SOME THOUGHTS ON ASPECTS OF GANDHIAN IDEOLOGY
PROF.
K. SATCHIDANANDA MURTY
Principal,
I
propose to deal with Mahatma Gandhi's views regarding the ideal political and
social order. His ideas on democracy may be developed along the following
lines:
Democracy
involves faith, hope and charity. It is based on the faith that all men are kin
and each man is an absolute and in himself.
Democracy
cannot be built without the hope that men can achieve the good life on earth in
spite of the determinism in nature and the presence of moral and physical evil
in themselves and in nature. Man is free to construct
the kind of world he wishes to live in and has the capacity to do so. Without
the hope that a man can be happy to the degree he fulfils his duties and
responsibilities, there can be no incentive to build or preserve democracy, for
in any other social order he cannot properly discharge them, or exercise his
rights.
Democracy
involves charity, love for fellowmen, Men are bound to be co-sufferers in this
world, and are also the willing or unwilling causes of
each other’s sufferings. They need mutual sympathy and compassion. Besides, it
is through communion that a good deal of happiness comes. Through helping
others comes a sense of fulfilment and a certain type
of happiness. One enlarges his personality and raises it to a higher level by
going out of oneself to the others and sparing their joys, commiserating in
their sorrows and serving them. Men must support and sustain each other, and
give comfort and solace to each other. One alone cannot be free, all must be
free; one cannot be happy without all being happy; and only in the salvation of
all is the salvation of one. It, therefore, behoves
us to love our fellowmen.
The
Gandhian faith could be explicated in the above
manner. Gandhi, of course, did not use the term “democracy” as much as he used
the other two terms: “self-government” (swaraj),
and “the kingdom of God” (Ramaraj), which he
defined as “sovereignty of people based on moral authority.” This is also what
the apostle of Western democracy,
What
sort of social order is most conducive to democracy? Here again Jefferson and
Gandhi gave similar answers. Only life and work in small communities will
permit men to have genuine self-government and personal responsibility.
Otherwise they cannot have an effective voice in shaping their destinies. A
social order which cannot make charity possible is not
good. Charity cannot manifest itself without personal relationships.
It
will be instructive to recall Jefferson’s plan for organising
democracy in
From
all accounts we find that self-subsistuent and fully
employed village communities were the vital organic units of the distinctive
Indian civilization. The
A
reorganisation of the political order requires a reorganisation of the economic order. Here too Gandhi’s
ideas have heuristic relevance. “Our main object”, said Nehru,
“is to increase production and thereby find progressively fuller employment for
our people.” Let us see what has been accomplished. At the end of the III Plan
ninety to one hundred lakhs of people have been left
unemployed. The IV Plan Draft envisaged creation of 190 lakhs
jobs, while during this period two hundred and fifty lakhs
of people are expected to join the labour force.
Thus, in 1971 over one hundred and sixty lakhs will
remain jobless. So, by then there will be more unemployment than previously. As
for our production, with a per capita rate of 90 dollars, our gross national
product is not higher than that of countries like
Considering
our population and resources, in the foreseeable future there is no hope of
A
Gandhian may answer as follows. We must utilize to
the full the one great asset we have–our gigantic population. An intensive and
better use of their manual labour and an expenditure
of capital proportionate to our resources is the way out. Our situation does
not permit us to aim at any kind of affluence. We must realistically aim at a
universal and strictly limited raising of the material
standard of living, which will permit our people to have at least basic
amenities and simple happiness. According to Gandhi, more than that is neither
good nor necessary. As Vinoba Bhave
pointed out, “freedom from, the lure of money and performance of body labour” is “the acme of Gandhi’s philosophy.” Each village
should become self-sufficient through agriculture, use of hand-tools and rural
industries. If everyone works with his hands and hand-tools, and if the
land and materials are made available to the workers, there would be no
unemployment. This recalls Jefferson’s utopia in which “agriculture, handwork
and learning” would flourish and guide the lives of men.
Would
India dare to reject industrialisation and technology, forego the hope of
becoming affluent and a great power commensurate with its continental size, and
endeavour to create an agrarian utopia? There is also
the danger that deindustrialisation might only
increase poverty, without ushering in an utopia. But, even if it follows the
path of large-scale industrialisation, will it succeed in becoming a developed
country and abolishing primary poverty? This is a dilemma.
The
Gandhian economy not only eschews large-scale
industries but requires decentralisation of village
industries. Vinoba Bhave
has made a fruitful distinction between non-Centralisation
and de-Centralisation. Prior to the machine age,
industries were carried on in the villages in independent units scattered all
over the country without any plan or co-ordination. Now village industries have
to be organised on the basis of “a comprehensive
all-pervading idea.” This, says Bhave, is decentralisation, or intelligent non-centralisation.
As many think, Gandhism is not totally opposed to machines. It is opposed, says
Bhave, only to machines which create unemployment,
idleness and intellectual dullness, and not to those which fit into man’s
hands like a subsidiary limb. One may compare this idea of decentralisation
to that of Aldous Huxley. In Huxley’s scheme, individuals,
families and small co-operative groups own lands and small power-driven
instruments of production, necessary for subsistence and for supplying local markets.
While too much of huge machinery leads to regimentation and loss of
spontaneity, absence of mechanical efficiency leads to chronic poverty and
anarchy. Huxley hits upon small power-driven machinery as the golden mean.
Similarly, the Indian socialist leader Lohia
envisaged decentralisation based on the small-unit
machine.
Anyway,
this much seems to be clear: Unless consumption is Gandhian,
our production-structure cannot be Gandhian. There is
in India now such a mass hunger for food and consumer goods that only
large-scale production of them can satisfy it. So, unless it is decided to
content ourselves with the fulfilment of bare and
simple necessities of life and minimum possible consumption, Gandhian production-techniques need not be introduced.
We
now come to another problem. The increase in country’s productivity is not the
only real problem. Application of modern science may do the trick. The greater
problem is that of social justice. An increase of national wealth will only
make the rich richer and the poor poorer, leaving the demand for social justice
untouched. Here again Gandhi provides a possible solution. Whatever one has,
says Gandhi, one holds as a trust for the benefit of all. Not only wealth, but
one’s physical strength, skills and intelligence must be for the service of
all. His doctrine of trusteeship is the use of all one has for the good of all.
At the international level, whatever one nation has must be shared with the
others. This is a reinterpretation of the concept of loka-sangraha.
The Gandhian economic order is based on individual
non-possession (aparigraha). “Land in a
village,” says Vinoba, “must belong to it as a whole,
and factories in the country to the whole nation. None should be owner of
property.” The Gandhians want a revolution in which a
privileged minority consents at least to an equitable, if not equal,
redistribution of all wealth in any form. Will our upper classes, and our
parliament and legislatures, as they are now constituted and composed, dare to
do this soon enough to make the other kind of revolution unnecessary?
“I believe in the fundamental truth of all great religions of the world. I believe they are all God-given, and I believe these are necessary for the people to whom these religions were revealed. And I believe that, if only we could all of us read the scriptures of different faiths, we should find that these were at the bottom all one and were all helpful to one another...After long study and experience I have come to the conclusion that (1) all religions are true (2) all religions have some error in them.
“I do not believe in the exclusive divinity of the Vedas. I believe in the Bible, in Koran and the Zend Avesta to be as much divinely inspired as the Vedas. My belief in the Hindu scriptures does not require me to accept every word and every verse as divinely inspired...I decline to be bound by any interpretation, however learned it may be, if it is repugnant too reason or moral sense.”
–Gandhi