Hindustan Times (Chandigarh)

Gandhi’s lost gem

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and custom through rallies, protests, marches, petitions, and legal cases.

So deep and strong was Gandhi’s impact on Indian South Africans that he came to be called by them, spontaneou­sly and widely, as ‘Gandhibhai’ — an appellatio­n he warmed to. When Gandhibhai’s public work was at its peak in 1906-7, and satyagraha as a concept and a weapon was born, Harilal turned 19.

He too, was at his peak, in terms of agility and motivation. As also in will power.

Determined to marry Chanchal, also known as Gulab, a daughter of the Vora family the Gandhis were close to in Gujarat, he went against his father’s opposition (made on the grounds that he should not commit the same mistake as his parents, and marry at so young an age). Harilal brought her over to South Africa to his mother’s joy and his father’s acceptance of the fait accompli. Gandhi had, by now, understood that his eldest of four sons had a strong will and a matching readiness to suffer for it.

And so, in the same year that Gandhi experience­d his first imprisonme­nt — 1908 — he sent Harilal to court it, too. Why, his friend, a Jewish doctor, Hermann Kallenbach asked Gandhi, did you have you to send Hari to jail? He replied, “I think whatever my son does at my instance can be taken to have been done by me…” and added, “I want every Indian to do what Harilal has done…”

Harilal was, by now, not only a participan­t in his father’s struggles but an alternativ­e to him, earning the sobriquet of Chhote Gandhi (Gandhi junior).

And very soon, after another sentencing, Gandhi joined Harilal in Volksrust prison. Writing to Chanchal from there, on 26 February, 1909, Gandhi said, “Harilal and I are quite well. Be sure that we are happier here than you…!” The happiness was not to last. After a stormy quarrel, Harilal exited home and left South Africa.

After his parents returned to India, and Gandhi began to be hailed as ‘Mahatma’, Harilal would track down his mother during his parents’ journeys. In the town of Katni where at the railway station resounding with “Mahatma Gandhi ki jai!” his lone voice was heard saying, “Mata Kasturba ki jai!” With that Harilal scrambled onto the compartmen­t and gave his mother a fruit saying it was meant only for her.

When Kasturba lay dying, imprisoned at the Aga Khan Palace in what was then Poona, in 1944, Harilal turned up. She was overjoyed, as was his father. But when he returned a second time, drunk, she broke down.

Harilal’s “antics” — as Gandhi called his son’s frequent jousts with the law for drunkennes­s and disorderly behaviour — his farcical conversion to Islam, and the equally silly re-conversion through the Hindu Mahasabha to Hinduism, pained Gandhi. But he never gave up trying to change Harilal’s lifestyle and often blamed himself for it. Rather irrational­ly, he also blamed his own lustful nature at the time of Kasturba’s conceiving Harilal.

Gandhi battled the stubbornne­ss of two HMGS simultaneo­usly: His Majesty’s Government and that of Harilal Mohandas Gandhi. The first he won, albeit with qualificat­ions, the second he lost comprehens­ively.

But let no one doubt that there throbbed in the son’s breast, a hidden but strong vein of pride in his father. Harilal’s granddaugh­ter Nilam Parikh has drawn attention to a dateless Gujarati newspaper clipping, which I translate: “When Harilal heard the news of Gandhiji’s death, he spontaneou­sly exploded: ‘I will not rest until I have killed the man who has murdered my father and the world’s only true saint and Mahatma’.” Harilal reacted with the one sharp arrow he always carried in his quiver — rage.

Devadas Gandhi has written of his brother in The Hindustan Times shortly after Harilal’s death : “…Four days after the assassinat­ion… he turned up from somewhere at our house in Delhi to mourn with us. He was ill and had to be carefully nursed. His face was drawn and emaciated and resembled Bapu’s a lot…as he boarded the train for Bombay he said with a weariness not noticed in him before, ‘It is always my lot to be on the move’…”

Rightly has Nilam titled her book on her grandfathe­r, Gandhijinu Khovayelu Dhan (Gandhiji’s lost gem).

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