New Delhi, May 12: Congress President Sonia Gandhi on Saturday described late Prime Minister and her mother-in-law Indira Gandhi as her friend and mentor, saying the late leader's nationalism was all-inclusive and rooted in the philosophy of compassion.
In her speech at the launch of a book 'India's Indira' in New Delhi, Sonia Gandhi said that 'the then Prime Minister had no time for snobbishness, ostentation, or pomposity, and was quick to detect hypocrisy and insincerity.'
'The brand of patriotism that I witnessed in Indira Gandhi was a noble and generous one that she imbibed from the notables of the freedom movement from her beloved father above all, and from Gandhi ji her dear Bapu.
'It was an all-inclusive, all-embracing nationalism rooted in a philosophy of compassion. This made her a proud Indian but also a citizen of the world,' she said.
Sonia Gandhi, who was born in Italy and married Indira Gandhi's older son Rajiv Gandhi, said the late leader was a
remarkable person.
'The Indira Gandhi I knew was the nurturing mother-in-law, mother, and grandmother. What a remarkable person she was how kindly she welcomed me nervous and shy as I was into her home; how patiently she taught me to adapt to the new country and family.'
Sonia Gandhi said that 'Indira Gandhi understood her difficulties, drew her into her heart and opened her eyes to India's great history and culture.'
Indira Gandhi, the Congress leader said, had grown up in the heat and turbulence of freedom struggle, knowing wealth, sacrifice, comfort, deprivation, and sorrow.
'Her mother's illness and untimely death and her struggle as a young girl with loneliness and loss made her deeply sensitive to the pain of others and protective of them.
'She was a friend and mentor to me, careful not to impose her will except in little things like making me drink milk and eat spinach, which I detested, while I was expecting my first child,' Sonia Gandhi said.