Date of Birth : May 9, 1866 Date of
Death : 1915 Place of Birth : Maharashtra
Gopal Krishna Gokhale was born on
May 9, 1866, in Ratnagiri, Maharashtra, and he became one of the most learned
men in India, a leader of social and political reformists and one of the
earliest, founding leaders of the Indian Independence Movement. Gokhale was a
senior leader of the Indian National Congress and the Servants of India
Society. The latter was committed to only social reform, but the Congress Party
in Gokhale’s time was the main vehicle for Indian political representation.
Gokhale was a great, early Indian champion for public education. Being one of
the first generations of Indians to receive college education, Gokhale was
respected widely in the nascent Indian intellecutal community and acoss India,
whose people looked up to him as the least elitist of educated Indians. Coming
from a background of poverty, Gokhale was a real man of the people, a hero to
young Indians discovering the new age and the prospects of the coming 20th
century; he worked amongst common Indians to encourage education, sanitation
and public development. He actively spoke against ignorance, casteism and
untouchability in Indian society. Gokhale was also reputed for working for
trust and friendship between Hindu and Muslim communities. It should be
remembered that Gokhale was a pioneer in this work, never done before in Indian
history by Indians. Along with distinguished colleagues like Bal Gangadhar
Tilak, Dadabhai Naoroji, Bipin Chandra Pal, Lala Lajpat Rai and Annie Besant,
Gokhale fought for decades to obtain greater political representation and power
over public affairs for common Indians. He was moderate in his views and
attitudes, and sought to petition the British authorities, cultivate a process
of dialogue and discussion which would yield greater British respect for Indian
rights. In 1906, he and Tilak were the respective leaders of the moderates and
extremists (now known by the more politically correct term,’aggressive
nationalists’) in the Congress. Tilak advocated civil agitation and direct
revolution to overthrow the British Empire, and the Congress Party split into
two wings. The two sides would patch up in 1916. Gokhale did not support
explicit Indian independence, for such an idea was not even understood or
expressed until after the World War I.
Gopal Krishna Gokhale’s biggest
contribution to India was as a teacher, nurturer of a whole new generation of
leaders conscious to their responsibilities to a wider nation. Gokhale was
famously a mentor to a young barrister who had been blooded in the work of
revolution in South Africa a few years earlier. Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi
received great warmth and hospitality from Gokhale, including personal
guidance, knowledge and understanding of India, the issues of common Indians
and Indian politics. By 1920, Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi would become known as
Mahatma Gandhi, and ad the leader of nationalist Indians and the largest
non-violent revolution in the history of the world. However, Gokhale himself
died in 1915. In his autobiography, Gandhi calls Gokhale his mentor and guide,
while Mohammed Ali Jinnah, the future founder of Pakistan, in 1912 wanted to
become the “Muslim Gokhale,” “Ambassador of Hindu-Muslim Unity.”
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