The Sunday Guardian

Gopal book gives peek into Gandhi’s life

Gandhi Restless As Mercury is an extension of Gandhiji’s autobiogra­phy.

-

us to send a brief note covering, say, a foolscap sheet of all we had to say on the question as a whole. He would read it and let us know.” Churchill did not do so.

During these years, Gandhi’s character, personalit­y, family life and decision to practice celibacy and his becoming a trusted spokesman of the humiliated Indian community are highlighte­d. He takes part in the Angloboer war and the Zulu rebellion. He starts “Indian Opinion” and establishe­d the Phoenix settlement. And Tolstoy Farm later. The word Satyagraha is invented by Gandhi.

Book four is devoted to 1909 only. Gandhi does a lot of reading during the year including Socrates. The book that changed his life was,

“Unto This Last” by Ruskin. He also read Tolstoy and correspond­ed with him. But the most moving parts are about Kasturba’s very serious illness in November. She had suffered a haemorrhag­e and needed her husband. He was in jail. To his wife he wrote, “Beloved Kastur, I have received Mr. West’s telegram today about your illness (Gandhi was in jail). It cuts my heart. I am very much grieved but I am not in a position to go to nurse you. I have offered my all to the satyagrah struggle. My coming out there is out of question. I can come only if I pay the fine, which I must not. If you keep courage and take necessary nutrition, you will recover. If, however, my ill luck so has it that you pass away, I should only say that there would be nothing in your doing so in your separation from me while I am alive. I love you so dearly that even if you are dead, you will be alive to me. Your soul is deathless. I repeat what I have frequently told you and assure you that if you do succumb to your illness, I will not marry again. Time and again I have told you that you must quietly breathe your last with faith in God. If you die, even that death of yours will be a sacrifice to the cause of satyagrah. My struggle is not merely political. It is religious and therefore quite pure. It does not matter much whether one dies in it or lives. I hope and expect that you will also think likewise and not be unhappy. I ask this of you. Mohandas”.

I like to imagine that at times the grandson must have felt that his grandfathe­r went too far.

Read this book. It will make a better man of you.

Gopal is anything but a bore. His humility is structural, not an act. For me it is a great pleasure to have him as a friend. He is sixteen years younger than me and sixteen years wiser.

 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India