I | INTRODUCTION |
Mohandas
Gandhi (1869-1948), Indian nationalist leader, who established his
country's freedom through a nonviolent revolution.
Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi, also known as
Mahatma Gandhi, was born in Porbandar in the present state of Gujarāt on October
2, 1869, and educated in law at University College, London. In 1891, after
having been admitted to the British bar, Gandhi returned to India and attempted
to establish a law practice in Bombay (now Mumbai), with little success. Two
years later an Indian firm with interests in South Africa retained him as legal
adviser in its office in Durban. Arriving in Durban, Gandhi found himself
treated as a member of an inferior race. He was appalled at the widespread
denial of civil liberties and political rights to Indian immigrants to South
Africa. He threw himself into the struggle for elementary rights for
Indians.
II | PASSIVE RESISTANCE |
Gandhi remained in South Africa for 20 years,
suffering imprisonment many times. In 1896, after being attacked and beaten by
white South Africans, Gandhi began to teach a policy of passive resistance to,
and noncooperation with, the South African authorities. Part of the inspiration
for this policy came from the Russian writer Leo Tolstoy, whose influence on
Gandhi was profound. Gandhi also acknowledged his debt to the teachings of
Christ and to the 19th-century American writer Henry David Thoreau, especially
to Thoreau's famous essay “Civil Disobedience.” Gandhi considered the terms
passive resistance and civil disobedience inadequate for his
purposes, however, and coined another term, satyagraha (Sanskrit for
“truth and firmness”). During the Boer War, Gandhi organized an ambulance corps
for the British army and commanded a Red Cross unit. After the war he returned
to his campaign for Indian rights. In 1910, he founded Tolstoy Farm, near
Johannesburg, a cooperative colony for Indians. In 1914 the government of the
Union of South Africa made important concessions to Gandhi's demands, including
recognition of Indian marriages and abolition of the poll tax for them. His work
in South Africa complete, he returned to India.
III | CAMPAIGN FOR HOME RULE |
Gandhi became a leader in a complex struggle,
the Indian campaign for home rule. Following World War I, in which he played an
active part in recruiting campaigns, Gandhi, again advocating Satyagraha,
launched his movement of passive resistance to Britain. When, in 1919,
Parliament passed the Rowlatt Acts, giving the Indian colonial authorities
emergency powers to deal with so-called revolutionary activities, Satyagraha
spread through India, gaining millions of followers. A demonstration against the
Rowlatt Acts resulted in a massacre of Indians at Amritsar by British soldiers
(see Amritsar Massacre); in 1920, when the British government failed to
make amends, Gandhi proclaimed an organized campaign of noncooperation. Indians
in public office resigned, government agencies such as courts of law were
boycotted, and Indian children were withdrawn from government schools. Through
India, streets were blocked by squatting Indians who refused to rise even when
beaten by police. Gandhi was arrested, but the British were soon forced to
release him.
Economic independence for India, involving
the complete boycott of British goods, was made a corollary of Gandhi's swaraj
(Sanskrit, “self-ruling”) movement. The economic aspects of the movement were
significant, for the exploitation of Indian villagers by British industrialists
had resulted in extreme poverty in the country and the virtual destruction of
Indian home industries. As a remedy for such poverty, Gandhi advocated revival
of cottage industries; he began to use a spinning wheel as a token of the return
to the simple village life he preached, and of the renewal of native Indian
industries.
Gandhi became the international symbol of a
free India. He lived a spiritual and ascetic life of prayer, fasting, and
meditation. His union with his wife became, as he himself stated, that of
brother and sister. Refusing earthly possessions, he wore the loincloth and
shawl of the lowliest Indian and subsisted on vegetables, fruit juices, and
goat's milk. Indians revered him as a saint and began to call him Mahatma
(Sanskrit, “great soul”), a title reserved for the greatest sages. Gandhi's
advocacy of nonviolence, known as ahimsa (Sanskrit, “noninjury”), was the
expression of a way of life implicit in the Hindu religion. By the Indian
practice of nonviolence, Gandhi held, Britain too would eventually consider
violence useless and would leave India.
The Mahatma's political and spiritual hold on
India was so great that the British authorities dared not interfere with him. In
1921 the Indian National Congress, the group that spearheaded the movement for
nationhood, gave Gandhi complete executive authority, with the right of naming
his own successor. The Indian population, however, could not fully comprehend
the unworldly ahimsa. A series of armed revolts against Britain broke
out, culminating in such violence that Gandhi confessed the failure of the
civil-disobedience campaign he had called, and ended it. The British government
again seized and imprisoned him in 1922.
After his release from prison in 1924, Gandhi
withdrew from active politics and devoted himself to propagating communal unity.
Unavoidably, however, he was again drawn into the vortex of the struggle for
independence. In 1930 the Mahatma proclaimed a new campaign of civil
disobedience, calling upon the Indian population to refuse to pay taxes,
particularly the tax on salt. The campaign was a march to the sea, in which
thousands of Indians followed Gandhi from Ahmadābād to the Arabian Sea, where
they made salt by evaporating sea water. Once more the Indian leader was
arrested, but he was released in 1931, halting the campaign after the British
made concessions to his demands. In the same year Gandhi represented the Indian
National Congress at a conference in London.
IV | ATTACK UPON THE CASTE SYSTEM |
In 1932, Gandhi began new civil-disobedience
campaigns against the British. Arrested twice, the Mahatma fasted for long
periods several times; these fasts were effective measures against the British,
because revolution might well have broken out in India if he had died. In
September 1932, while in jail, Gandhi undertook a “fast unto death” to improve
the status of the Hindu Untouchables. The British, by permitting the
Untouchables to be considered as a separate part of the Indian electorate, were,
according to Gandhi, countenancing an injustice. Although he was himself a
member of the Vaisya (merchant) caste, Gandhi was the great leader of the
movement in India dedicated to eradicating the unjust social and economic
aspects of the caste system.
In 1934 Gandhi formally resigned from
politics, being replaced as leader of the Congress Party by Jawaharlal Nehru.
Gandhi traveled through India, teaching ahimsa and demanding eradication
of “untouchability.” The esteem in which he was held was the measure of his
political power. So great was this power that the limited home rule granted by
the British in 1935 could not be implemented until Gandhi approved it. A few
years later, in 1939, he again returned to active political life because of the
pending federation of Indian principalities with the rest of India. His first
act was a fast, designed to force the ruler of the state of Rājkot to modify his
autocratic rule. Public unrest caused by the fast was so great that the colonial
government intervened; the demands were granted. The Mahatma again became the
most important political figure in India.
V | INDEPENDENCE |
When World War II broke out, the Congress
Party and Gandhi demanded a declaration of war aims and their application to
India. As a reaction to the unsatisfactory response from the British, the party
decided not to support Britain in the war unless the country were granted
complete and immediate independence. The British refused, offering compromises
that were rejected. When Japan entered the war, Gandhi still refused to agree to
Indian participation. He was interned in 1942 but was released two years later
because of failing health.
By 1944 the Indian struggle for independence
was in its final stages, the British government having agreed to independence on
condition that the two contending nationalist groups, the Muslim League and the
Congress Party, should resolve their differences. Gandhi stood steadfastly
against the partition of India but ultimately had to agree, in the hope that
internal peace would be achieved after the Muslim demand for separation had been
satisfied. India and Pakistan became separate states when the British granted
India its independence in 1947. During the riots that followed the partition of
India, Gandhi pleaded with Hindus and Muslims to live together peacefully. Riots
engulfed Calcutta (now Kolkata), one of the largest cities in India, and the
Mahatma fasted until disturbances ceased. On January 13, 1948, he undertook
another successful fast in New Delhi to bring about peace. But on January 30, 12
days after the termination of that fast, as he was on his way to his evening
prayer meeting, he was assassinated by Nathuram Godse, a Hindu fanatic.
Gandhi's death was regarded as an
international catastrophe. His place in humanity was measured not in terms of
the 20th century but in terms of history. A period of mourning was set aside in
the United Nations General Assembly, and condolences to India were expressed by
all countries. Religious violence soon waned in India and Pakistan, and the
teachings of Gandhi came to inspire nonviolent movements elsewhere, notably in
the U.S. under the civil rights leader Martin Luther King, Jr.
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