INTERPRETING GANDHI
V. V. RAMANA MURTI
Reader
in Political Science,
The
problem of understanding Gandhi’s ideas arose even in Gandhi’s
life time. But what confronts us in the post-Gandhi era is a more complicated
question of immediate relevance. As Gandhi’s spoken and written
word is very extensive, and covers a vast range of topics, it is not always
easy to determine his conclusive opinion on a certain issue
without coming across divergent evidence on the same. It is not that different
schools of thought, each one self-sufficient in itself,
vie with each other for the exclusive right for the interpretation of Gandhian literature. Unlike Marxism, Gandhism has not yet
arrived at that stage of an intellectual system. What happens more often now is
that quite a few sources from Gandhi are offered by very different and
sometimes even opposing groups to sustain a single inference. It has become too
common. This case is well illustrated by a frequently quoted passage from
Gandhi on the alternatives of cowardice and violence before a votary of
non-violence.
“I
do believe” says Gandhi, “that where there is only a choice between cowardice
and violence I would advice violence.”1
Can
it be said on this basis that Gandhi supports violence? For instance, Gandhi’s
name was invoked in the public to support
The
basic question to be asked in this connection is, assuming Gandhi’s preference
to violence towards cowardice, if he justifies in any way cowardice as such. We
find Gandhi repeatedly condemning cowardice. In his post-prayer speech in
This
is abundantly made clear by Gandhi in the many observations that follow
immediately the above reference to cowardice arid violence. For instance,
Gandhi at once adds in the same source: “But I believe that non-violence is
infinitely superior to violence.” 4 Again, Gandhi repeats in
a similar vein: “Non-violence is the law of our species as violence is the law
of the brute.”5 And he warns in the same breath that “
All
these extracts were from an article that was entitled by Gandhi as “The
Doctrine of the Sword”, and published in Young India of August 11, 1920.
Gandhi explained at the outset his reason for writing on this subject. Taking
into consideration “the hold that the doctrine of the sword has on the majority
of mankind,” Gandhi wants to answer its apologists. 7 He also notes
that “the success of non-cooperation depends principally on absence of
violence,” 8 It is sheer irony that this article “The Doctrine of
Sword” which Gandhi wrote to disprove the efficacy of violence, is now being
used widely to prove the doctrine of violence. And what is more surprising
is that the Mahatma’s pontification is
solicited for supporting
violence.
Moreover,
the piece in question was written by Gandhi in 1920, at
a particular period of his life in relation to a specific situation.
It will not be quite right if we take certain portions of it today, and deliberately use them for supporting
our own conclusions on
a specific issue. Gandhi was
always developing, and his mind was accordingly changing. As Romain
Rolland wrote of Gandhi after their
historic meeting in December 1931:
“His mind proceeds through successive
experiments into action and he follows a straight line, but he never stops, and one would risk
error in attempting to judge him by what he said ten years ago because his
thought is in constant revolution.” 9
A
sense of chronology is imperative
for interpreting Gandhi’s ideas. Each
has to be understood in its entire context, and related to
the main thinking of Gandhi.
Sometimes his two texts may
appear to have a contradiction or
inconsistency. Such cases have
to be examined in detail in the total perspective of Gandhism. When this difficulty was
pointed out to Gandhi by a correspondent, he offered to suggest a criterion that might be relevant even now. Writing
in Harijan of April 29, 1933, Gandhi observes: “When anybody
finds any inconsistency between
any two writings of mine, he would do
well to choose the latter of
the two on the same subject.”
10
The
Another
view is persistently cited from
Gandhi to support armed retaliation. And it believes that Gandhi blessed
the Indian Soldiers that
were sent by the Union Government
to
This
opinion was put to Gandhi himself by a correspondent who
took strong exception to his stand on the Indian Government on the
This
is Gandhi’s categorical enunciation of his fundamental difference with the
Indian Government on the policy of sending the military to
Arne
Naess is a notable exception in this respect. In his
book Gandhi and the Nuclear Age, Naess writes:
“Although Gandhi judged the responsibility for bloodshed in Kashmir in 1947: believing
that India had the right on her side in her struggle with Pakistan,
he still believed that India should never have resisted Pakistan troops or
civilians with physical violence, India, according to Gandhi, might easily have
offered Kashmir, non-violent aid and this would have been
a heroic deed.” 14 This treatment on the subject is in contrast to
the easy and many distortions of Gandhi’s ideas in the contemporary scene.
Satyagraha and Duragraha
Nowhere
is the Gandhian
spirit more misused than in the contemporary
trend of gherao and bandh that has almost seized the country.
As they are found in practice, gherao and bandh are far removed from Gandhi’s
technique of satyagraha. Gandhian method
has a definite pattern and philosophy that are integral to its working. Satyagraha
is a technique in quest of influence as different from power. What it has always sought
is a moral influence to convert
the enemy and resolve the conflict peacefully. The gherao
and bandh are, on the other hand, woeful exercises
in power-politics. They have
scanty regard for the Gandhian principle
that means and ends are convertible. Can we then call
bandh and gherao as methods of Satyagraha?
It
may be interesting to recall that
Gandhi makes an important distinction between satyagraha and duragraha even in the earliest phase of his
movement. Speaking at Ahmedabad on April
14, 1919, Gandhi observes that satyagraha
without the religious spirit is duragraha. Again writing on September 11, 1919, Gandhi warns that “if people employ duragraha
in the name of Satyagraha and unpleasant consequences follow
the latter is certainly not to blame.”
15 The bandh and gherao
belong more appropriately
to the cult of duragraha.
The present practice of
Satyagraha in
1 See
The Collected Works of Mahatma Gandhi
Vol. XVIII, (Government of India, Publications Division, 1965) p. 132
2
M. K. Gandhi, Non-Violence in Peace and War, Vol. II.
(Navajivan Publishing House, Ahmedabad.
1949) p. 159
3 Martin
Luther King, Jr., Stride Toward Freedom. (Harper
and Raw, New York. 1958) p. 102
4 The
Collected Works of Mahatma Gandhi, Vol. XVIII. p. 132 Op.Cit
5 Ibid,
p. 133
6 Ibid,
p. 134
7 Ibid,
p. 132
8 Ibid
9 Cited
in D. G. Tendulkar, Mahatma Gandhi: Life of
Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi,
10 M.
K. Gandhi, Harijan, April 29, 1933. p. 2
11 M.
K. Gandhi: Non-Violence in peace and War Vol,
II. Op. Cit., p.332
12
Ibid. p, 333
13
Ibid.
14 Arne
Naess, Gandhi and the Nuclear Age (The Bedminister
Press, New Jeresy, 1965) p. 110
15 The Collected Works of Mahatma Gandhi, Vol. XVI (Government of