Mohandas
Karamchand Gandhi
Date of Birth : Oct 2, 1869 Date of
Death : Jan 30, 1948 Place of Birth : Gujarat
Mahatma Gandhi (Mohandas Karamchand
Gandhi) was born into a Hindu Modh family in Porbandar, Gujarat, India in 1869.
He was the son of Karamchand Gandhi, the diwan (Chief Minister) of Porbandar,
and Putlibai, Karamchand’s fourth wife (his previous three wives had died in
childbirth), a Hindu of the Pranami Vaishnava order. Growing up with a devout
mother and surrounded by the Jain influences of Gujarat, Gandhi learned from an
early age the tenets of non-injury to living beings, vegetarianism, fasting for
self-purification, and mutual tolerance between members of various creeds and
sects. He was born into the vaishya, or business, caste.
In May 1883, at the age of 13,
Gandhi was married through his parents’ arrangement to Kasturba Makhanji (also
spelled “Kasturbai” or known as “Ba”), who was the same age as he. They had
four sons: Harilal Gandhi, born in 1888; Manilal Gandhi, born in 1892; Ramdas
Gandhi, born in 1897; and Devdas Gandhi, born in 1900. Gandhi was a mediocre
student in his youth at Porbandar and later Rajkot. He barely passed the
matriculation exam for the University of Bombay in 1887, where he joined Samaldas
College. He was also unhappy at the college, because his family wanted him to
become a barrister. He leapt at the opportunity to study in England, which he
viewed as “a land of philosophers and poets, the very centre of civilization.”
Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi was a major political and spiritual leader of India,
and the Indian independence movement. He was the pioneer and perfector of
Satyagraha – the resistance of tyranny through mass civil disobedience strongly
founded upon ahimsa (total non-violence) – which led India to independence, and
has inspired movements for civil rights and freedom across the world.
Gandhi is commonly known and
addressed in India and across the world as Mahatma Gandhi and as Bapu. Though
his elders objected, Gandhi could not be prevented from leaving; and it is said
that his mother, a devout woman, made him promise that he would keep away from
wine, women, and meat during his stay abroad. Gandhi left behind his son
Harilal, then a few months old. In London, Gandhi encountered theosophists,
vegetarians, and others who were disenchanted not only with industrialism, but
with the legacy of Enlightenment thought. They themselves represented the
fringe elements of English society. Gandhi was powerfully attracted to them, as
he was to the texts of the major religious traditions; and ironically it is in
London that he was introduced to the Bhagavad Gita. Here, too, Gandhi showed
determination and single-minded pursuit of his purpose, and accomplished his
objective of finishing his degree from the Inner Temple.
He was called to the bar in 1891,
and even enrolled in the High Court of London; but later that year he left for
India. After one year of a none too successful law practice, Gandhi decided to
accept an offer from an Indian businessman in South Africa, Dada Abdulla, to
join him as a legal adviser. Unbeknown to him, this was to become an
exceedingly lengthy stay, and altogether Gandhi was to stay in South Africa for
over twenty years. The Indians who had been living in South Africa were without
political rights, and were generally known by the derogatory name of ‘coolies’.
Gandhi himself came to an awareness of the frightening force and fury of
European racism, and how far Indians were from being considered full human
beings, when he thrown out of a first-class railway compartment car, though he
held a first-class ticket, at Pietermaritzburg. From this political awakening
Gandhi was to emerge as the leader of the Indian community, and it is in South
Africa that he first coined the term satyagraha to signify his theory and
practice of non-violent resistance. Gandhi was to describe himself preeminently
as a votary or seeker of satya (truth), which could not be attained other than
through ahimsa (non-violence, love) and brahmacharya (celibacy, striving
towards God). Gandhi conceived of his own life as a series of experiments to
forge the use of satyagraha in such a manner as to make the oppressor and the
oppressed alike recognize their common bonding and humanity: as he recognized,
freedom is only freedom when it is indivisible. In his book ‘Satyagraha in
South Africa’ he was to detail the struggles of the Indians to claim their
rights, and their resistance to oppressive legislation and executive measures,
such as the imposition of a poll tax on them, or the declaration by the
government that all non-Christian marriages were to be construed as invalid. In
1909, on a trip back to India, Gandhi authored a short treatise entitled ‘Hind
Swaraj’ or Indian Home Rule, where he all but initiated the critique, not only
of industrial civilization, but of modernity in all its aspects.
Gandhi returned to India in early
1915, and was never to leave the country again except for a short trip that
took him to Europe in 1931. Though he was not completely unknown in India,
Gandhi followed the advice of his political mentor, Gokhale, and took it upon
himself to acquire a familiarity with Indian conditions. He traveled widely for
one year. Over the next few years, he was to become involved in numerous local
struggles, such as at Champaran in Bihar, where workers on indigo plantations
complained of oppressive working conditions, and at Ahmedabad, where a dispute
had broken out between management and workers at textile mills. His
interventions earned Gandhi a considerable reputation, and his rapid ascendancy
to the helm of nationalist politics is signified by his leadership of the
opposition to repressive legislation (known as the “Rowlatt Acts”) in 1919.
His saintliness was not uncommon,
except in someone like him who immersed himself in politics, and by this time
he had earned from no less a person than Rabindranath Tagore, India’s most
well-known writer, the title of Mahatma, or ‘Great Soul’. When ‘disturbances’
broke out in the Punjab, leading to the massacre of a large crowd of unarmed
Indians at the Jallianwala Bagh in Amritsar and other atrocities, Gandhi wrote
the report of the Punjab Congress Inquiry Committee. Over the next two years,
Gandhi initiated the non-cooperation movement, which called upon Indians to withdraw
from British institutions, to return honors conferred by the British, and to
learn the art of self-reliance; though the British administration was at places
paralyzed, the movement was suspended in February 1922 when a score of Indian
policemen were brutally killed by a large crowd at Chauri Chaura, a small
market town in the United Provinces.
Gandhi himself was arrested shortly
thereafter, tried on charges of sedition, and sentenced to imprisonment for six
years. At The Great Trial, as it is known to his biographers, Gandhi delivered
a masterful indictment of British rule. Owing to his poor health, Gandhi was
released from prison in 1925. Over the following years, he worked hard to
preserve Hindu-Muslim relations, and in 1924 he observed, from his prison cell,
a 21-day fast when Hindu-Muslim riots broke out at Kohat, a military barracks
on the Northwest Frontier. This was to be of his many major public fasts, and
in 1932 he was to commence the so-called Epic Fast unto death, since he thought
of “separate electorates” for the oppressed class of what were then called
untouchables (or Harijans in Gandhi’s vocabulary, and dalits in today’s
language) as a retrograde measure meant to produce permanent divisions within
Hindu society. Gandhi earned the hostility of Ambedkar, the leader of the
untouchables, but few doubted that Gandhi was genuinely interested in removing
the serious disabilities from which they suffered, just as no one doubt that
Gandhi never accepted the argument that Hindus and Muslims constituted two
separate elements in Indian society.
These were some of the concerns most
prominent in Gandhi’s mind, but he was also to initiate a constructive
programme for social reform. Gandhi had ideas — mostly sound — on every
subject, from hygiene and nutrition to education and labor, and he relentlessly
pursued his ideas in one of the many newspapers which he founded. Indeed, were
Gandhi known for nothing else in India, he would still be remembered as one of
the principal figures in the history of Indian journalism. In early 1930, as
the nationalist movement was revived, the Indian National Congress, the
preeminent body of nationalist opinion, declared that it would now be satisfied
with nothing short of complete independence (purna swaraj). Once the clarion call
had been issued, it was perforce necessary to launch a movement of resistance
against British rule. On March 2, Gandhi addressed a letter to the Viceroy,
Lord Irwin, informing him that unless Indian demands were met, he would be
compelled to break the “salt laws”.
Predictably, his letter was received
with bewildered amusement, and accordingly Gandhi set off, on the early morning
of March 12, with a small group of followers towards Dandi on the sea. They
arrived there on April 5th: Gandhi picked up a small lump of natural salt, and
so gave the signal to hundreds of thousands of people to similarly defy the
law, since the British exercised a monopoly on the production and sale of salt.
This was the beginning of the civil disobedience movement: Gandhi himself was
arrested, and thousands of others were also hauled into jail. It is to break
this deadlock that Irwin agreed to hold talks with Gandhi, and subsequently the
British agreed to hold a Round Table Conference in London to negotiate the
possible terms of Indian independence. Gandhi went to London in 1931 and met
some of his admirers in Europe, but the negotiations proved inconclusive. On
his return to India, he was once again arrested. For the next few years, Gandhi
would be engaged mainly in the constructive reform of Indian society.
He had vowed upon undertaking the
salt march that he would not return to Sabarmati Ashram in Ahmedabad, where he
had made his home, if India did not attain its independence, and in the
mid-1930s he established himself in a remote village, in the dead center of
India, by the name of Segaon (known as Sevagram). It is to this obscure
village, which was without electricity or running water, that India’s political
leaders made their way to engage in discussions with Gandhi about the future of
the independence movement, and it is here that he received visitors such as
Margaret Sanger, the well-known American proponent of birth-control. Gandhi
also continued to travel throughout the country, taking him wherever his
services were required. One such visit was to the Northwest Frontier, where he
had in the imposing Pathan, Khan Abdul Ghaffar Khan (known by the endearing
term of “Frontier Gandhi”, and at other times as Badshah Khan), a fervent
disciple. At the outset of World War II, Gandhi and the Congress leadership
assumed a position of neutrality: while clearly critical of fascism, they could
not find it in themselves to support British imperialism. Gandhi was opposed by
Subhas Chandra Bose, who had served as President of the Congress, and who took
to the view that Britain’s moment of weakness was India’s moment of
opportunity. When Bose ran for President of the Congress against Gandhi’s
wishes and triumphed against Gandhi’s own candidate, he found that Gandhi still
exercised influence over the Congress Working Committee, and that it was near
impossible to run the Congress if the cooperation of Gandhi and his followers
could not be procured. Bose tendered his resignation, and shortly thereafter
was to make a dramatic escape from India to find support among the Japanese and
the Nazis for his plans to liberate India. In 1942, Gandhi issued the last call
for independence from British rule. On the grounds of what is now known as
August Kranti Maidan, he delivered a stirring speech, asking every Indian to
lay down their life, if necessary, in the cause of freedom.
He gave them this mantra: “Do or
Die”; at the same time, he asked the British to ‘Quit India’. The response of
the British government was to place Gandhi under arrest, and virtually the
entire Congress leadership was to find itself behind bars, not to be released
until after the conclusion of the war. A few months after Gandhi and Kasturba
had been placed in confinement in the Aga Khan’s Palace in Pune, Kasturba
passed away: this was a terrible blow to Gandhi, following closely on the heels
of the death of his private secretary of many years, the gifted Mahadev Desai.
In the period from 1942 to 1945, the Muslim League, which represented the
interest of certain Muslims and by now advocated the creation of a separate
homeland for Muslims, increasingly gained the attention of the British, and
supported them in their war effort. The new government that came to power in
Britain under Clement Atlee was committed to the independence of India, and
negotiations for India’s future began in earnest. Sensing that the political
leaders were now craving for power, Gandhi largely distanced himself from the
negotiations. He declared his opposition to the vivisection of India.
It is generally conceded, even by
his detractors, that the last years of his life were in some respects his
finest. He walked from village to village in riot-torn Noakhali, where Hindus
were being killed in retaliation for the killing of Muslims in Bihar, and
nursed the wounded and consoled the widowed; and in Calcutta he came to
constitute, in the famous words of the last viceroy, Mountbatten, a “one-man
boundary force” between Hindus and Muslims. The ferocious fighting in Calcutta
came to a halt, almost entirely on account of Gandhi’s efforts, and even his
critics were wont to speak of the Gandhi’s ‘miracle of Calcutta’. When the
moment of freedom came, on 15 August 1947, Gandhi was nowhere to be seen in the
capital, though Nehru and the entire Constituent Assembly were to salute him as
the architect of Indian independence, as the ‘father of the nation’. The last
few months of Gandhi’s life were to be spent mainly in the capital city of
Delhi. There he divided his time between the ‘Bhangi colony’, where the
sweepers and the lowest of the low stayed, and Birla House, the residence of
one of the wealthiest men in India and one of the benefactors of Gandhi’s
ashrams. Hindu and Sikh refugees had streamed into the capital from what had
become Pakistan, and there was much resentment, which easily translated into
violence, against Muslims. It was partly in an attempt to put an end to the
killings in Delhi, and more generally to the bloodshed following the partition,
which may have taken the lives of as many as 1 million people, besides causing
the dislocation of no fewer than 11 million, that Gandhi was to commence the
last fast unto death of his life. The fast was terminated when representatives
of all the communities signed a statement that they were prepared to live in
“perfect amity”, and that the lives, property, and faith of the Muslims would
be safeguarded.
A few days later, a bomb exploded in
Birla House where Gandhi was holding his evening prayers, but it caused no
injuries. However, his assassin, a Marathi Chitpavan Brahmin by the name of
Nathuram Godse, was not so easily deterred. Gandhi, quite characteristically,
refused additional security, and no one could defy his wish to be allowed to
move around unhindered. In the early evening hours of 30 January 1948, Gandhi
met with India’s Deputy Prime Minister and his close associate in the freedom
struggle, Vallabhai Patel, and then proceeded to his prayers. That evening, as
Gandhi’s time-piece, which hung from one of the folds of his dhoti
(loin-cloth), was to reveal to him, he was uncharacteristically late to his
prayers, and he fretted about his inability to be punctual. At 10 minutes past
5 o’clock, with one hand each on the shoulders of Abha and Manu, who were known
as his ‘walking sticks’, Gandhi commenced his walk towards the garden where the
prayer meeting was held. As he was about to mount the steps of the podium,
Gandhi folded his hands and greeted his audience with a namaskar; at that
moment, a young man came up to him and roughly pushed aside Manu. Nathuram
Godse bent down in the gesture of an obeisance, took a revolver out of his
pocket, and shot Gandhi three times in his chest. Bloodstains appeared over
Gandhi’s white woolen shawl; his hands still folded in a greeting, Gandhi
blessed his assassin: He Ram! He Ram! As Gandhi fell, his faithful time-piece
struck the ground, and the hands of the watch came to a standstill. They
showed, as they had done before, the precise time: 5:12 P.M.
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