"Poverty is the worst form of violence"
About this Quote
The subtext is sharper: poverty is not merely a backdrop to conflict, it is conflict - slow, bureaucratic, and socially sanitized. By calling it the worst form, Gandhi indicts the kinds of suffering that don’t shock the conscience because they arrive quietly: malnutrition, untreated disease, humiliation, shortened life. It’s a rebuke to leaders who condemn riots while presiding over systems that grind people down more reliably than any weapon.
Context matters because Gandhi’s politics weren’t only about expelling colonial rule; they were about exposing how power disguises itself as normal life. Under British imperial economics, India experienced extraction, debt, and periodic famine. Gandhi’s emphasis on swadeshi (self-reliance), village industry, and disciplined simplicity wasn’t quaint nostalgia; it was a counter-argument to an economic order that produced "peace" at the surface and violence in the ledger.
Rhetorically, the sentence is compact, legalistic, almost prosecutorial. It expands nonviolence from a personal ethic into a social demand: if you want to be against violence, you can’t stop at policing bodies. You have to confront the conditions that quietly break them.
Quote Details
| Topic | Human Rights |
|---|---|
| Source | Help us find the source |
| Cite |
Citation Formats
APA Style (7th ed.)
Gandhi, Mahatma. (2026, January 17). Poverty is the worst form of violence. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/poverty-is-the-worst-form-of-violence-26098/
Chicago Style
Gandhi, Mahatma. "Poverty is the worst form of violence." FixQuotes. January 17, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/poverty-is-the-worst-form-of-violence-26098/.
MLA Style (9th ed.)
"Poverty is the worst form of violence." FixQuotes, 17 Jan. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/poverty-is-the-worst-form-of-violence-26098/. Accessed 18 Feb. 2026.










