A Letter to a Hindu, Leo Tolstoy
A Letter to a Hindu, Leo Tolstoy
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A Letter to a Hindu

Author: Leo Tolstoy

Narrator: Emily Foster

Unabridged: 32 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Publisher: Ink and Marble

Published: 04/03/2026

Categories: Nonfiction, Philosophy


Synopsis

One letter becomes a bold challenge to violence, empire, and the moral shortcuts of modern life.In A Letter to a Hindu, Leo Tolstoy delivers a concise, urgent work of moral and spiritual persuasion. Speaking with the clarity of a philosopher and the passion of a prophet, he argues for the transforming power of conscience over force and calls listeners to examine how real change begins within the individual. This is political philosophy in its most personal form: a direct appeal that tests convictions about duty, justice, and the price of progress.Tolstoy draws on ethical reasoning and religious thought to press a single question again and again: what happens when people refuse to cooperate with wrongdoing. Listeners can expect a focused, idea driven experience that explores nonviolent resistance, personal responsibility, and the tension between faith and state power. The tone is direct and reflective, designed to provoke thought rather than tell a story.If you want a classic Tolstoy essay that still feels urgent, press play and let this letter work on you.

About Leo Tolstoy

Leo Tolstoy was born in 1828 at Yasnaya Polyana in central Russia and educated privately. He studied Oriental languages and law at the University of Kazan, then led a life of dissipation until 1851, when he went to the Caucasus and joined an artillery regiment. He took part in the Crimean War, and on the basis of this experience wrote The Sevastopol Stories, which confirmed his tenuous reputation as a writer.

After a period in St. Petersburg and abroad, where he studied educational methods for use in his school for peasant children at Yasnaya Polyana, Tolstoy married Sofya Behrs in 1862. The next fifteen years was a period of great happiness: the couple had thirteen children, and Tolstoy managed his estates, continued his educational projects, and wrote War and Peace and Anna Karenina.

A Confession marked a spiritual crisis in Tolstoy's life; he became an extreme moralist, and in a series of pamphlets written after 1880, he expressed his rejection of state and church, indictment of the weaknesses of the flesh, and denunciation of private property. He published his last novel, Resurrection, in 1900.

Tolstoy's teaching earned him many followers at home and abroad, but also much opposition, and in 1901 he was excommunicated by the Russian Orthodox Church. He died in 1910.


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