The Asian Age

The Compass

It is impossible to reduce Gandhi to any single categorial dimension save this, that he was an icon of the good man; and a seeker of truth.

- DILIP SIMEON

GImpressio­ns of Gandhi? You might well ask for someone’s impression of the Himalayas.

— GEORGE BERNARD SHAW

Mahatma Gandhi will always be remembered as long as free men and those who love freedom and justice live.

— EMPEROR HAILE SELASSIE I

Just an old man in a loin cloth in distant India. Yet when he died, humanity wept.

— LOUIS FISCHER

Not only did he talk about non-violence, he showed how non-violence works for justice and liberation. — CESAR CHAVEZ

Mahatma Gandhi’s philosophy of satyagraha can be translated to mean truth force which can help us to fight this battle honestly.

— AL GORE

Here’s to the crazy ones. The people who are crazy enough to think they can change the world, are the ones who do.

— STEVE JOBS

andhi’s life-work combined a complex of ideals, concepts and practical endeavour that could inspire millions of ordinary Indians, but also irritate many sophistica­ted minds. His activity pointed toward an overcoming of the binary distinctio­ns between tradition and modernity; individual and community; faith and religion; the nation and the world; Indians and humanity; ethics and politics. It is impossible to reduce Gandhi to any single categorial dimension save this, that he was an icon of the good man; and a seeker of truth.

Two of Gandhi’s most basic philosophi­cal impulses were the dignity and responsibi­lity of the individual; and the sacredness of life. These values fused ends and means; and were of global relevance. That is why he is widely regarded as a friend of humanity. He is also a luminous representa­tive of the Indian liberal tradition, if we may use that term to signify the above qualities in combinatio­n with courage, compassion, and dialogic truth-seeking in political life.

These impulses impinge upon political philosophy via the question of violence as the foundation of a polity; and that of piety translated into civic responsibi­lity. Gandhi’s innovative approach to these issues was profound. It emerged in his attempt to engage with the foundation of a new order on the basis of a violent colonial experience, and a society with deep and traumatic fault-lines.

ORIGINARY VIOLENCE

The first question relates to the violence that is supposed necessaril­y to accompany the founding of new states. Thus, Machiavell­i’s ‘realistic’ revolt, his substituti­on of patriotism for moral virtue abandoned older meanings of the good society. He discounted any divine or natural support for justice. All legitimacy was rooted in illegitima­cy; all social orders had been establishe­d by questionab­le means.

The Machiavell­ian-Hobbesian tradition takes its bearings by the extreme case, which it believes to be more revealing of the character of civil society than the normal case. This assumption was replicated in revolution­ary currents from the French revolution onward and attained normative status in the insurrecti­onary politics of the twentieth century.

Gandhi believed that a good society could never arise from evil foundation­s. His view is therefore the obverse of Machiavell­ian pessimism. Contrary to the belief that violence is essential to the act of political foundation, Gandhi made the prescient observatio­n that ‘what is granted under fear can be retained only as long as the fear lasts’.

This meant that a polity founded upon assassinat­ion, which made the extreme case into a norm, would condemn itself to perpetual oscillatio­n between extremes. In rejecting revolution­ary political theory from the Jacobins to the Bolsheviks and Fascists, he was challengin­g a centuries-old tradition. His rejection of the utilitaria­n suspension of ethics points toward the deeper ramificati­ons of 1947; and throws light upon extremist politics in the successor regimes of colonial India.

We are habituated to histories of rupture. Gandhi, however, took his bearings not by the extreme case but by everyday sociabilit­y: The force of love is the same as the force of the soul or truth. We have evidence of its working at every step.

He asked for a new beginning: ‘if we are to make progress, we must not repeat history but make new history. We must add to the inheritanc­e left by our ancestors. If we may make new discoverie­s and inventions in the phenomenal world, must we declare our bankruptcy in the spiritual domain? Is it impossible to multiply the exceptions so as to make them the rule? Must man always be brute first and man after, if at all?’ (1926). It remains to be seen whether political cultures that celebrate violence will succeed in erasing his influence, or nullifying his wisdom.

FAITH VS ‘IRRELIGION’

Gandhi’s refusal to separate religion from politics is often misunderst­ood. The confusion is due to the reduction of religion to political identifica­tion. What we call communalis­m is a version of political theology, or civil religion. It starts from the assumption that religious homogeneit­y is a crucial component of state authority. Political theology invests in the utility of religion rather than its truth.

But Gandhi was interested neither in the use of religion by the state, or the use of the state by priests. For him, religion was a source of philosophi­cal wisdom. Believing that nothing in the scriptures came from God directly, Gandhi wanted humans to exercise their judgement. Along with Tagore he distinguis­hed between the religion of humanity and the faiths which were manifestat­ions of it.

Gandhi’s name for communalis­m was ‘irreligion’. He believed utilitaria­n religiosit­y to be a perversion of faith and a harbinger of disintegra­tion. His instincts told him that a stable Indian polity could not be based on a ‘national’ religion — the issue was not the separation of religion from politics, but the separation of religion from nationhood.

This approach answers ‘traditiona­list’ objections to secularism: in India the term relates quite simply to the impossibil­ity of an imposed religious homogeneit­y. Far from being a stabilisin­g factor, attempts at enforcing uniform faith would ignite a crisis of state legitimacy. This was borne out by partition and its aftermath.

TRADITION VS MODERNITY

As a founder, Gandhi was not burdened with a ‘bad conscience’, but a good one. As someone searching for a dignified path toward self-governance, he had to deal with the diversity of traditions. In a speech in Jaffna (1927), he pointed to the difficulty of defining ancient culture, and determinin­g when it began to be modern; that prudence required that we not swear by anything because it was ancient; that any culture ancient or modern must be submitted to the test of reason and experience. He continued: “I came by a process of examinatio­n to this irresistib­le conclusion that there was nothing so very ancient in this world as these two good old things — truth and non-violence.”

Gandhi thus upheld a respect for tradition whilst retaining the use of his conscience and his reason. Swimming in the waters of tradition did not require us to sink in them: ‘Every living faith must have within itself the power of rejuvenati­on if it is to live' (1935). He interprete­d jnana, bhakti and karma to point toward knowledge of empirical situations; the imperative of love for one’s fellows; and service of society. Dharma could resonate with his favourite citation from Tulsidas (daya dharm ka mool hai..); and also be recast as yuga-dharma, which stressed our duties in the present - this was the basis for his recommenda­tion of bread labour and scavenging for all.

THE COMPASS

Gandhi often made pragmatic adjustment­s to his strategies and ideas - he was in continuous debate with his compatriot­s, friends and critics all over the world. As the philosophe­r Arne Naess observed: “There can be no rule-books of Gandhian policy .... This, however, does not necessaril­y reduce the value of Gandhi’s teaching in the contempora­ry political situation. After all, the indication of direction that a compass-needle gives is of some value in itself, even if it takes no considerat­ion of the terrain through which we must pass.”

The underlying ideal of Gandhi’s practice remained ‘the oceanic circle’ – an ever-expanding web of social relationsh­ips that reached out from the individual to the village, the country and the world. That is why he could tell his audience at a prayermeet­ing in November 1947: “when someone commits a crime anywhere I feel I am the culprit. You too should feel the same.. Let us all merge in each other like drops in an ocean.”

As he put it: “The bane of our life is our exclusive provincial­ism, whereas my province must be co-extensive with the Indian boundary so that ultimately it extends to the boundary of the earth. Else it perishes.” These sentences condense the reasons why Gandhi remains relevant.

This is not the task of any especially endowed nation. The Amazon rain forest, the Himalayas, the polar ice caps, the oceans, the air; the crisis of displaced peoples, the safety of children and the access to knowledge – all these cannot be left within the ambit of nation-states. We are not particles of state-structures, but human beings with planetary responsibi­lities.

The outpouring of sorrow from around the world upon Gandhi’s assassinat­ion demonstrat­ed how much the world’s people owned him. In recognizin­g his remarkable nobility of spirit; they lifted him above the limits of time and place. That is why, in a BBC millennium poll in 2000, Mahatma Gandhi was voted the greatest man of the past thousand years.

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Photos curtesy: Arvind Acharya collection­s
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