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By Dada Dharmadhikari 
  
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(This article tells us about the three symbols 
of revolution that Gandhi gave us.  Besides these three symbols, Gandhi has 
taught us about truth, non-violence and personal conduct.  He believed that 
to bring about social transformation the revolutionaries must first 
revolutionize their daily lives and then work towards establishing changes in 
the lives of others.  Gandhi attempted to put the world together through 
his experiments which he humbly titled 'The Story of my Experiments with 
Truth'). 
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The Barrister and the Donkey 
I am reminded in this connection of a very interesting story which I heard 
when I was a young boy. A barrister once lived next-door to a washerman, 
who had a spirited donkey. Now, this donkey used to bray lustily 
several times every night. The poor lawyer could not sleep a wink. He remonstrated with the washerman but the  washerman pleaded. "You 
are a barrister, my good man. You know that a donkey is too stupid to 
listen to reason." So the exasperated lawyer filed a suit for damages 
against the washerman. The counsel for the washerman, while examining the 
complainant, asked, "How many times does this donkey bray?"  The complainant 
replied,  "May be 4 to 5 times in the night." 
        
Question : For how many minutes at a time? 
        
Answer : Say, 2 or 3 minutes. 
Thereupon, the counsel for defence said, "Well, that works up to about 20 
minutes in all.  Your case that you cannot sleep a wink during the whole 
night does not stand." 
"But" contented the barrister, "What about the 
time that is lost in waiting for the donkey to bray?"   
The Judge dismissed the complaint with the remark 
that the complainant is super-sensitive. 
 Now the barrister was at his wit's end. As a last resort, he appealed to 
the highest tribunal of Almighty God. He prayed to his God to kill the washerman's donkey and made solemn promise to treat the priests to a rich dish 
of sweets. But Providence knew its business better. One morning, the 
pet spaniel of the barrister breathed its last. Distressed out of his 
wits, the barrister bitterly complained, "Oh God, thou hast ruled this 
world for countless millennia and yet hast not the sense to distinguish a donkey 
form a dog!"   
 
Denominational Truth 
Our faith in God is thus not even skin-deep.  
Instead of submitting to his will, we want to make Him the instrument of our will. Besides this, when 
there are two or more Gods, one man's God becomes another man's Devil. This gives rise to denominations. Truth is not denominational. When 
Truth becomes denominational, it degenerates into a new orthodox Hence, 
Gandhi began to maintain that Truth is God instead of asserting that God is 
Truth. 
 
Truth and Non-violence 
There can be no compulsion, no coercion in the 
search for Truth. One is very eager to understand and appreciate another man's 
point of view. You may win an argument and lose a friend. You can even cut a 
man's head off but you cannot silence the voice of Truth. That is how Gandhi 
came to Non-violence in his 
 search for Truth.  He said Truth and 
Non-violence are two sides of the same coin. 
 
Truth knows no frontiers         
 
Truth is neither yours nor mine. It is neither Western nor Eastern. It knows no frontiers. That is why Gandhi could draw inspiration from the Sermon on the mount as well 
from the Bhagwad Gita.  In his exposition of the 11th verse of the 4th 
Chapter of the Gita, he says,  
"I should plead for justice and atonement in case 
of my own transgressions; but in the case of other, I should pray for mercy and 
forgiveness." This is the true spirit of humanity. Gandhi looked 
upon the faults and short-comings of other as his own. This was 
identification in a very different sense. 
Those committed to an ideology refuse to share the 
throne even with their God. They cannot tolerate two sovereigns. The Bard 
of the "Whiteman's Burden" sang 
        
The East is East and the  West is West 
        
And ne'er the twain shall meet. 
He lost sight of the elementary fact that our 
planet is a globe. And that, there is neither 'East nor West'.  Gandhi 
looked upon the world as one glorious neighborhood. He therefore belonged to no 
particular clime or country.  In that sublime sense, he was 'anonymous', 
because he was universal..    
 
Three Symbols of Revolution given by 
Gandhi 
Every revolution has its symbols, which are an 
index of its objectives. Gandhi gave us three symbols : (1) Community Prayer (2) 
The spinning Wheel (3) The Broom-stick. 
Prayer stands for invoking the inner strength of 
men for the good of one another, the wheel for productive labour and the 
broom-stick for the abolition of social inequalities based on birth. 
 
Community Prayer 
To Gandhi, this world itself was the temple of God 
and not 'Gods'.  For when truth becomes denominational, it degenerates into 
dogma and freezes into a new orthodoxy. "Dogma" says Mao, "is worse than 
cow-dung. Cow-dung can be used as manure."  To seek to impose a certain 
ideology on men's minds is to violate the soul.  Prayer precludes all 
indoctrination. 
 
The Spinning Wheel 
The spinning wheel stands for productive labour and for a face-to-face 
community. Society is after all relationship of man with man. The 
spinning wheel represents Gandhi's conception of a new relationship between men. He sought with all the earnestness he could command, to transform the existing 
relations of production and distribution. He was against anonymity, de-personalisation and de-humanisation in the process of production and 
distribution. Gandhi's conception of de-centralised social order was thus 
essentially different from the decentralization as generally understood. 
 
The Broom-stick 
The broom-stick is an instrument of the most unclean and the most despised 
social service rendered by the sweepers of India. It is thus the symbol of 
social equality. It reminds us of our common humanity, our oneness with 
'the lowliest and the lost'. The fundamental unity of all men is the 
plinth and foundation of all human relationship and human intercourse.  It 
ought to be the motive force behind all our efforts of social change. 
 
Individual Conduct to Change Heart 
Gandhi introduces an entirely new dimension in the technique of social 
transformation, in other words, in the technique of revolution. He 
insisted on individual conduct. He said that "the values which the 
revolution sought to establish must first be translated into the daily life of 
those who sought to bring about revolution". A change of context was not enough. "Change in the daily life of those who sought to change the context was 
essential."  This was the first and preliminary condition of bringing about 
a change of heart in those who were ranged on the other side. He declared,  
"Having flung aside the sword, it is only the cup of love that I can offer to 
those who oppose me."    
 
Gandhi's Experiments with Truth 
I shall close with an interesting anecdote of my 
school days. Our geography teacher sometimes taught us a very interesting game 
in one of his geography lessons. He had a knack of arranging pieces of cardboard 
specially designed to make up a map of the world. He put together those pieces 
of cardboard in their proper order and asked us to have a good look at the map 
of the world, with a view to be able to re-arrange them for ourselves. He then 
shuffled the pieces of cardboard as we shuffle the playing cards and asked us to 
re-arrange the map of the world. Most of us were at a loss. But there was one of 
exceptionally clever boy. He looked at the reverse of one of the pieces of 
cardboard. To his intense delight, he found that on the other side of each 
piece of cardboard there was a limb of the human body.  He at once 
concluded that on the reverse of the map of the world was the figure of man. He 
immediately tried of put together the man and in that attempt he was able to put 
together the world also. That is what Gandhi attempted to do through all his 
magnificent experiments which, with characteristic humility, he called "My 
Experiments with Truth". 
Source: Philosophy of Sarvodaya, Acharya Dada 
Dharmadhikari, Popular Prakashan, 2000 
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