India commemorated the 60th anniversary of Mohandas K. Gandhi's assassination today with his great granddaughter scattering the peace icon's ashes in the Arabian Sea.
Gandhi, who led the non-violent struggle for independence from Britain, is still revered as the moral conscience of the nation and pictures of his wizened, smiling face are everywhere in India, from the country's rupee notes to murals along the highway.
Gandhi's followers carried his ashes through the streets of Mumbai to the coast of the Arabian sea. Some 300 people, including school and college students and elderly followers, watched as Gandhi's family members took the ashes out to sea on a decorated motorboat.
There his great granddaughter Neelam Parikh, a frail 75-year-old immersed the ashes into the sea.
"It's an emotional day for us and also a day for deep thought. A day that we should remember him and remind ourselves of his teachings," she said later.
Gandhi's ashes were preserved by an Indian businessman who sent them to a museum in Mumbai last year. The museum had planned to display the ashes, but Gandhi's family said he would have preferred them scattered at sea.
A prayer ceremony also was planned at the New Delhi meeting house where he was killed by a Hindu extremist in 1948, just months after the nation was born. Prime Minister Manmohan Singh and Sonia Gandhi, the head of India's ruling Congress party, are expected to attend. Sonia Gandhi is the widow of former prime minister Rajiv Gandhi, grandson of Jawaharlal Nehru, India's first prime minister and Mohandas Gandhi's close friend.