UNTO
THE LAST *
Saints and savants carry their mission of glory to
their graves’ end. Or would it not be more appropriate to say that their graves
greet them the moment they fulfil their missions.
They had all been born for a purpose and lived to work and die for its
achievement. If Gandhi had died six months earlier, he would have been saved
the agony of the vivisection of the country which he intended to resist with
his very life, as indeed he had vowed, and had resisted by a fast unto death
Sir Samuel Hoare’s project of vivisection of the
Hindu community in respect of representation in legislatures. When Ramsay
MacDonald would wrench the Harijans from their faith
and fold and give seventy-one seats, Gandhi gave them twice seventy-one plus
nine or one hundred and fifty-one elected seats altogether, retaining the Harijans as an integral factor of Hindu society. Even so,
it was anticipated that he would fast unto death to resist the vivisection of
II
But
in recalling the story of the life of a philosopher and saint, on the occasion
of the anniversary of his cruel death, it behoves the
nation which has been orphaned by his unexpected demise, to survey the salient
chapters of his biography which he himself had appropriately defined as an
Experiment in Truth. Truth was the one aim and object of his life and however
abstract Truth itself may be, in his view it concretized the Godhead to man on
earth. But he never visualised truth or Sat yam
except along with non-violence or Ahimsa, for they represented the obverse and
the reverse of the modal of Divinity. His concept of truth was all-pervading
and all-comprehensive. To him it was not truth or truthful conduct if a person
wrote a harsh letter and called it back, and if the addressee of the letter in
returning it to the writer, kept a copy of it before sending back the original.
That was how there lies in Gandhi’s records no copy of the letter of the
District Magistrate of Champaran to him in 1917 on
the eve of serving him notice under Section 104 and 108, Cr. P. C. For the same
reason the Congress has not in its archives a copy of Home Secretary Emerson’s
letter written in the fourth week of February 1931, breaking the Irwin-Gandhi
negotiations in a spirit of haughtiness and contempt for the Congress. Whenever
he received a complaint about a colleague, he put the matter straight to the
latter and accepted whatever he had to say in explanation. He spoke the truth
and not only took it but acted on the belief that every one of his colleagues
and fellow-workers spoke the truth. With truth as the sword and Ahimsa as the
shield, Gandhi recognized no other weapon than the weapon of love to reclaim
the erring brother or even the vindictive opponent, or to wield authority over
mankind. His goal, in his own words, was friendship with the world and he
proudly declared that he could combine the greatest love with the severest
opposition to wrong. “I refuse to suspect human nature,” he said. “It will, it is bound to, respond to any noble and friendly
action.” “His love does not burn others, but burns itself–suffering joyfully
unto death.” It was the habit of Gandhi’s mind always to call a spade a spade.
That was his upright politics. In his view, to call a spade a crowbar was wild
exaggeration, while to call it a needle was gross underrating.
Non-violence
or Ahimsa is a more difficult proposition. Ahimsa is not a negative factor but
a positive force. At best it is a direction–not a destination, an attempt–not
an attainment. When human Society requires weapons to protect
lives, it makes man no higher than the beast. The tiger has its claws, the lion
its paw, the elephant its tusks, the bull its horns, but man has no offensive
weapon. He has only his tongue which can both offend and defend. “Is this
village good,” asked a traveller of a yokel and got
the reply “If your tongue is good, the village is good.” Where then lies
wisdom? It lies in the Biblical saying “Vengeance is mine” saith
the Lord. The very beasts of the field and the birds of the air, the tiger in
his lair, the lion in his den, the hawk in its nest, the dove in its niche are
happy. Everything is beautiful in the nature. Man alone is
vile. Human nature, in Gandhi’s belief, is essentially non-violent, but greed,
anger, miserliness, delusion, pride and malice–the six enemies
of man according to our ancient texts (Kama, Krodha, Lobha, Moha, Mada, Matsarya) the Arishadvarg
of man–have made man violent and untruthful. Gandhi, therefore, set before the
world new values, social, economic and political. Accordingly, purity to him is
higher than piety, even as dignity is higher than dress. Nobility is higher
than birth, even as eminence is higher than wealth. Power is more than force,
even as influence is more than authority. Democracy is more than numbers and
justice is more than law. Civilization must transcend tradition, even as
culture outgrows knowledge. Religion is no more of ceremonies than prayers is
of praises. Piety must stand clear of a secticism
even as learning must avoid pedantry. Human nature is not to be spurned or
despised but must be studied and served. The world is not to be
abandoned but to be dwelt in and developed, Love and service constitute the
quintessence of Gandhi’s gospel. The basis of his religion,
the inspiration of his faith and the fountain source of his cosmo-nationality.
Often
time we hear it asked Whether Gandhi was not a revivalist. This enquiry is made
with a certain spirit of depreciation though not derision. Gandhi made no
secret of the fact that he built upon
Gandhi
was in the ultimate analysis a man, but amongst men he was a superior man and some
would go to the length of describing him as a superman. It is such
supermen whom we term Avatars that descend on earth whenever virtue fails and
sin spreads and Gandhi has been justly termed the tenth of such Avatan, The Avatars in the past met with a cruel end. Sri
Rama being reputed to have ended his life by drowning himself in the Sarayu river, Sri Krishna believed
to have been shot down by an arrow discharged by a hunter who mistook him in
the jungles of Junagadh for a deer; Christ was crusified on the cross, while Gandhi fell a prey to an
assassin’s bullet. Thus one Avatar’s life ended in death by suicide, a second’s
ended in death by accident, a third’s through orders of the ruling power and
fourth’s through homicide. In seeking freedom, Gandhi had not been in
search of mere economic security. His was the struggle to construct a new type
of society brimming with that emotional and spiritual security
which mere economic security could not give. He had demanded and obtained
liberty for the nation, not that it might secure the right to do what it
chooses, but that it might choose to do what is right. He warned, as Alexander
Hamilton had indeed warned earlier, that “Liberty may be endangered by the
abuses of liberty as well as by the abuses of power” and to one such liberty he
fell a victim, for he gave the liberty to every one to attend his prayers
without being searched or molested and such liberty proved his end. He believed
in the common man, and the common man was the material with which he had made
his experiments in truth. To few was it given that
they should witness the world-wide acceptance of their teaching and a
nation-wide allegiance to their philosophy. This was because Gandhi’s appeal
was to the common man. His faith lay in the uncontaminated purity of the
millions of the unsophisticated masses to whom he spoke in the language of
their tradition and custom, their philosophy and religion and whom he uplifted
from the slavery in which they had been wallowing to the freedom which is
theirs today. It is the common man who, through his incessant efforts and
through his sympathetic understanding raises the level of his fellowmen and
works out the greatness and the unity of his nation for the future. That
greatness and that unity, had been in the past,
brought about by him who bore the cross as well as by him who faced the cannon.
Thus it is that the race progresses only by the extra achievement of the
individual. It is for everyone of us to aspire to be
that individual.
Every
century in the World’s progress had its achievement and so has every statesman
and every warrior, every poet and every philosopher, every hero and every
saint. Far-sightedness and wisdom make the statesman; tactic and strategy make
the warrior; imagination and emotion make the poet; introspection and insight
make the philosopher; daring and dash make the hero, while service and
sacrifice make the saint. But what makes a man all in one–the
hero that wins, the statesman that rules, the warrior that fights, the poet
that sings, the philosopher that meditates and the saint that sees; not the
generosity of the hero, nor shrewdness of the statesman, not the prowess of the
warrior, nor the aesthetics of the poet, not the transcendentalism of the
philosopher, nor the selflessness of the saint–all
these must be there but there is one quality above them all that makes the full
man and that is humility.
We
all know how most drugs beyond the stated doses, work as poisons and how most
poisons within the prescribed limits of posology
serve as medicines. Even so, every virtue tends to become a weakness when
carried beyond limits. Self-conciousness which is the
normal attribute of genius thus becomes pride. Love of popularity when sought
in excess degenerates into vanity. Optimism which is an essential of
constructive endeavour deteriorates into credulity.
Scrutiny which determines truth, perilously borders on cynicism. Even
so diffidence may not be mistaken for humility any more than cowardice for
non-violence. Humility is to non-violence what symmetry is to
beauty or purity is to character–not an accident of adornment but an essential
of structure. Humility is a positive, active and aggressive quality that energises life and enlivens conduct. Humility attracts
where pride repels. Humility seeks knowledge and, operating through faith,
produces works. Humility is never contented, always regards failure as
an invitation to fresh effort and never becomes infatuated with success.
Humility nurtures the Heaven-aspiring soul and doth not harbour
merely a world-conquering will. Humility forbids wilfulness
which is weakness of will and cultivates the strength that can change one’s own
will. Humility wins where everything fails.
Gandhi’s
ministry of three decades is a standing lesson to
When,
therefore, you love your neighbour as yourself, a new
spirit born in the world, a new code of morality under which law and love enter
into a Contract, under which the hawk and the dove nestle together. Politics
itself becomes, as Acton had said, “Morality enlarged.” A new criterion is thus
established by which to judge the spirit of the nation. This is
what Gandhi achieved in his own day and left to posterity as a rich legacy
which will remain for ever the inestimable treasure of the nations of the
World.
* Reprinted from
“Speeches by Dr. Pattabhi Sitaramayya”.