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TRAVELS WITH GANDHI

HELEN DALLEY follows the pivotal events that shaped the father of India

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MOHANDAS ‘MAHATMA’ GANDHI,

champion of justice, father of India, began life as a shy, unremarkab­le child in Porbandar, Gujarat. He was born into a humble household, the youngest son of his father’s fourth wife. At school, he proved to be a mediocre student – good at English, average at maths, bad at geography – while at home he rebelled against his devout Hindu upbringing by stealing, smoking cigarettes and eating meat.

Eager to explore the world and improve his situation; Gandhi set off on a threeweek crossing aboard the SS Clyde to study law at Inner Temple, London, in 1888 – promising his mother he wouldn’t drink alcohol or eat red meat while he was away.

He spent the next three years struggling with his identity, feeling awkward about his difference­s and trying to fit in with Western fashions and social norms. His vegetarian­ism was another source of strife, until he discovered a vegetarian restaurant and other vegetarian­s in Farringdon. It was a turning point: among a group of

outsiders, the shy youth was galvanised to defend his diet, sharpening his debating skills as a board member of the Vegetarian Society, writing essays and organising vegetarian feasts. (Farringdon today is a lot richer, but remains a bastion of progressiv­e politics.)

Three years later, armed with a law degree, Gandhi returned to India, but didn’t possess the bullish confidence needed to succeed in Mumbai’s competitiv­e job market. So, in 1893, he accepted an offer from a law firm in South Africa. It was here, first in Durban and then in Johannesbu­rg, that the Mahatma Gandhi we know today was truly born.

Gandhi had a crash course in the racial oppression that was rife in South Africa. The young lawyer was ordered to remove his turban in a court in Durban (he refused). A week later he took a train to Pretoria and was forced to move to a third- class compartmen­t despite holding a first- class ticket. He again refused and was ejected from the train in Pietermari­tzburg, where he spent a freezing night in the waiting room. It was the last straw. For the next two decades, Gandhi was committed to ending the towering injustices towards his own people. It also determined his class of travel: ‘ The first- class life I abhor,’ he wrote.

After achieving moderate success, he returned to India in 1915, where his unique brand of activism was directed towards unjust British rule (and against the terrible state of third- class rail travel). His most famous act of civil disobedien­ce was the Salt March in 1930. That 24- day, 380-kilometre journey from Sabarmati, a suburb of Ahmedabad, to Dandi protested against the law prohibitin­g Indians from collecting or selling salt. Staff in hand and setting a brisk pace, Gandhi determined­ly led 79 followers – which eventually swelled to a three-kilometre-long procession – to the sea to make their own salt.

By now, Gandhi had also permanentl­y adopted the dhoti (a loose cloth wrapped around the waist), sandals and shawl, which was itself a form of protest. ‘Copying the European dress is a sign of our degradatio­n, humiliatio­n and weakness,’ he believed. He wouldn’t budge – not even for the Pope, who refused an audience with Gandhi when he travelled to Rome in 1931 on the grounds that his appearance was not up to scratch.

A year after Indian independen­ce was declared, Gandhi was assassinat­ed in 1948 in Delhi; but his influence continues to be felt. As Nelson Mandela said in 2007, ‘In a world driven by violence and strife, Gandhi’s message of peace and nonviolenc­e holds the key to human survival in the 21st century.’

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 ??  ?? 平權之路左圖上 起順時針:南非比勒陀利亞;倫敦內殿律師學院;德里的國立甘地博物館;甘地領導民眾進行「鹽之長征」;在南非當律師的年輕甘­地
平權之路左圖上 起順時針:南非比勒陀利亞;倫敦內殿律師學院;德里的國立甘地博物館;甘地領導民眾進行「鹽之長征」;在南非當律師的年輕甘­地
 ??  ?? Move in the rights direction Clockwise from above left: Pretoria, South Africa; Inner Temple, London; National Gandhi Museum, Delhi; Gandhi leading the Salt March; as a young lawyer in South Africa
Move in the rights direction Clockwise from above left: Pretoria, South Africa; Inner Temple, London; National Gandhi Museum, Delhi; Gandhi leading the Salt March; as a young lawyer in South Africa

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