The British looked
towards Mahatma Gandhi with admiration, amusement, bewilderment, suspicion, and
resentment. Except for a tiny minority of Christian missionaries and radical
socialists, the British tended to see in him at best a utopian visionary, a
cunning hypocrite whose professions of friendship for the British race were a
mask for subversion of the British Rule.
Mahatma Gandhi was
conscious of the existence of this wall of prejudice, and it was part of the
strategy of satyagraha to penetrate it. His three campaigns in 1920-22,
1930-34, and 1940-42 were well designed to achieving the grant of dominion
status in 1947. The British abdication in India was the first step in the
liquidation of the British Empire on the continents of Asia and Africa.
Britain, in 1969,
in the centenary year of MKGandhi's birth, erected a statue to his memory.
MKGandhi had critics in his own country, and indeed in his own party. The
liberal leaders protested that he was going too fast; the young radicals
complained that he was not going fast enough, left-wing politicians alleged
that he was not serious about evicting the British or liquidating such vested
Indian interests as princes and landlords; the leaders of the untouchables
doubted his good faith as a social reformer; and Muslim leaders accused him of
partiality to his own community.
Recent research
has established MKGandhi's role as a great mediator and reconciler. His talents
helped to resolve conflicts between the older moderate politicians and the
young radicals, the political terrorists and the parliamentarians, the urban
intelligentsia and the rural masses, the traditionalists and the modernists,
Hindus and the untouchables, the Hindus and the Muslims, and the Indians and
the British.
It was inevitable
that MKGandhi's role as a political leader should loom larger in public
imagination, but the mainspring of his life lay in religion, not in politics.
And religion for him did not mean formalism, dogma, ritual, or sectarianism.
"What I have
been striving and pining to achieve these thirty years, is to see God face to face."
His deepest strivings were spiritual, but unlike many of his countrymen with
such aspirations, he did not retire to a cave in the Himalayas to meditate on
the Absolute. He carried his cave, as he once said, within him. For him truth
was not something to be discovered in the privacy of one's personal life. Truth
had to be upheld in the challenging contexts of social and political life.
In the eyes of
millions of his countrymen, he was the Mahatma. The unthinking adoration of the
huge crowds that gathered to see him all along his route made his tours a
severe ordeal.
He could hardly
work during the day or rest at night. "The woes of the Mahatmas," he
wrote, "are known only to the Mahatmas."
MKGandhi won the
affection and loyalty of gifted men and women, old and young, with vastly
dissimilar talents and temperaments; of Europeans of every religious
persuasion; and of Indians of almost every political line. Few of his political
colleagues went all the way with him and accepted nonviolence as a creed; fewer
still shared his food fads, his interest in mudpacks and nature cure, or his
prescription of brahmacharya, complete renunciation of the pleasures of the
flesh.
MKGandhi's ideas
on sex may sound quaint and unscientific. His marriage at the age of 13 seems
to have complicated his attitude to sex and charged it with feelings of guilt,
but it is important to remember that total sublimation, according to the best
tradition of Hindu thought, is indispensable for those who seek
self-realization, and brahmacharya was for MKGandhi part of a larger discipline
in food, sleep, thought, prayer, and daily activity designed to equip himself
for service of the causes to which he was totally committed. What he failed to
see was that his own unique experience was no guide for the common man. It is
probably too early to judge MKGandhi's place in history. He was the catalyst if
not the initiator of three of the major revolutions of the 20th century: the
revolutions against colonialism, racism, and violence. He wrote copiously; the
collected edition of his writings runs to more than 80 volumes.
Much of what he
wrote was in response to the needs of his co-workers and disciples and the
exigencies of the political situation, but on fundamentals, he maintained a
remarkable consistency, as is evident from the Hind Swaraj,"Indian Home
Rule" published in South Africa in 1909. The strictures on Western
materialism and colonialism, the reservations about industrialism and
urbanization, the distrust of the modern state, and the total rejection of
violence that was expressed in this book seemed romantic, if not reactionary,
to the pre-World War I generation in India and the West, which had not known
the shocks of two global wars, experienced the phenomenon of Hitler, and the
trauma of the atom bomb.
Prime Minister
Jawaharlal Nehru's objective of promoting a just and egalitarian order at home,
and nonalignment with military blocs abroad doubtless owed much to MKGandhi,
but neither he nor his colleagues in the Indian nationalist movement wholly
accepted the Gandhian models in politics and economics.
In recent years MKGandhi's
name has been invoked by the organizers of numerous demonstrations and
movements, but with a few outstanding exceptions--such as those of Vinoba Bhave in India and Martin Luther King,
in USA, were ideas of MKGandhi.
Yet MKGandhi will
probably never lack champions. Erik H. Erikson, a distinguished American
psychoanalyst, in his study of Gandhi senses "an affinity between MKGandhi's
truth and the insights of modern psychology."
One of the
greatest admirers of MKGandhi was Albert Einstein, who saw in his nonviolence a
possible antidote to the massive violence unleashed by the fission of the atom.
And Gunnar Myrdal, the Swedish economist, after his survey of the socioeconomic
problems of the underdeveloped world, pronounced MKGandhi "in practically
all fields an enlightened liberal." In a time of deepening crisis in the
underdeveloped world, of social malaise in the affluent societies, of the
shadow of unbridled technology and the precarious peace of nuclear terror, it
seems likely that MKGandhi's ideas and techniques will
become increasingly relevant.
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