1920 was The year in India when
Mohandas Gandhi launched his signature politics with Non-Cooperation
Movement against India’s British regime. The call was motivated by
India’s recent and troubled past of military atrocity in Punjab,
allies’ betrayal of Islamic Khalifa, and the promulgation of
legislations to stifle a rising India into submission. The crux of
the call, Gandhi said, was directed inwardly; it aimed at
self-purification and penance. It was necessitated with a view to
break India’s complicity in her own subjugation. “The English,” in
Gandhi’s ideological assumption, as he had put down in Hind
Swaraj, “have not taken India; we have given it to them. They
are not in India because of their strength, but because we keep
them”.
The call received its energy from
contemporary politics. But it had its roots that extended to the
time when the British had begun Indian expedition proclaiming ‘trade
and not territory’ as their goal. It seemed long ago and yet it was
so near that debris of its impact was all visible, in the
destruction of Indian industry, in the pauperization of Indian
people and in the faminisation of Indian economy. If anything that
most succinctly defined the British rule, it was its role in the
destruction of the hand-spinning. It was this that drove Gandhi’s
politics and that made his criticism of the British rule harsh. He
saw the pernicious impact caused by a Satanic Empire that, in Indian
metaphor, was the Ravan Raj.
A year later in 1921, Gandhi gave an
inspired twist to his campaign against the British rule. At the
height of his campaign, Gandhi called for the actual destruction of
foreign clothes as a mark of self-respect. The foreign clothes,
Gandhi averred, were contaminated with gory blood of Indians of
yore. The only way one could now redeem one’s national existence was
incinerating the individual stock of such clothes. On 31st
July 1921, he personally lit bonfire of a huge collection of foreign
cloth on the ground of a friendly Bombay textile mill. The
electrifying spectacle was witnessed by a sea of humanity that had
worn coarse and white khadi. For Gandhi the exhilarating moment was
a “soul-stirring sight” and he called it a yajna.
The central thesis of the
non-cooperation was adoption of Charkha and replacement of foreign
apparel by hand-spun hand-woven fabric of Khadi.
Through his speeches, writings, and
the weekly silence, Gandhi brought home one point to his Indian
audience: The foreign cloth revived “Black Memories” and therefore
must be destroyed. In his speeches, Gandhi warned the public that
“Foreign cloth constitutes our slavery. You should throw it
off...Regard foreign cloth as no better than beef or liquor.” His
political language was replete with reference to foreign cloth as
“sin,” “filth....dirt....plague,” “pollution,” “a badge of our
slavery” which required to be discarded,
burnt and against which an
aversion needed to be created.
The depth of the injury caused by the
East India Company and the magnitude of suffering that India then
went through loomed large over Gandhi’s consciousness and politics.
By whatever means - fair or foul - the Company crippled the weaving
industry, accumulated wealth, waged wars, acquired control of ports,
monopolised trade and finally established their rule over India. The
country was enslaved for satisfying the greed of the foreign cloth
manufactures. India’s indigenous cloth industry “was made to
die”. The Company’s persecution was so cruel that Indian craftsmen
were obliged to cut off their own thumbs, starvation and lives, the
indigenous consumers got tempted to the imported clothes. “Who was
tempted at the sight of their silver? Who bought their goods?
History testifies that we did all this.” Indians therefore were
required to perform a double penance; one for the oppression the
ancestor producers had to endure and second, for the sin of having
succumbed to Satanic influences of the foreign manufactures. If the
former meant destruction of foreign clothes, latter required taking
up spinning as a National Duty and Khadi as the State Dress. In such
a scheme incineration of the foreign clothes was as much a sacrament
as the spinning of the Khadi yarn.
In his public speech delivered on the
occasion, Gandhi, who was yet to strip himself to the minimal
clothing that became his iconic trademark for all his remaining life
and beyond, hoped that the fire would not die out but similar fire
would be lit “every week.....in every town and every street of
India.” That process was to continue, was the pinnacle of and was
preceded by one of the most aggressive and determined campaigns in
the history of modern India. The campaign had progressively
accredited to itself an accusation for fomenting hatred and violence
against the fellow human beings and their creations. He was accused
of fostering narrow nationalism against India’s Vasudhaiv
Katumbakam. And, he was also advised that instead of burning the
clothes he should give it to the poor. The volley of accusation came
from friends and foes alike. While friends were pained, foes felt
vindicated at the sight of Gandhi’s violence, manifested in his act
of lighting the pile.
“Cleansing of filth is not violence,”
Gandhi’s was a point–blank reply. “It is a mockery to ask India not
to hate when in the same breath India’s most sacred feelings are
contemptuously brushed aside,” Gandhi wrote in response to
criticism. He shrugged off all oppositions, even from so close a
friend as Andrews who advocated giving the foreign clothes to poor
instead of consigning them in fire. “The central point in burning,”
Gandhi wrote to Andrews, “is to create an utter disgust with
ourselves that we have thoughtlessly decked ourselves at the expense
of the poor”. About the burning itself Gandhi said “it was a noble
act nobly performed.” With this one act, Gandhi said, people were
“silently and unconsciously transferring their hatred of sinners to
sin itself.” Burning was a life-saving “surgical operation.” If
there was any anger or ill will, the fire gave it a disciplined
vent. Fire was symbolic of transformation of impotent hatred into
conscious self-pity. Giving to the poor discarded foreign cloth was
like giving “discarded costly toilet brushes to them.” “Such an
inartistic and incongruous” charity was an insult to their sense of
patriotism and the state of poverty. The sin was not the foreign
fineries nor even the foreign conquest but folly of Indians falling
to the conquerors’ bait in the past.
Past was an important reference point
for Gandhi just as it is for the post-independent propendent
proponents of Hindutva. In the contemporary contention for hegemony
it is the present’s necessity to call for the past to stand a
witness. Gandhi called for facts from past, aptly supported by
historical research of Naoroji and Rajani Dutt, to support his
argument that the British machinations rather than their machinery
killed India’s flourishing craft of cloth–making and impoverished
her. In drawing from past, Gandhi was as much legitimate as are the
Hindutva exponents. The politics of Hindutva ostensibly revolves
around the historical misdeeds of the medieval Islamic rules. Their
temple-demolishing spree, the present-day cadres grieve, was an
affront to Hindutva. The only way a mistake of past can be redeemed
is by avenging in present a past-wrong. Gandhi too said much
the same. But, while Gandhi avenged through atonement for having
succumbed to temptation and turmoil, the politics of Hindutva
avenges through ethnic cleansing. Gandhi not only fixed
responsibility for destruction but also attempted reinstating the
economy to tilt balance against the imperial needs. Responsibility
was laid not on the perpetrators of the destruction but on Indians
who caved in to pressure and temptation from the British traders.
So avenging the wrong perpetrated in the past did not mean to hate
the present-day British rulers but reclaiming an empowered self by
stripping all weaknesses. On the other hand, the ideology of
Hindutva directs its destructive energy against the “Babar’s Santan,”
the Muslims. By anointing the Muslims of today so it holds not just
the Mughal ruler but the whole Islamic population of India
responsible for India’s medieval “ignominy.” In this indiscriminate
demarcation of enemy, there is no inward looking but simple
blame–displacement.
Gandhi drew a distinction between bad
actions and bad men. Gandhi’s politics, as he tirelessly repeated
from umpteen platforms, was “directed not against men but against
measures.” It was not directed against the Governors, but against
the system they administered. The roots of his politics lay not in
hatred but in justice, if not in love. “And so I hope this great
movement....has made it clear. ....that whilst we may attack
measures and systems, we may not, must not, attack men. Imperfect
ourselves, we must be tender towards others and be slow to impute
motives.” If he did use harsh language, Gandhi said, they were
condemnation free of any evil intention. Even on 31 July 1921 when
passion ran high at the sight of that massive bonfire of foreign
clothes, there were English men and women on the platform along with
Gandhi. Gandhi was striving to establish Swaraj in India by
appealing to moral force to attain which he relied upon selfishness
and sacrifice. “We should try to end British rule not by vising them
with punishment but by acquiring strength through
self-purification.” It is this fine distinction that needs to be
understand by the free India even when it sets itself on the agenda
of correcting the past. While Gandhi’s destruction of foreign cloth
was meant to strengthen India as a nation, Hindutva’s destruction of
Babri mosque brought her civil chaos and bloody reprisal.
- Gandhi Marg, January-March 2005 |