The need of the moment is not one religion, but mutual respect and tolerance of the devotees of the different religions.
— Mahatma Gandhi
The Holy Bible is an abyss. It is impossible to explain how profound it is, impossible to explain how simple it is.
— Ernest Hello
It was both comforting and terrifying to go in to audition for 'The Girl in the Cafe,' as I'd worked with everyone in the room on 'State Of Play.'
— Kelly Macdonald
Men do everything that men do, from waging war to reading books, for one purpose only: to get laid.
— David Burr Gerrard
Tolerance gives us spiritual insight, which is as far from fanaticism as the north pole is from the south.
— Mahatma Gandhi
You try to do something every single day that will help an American or maybe someone overseas.
— Barbara Bush
Tolerance obviously does not disturb the distinction between right and wrong, or good and evil.
— Mahatma Gandhi
Unless we are able to evolve a spirit of mutual tolerance for diametrically opposite views, non co-operation is an impossibility.
— Mahatma Gandhi