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      By Y V Satyanarayana 
      
      THIS ARTICLE IS 
      intended to explore Gandhi's technique of conflict resolution and his 
      vision of an ideal society. I have also made an attempt to analyse and 
      compare the vision of Marx and Gandhi about the future of mankind. Since 
      Marx and Gandhi are the outspoken champions of the interests of the 
      down-trodden and exploited humanity, who fought in their own way against 
      social suffering, political subjugation, and economic exploitation, it is 
      quite natural for them to have some similar views, if not identical ones. 
      They are not only concerned for the poor and oppressed humanity, but also 
      revolutioned the character of philosophy and brought it to the realm of 
      social action. The history of mankind shows how great men have always 
      struggled and fought against the prevailing social evils and human 
      sufferings. Of such great men in human history, the 19th century produced 
      two outstanding personalities-Marx and Gandhi. The great men while being 
      products of history also act as the agents of history. Marx and Gandhi 
      responded to the challenges of the given historical situations, realized 
      the historical necessities of their times and tried to actualize the needs 
      and aspirations of the people of their times in their own way. Describing 
      the nature of great man, Hegel says:  
      
      The great man 
      of the age is the one who can put into words the will of his age, tell his 
      age what its will is, and accomplish it. What he does is the heart and 
      essence of his age, he" actualizes his age1 
      
      What is a 
      conflict? A conflict may be said as a serious disagreement between the 
      opinions .or interests of two persons or two groups of persons involved in 
      an issue. 
      
      Gandhi was much 
      concerned to evolve a revolutionary approach to political action and 
      social change. His originality lay in the formulation of a new technique 
      of non-violent non-cooperation or Satyagraha for social action. He 
      believed that Satyagraha is an infallible means for resolving all social, 
      political, and economic evils. As a technique of social action, satyagraha 
      may be applied to resolve the following type of social conflicts: 
      
        - 
        
        conflict 
        between one individual and another individual   
        - 
        
        conflict 
        between an individual and a group   
        - 
        
        conflict 
        between one group and another group or between two classes  
        - 
        
        conflict 
        between a section of the community and the state   
        - 
        
        conflict 
        between one nation and another nation   
       
      
      Unlike Marx; 
      Gandhi never regarded all history as the history of class struggle or all 
      social conflicts as fundamentally antagonistic in their nature. 
      Nevertheless he was aware of the class conflicts and wanted to resolve 
      them or minimise them by nonviolent means. Marx and Gandhi held a similar 
      view that no social conflict can be resolved unless the sufferers realise 
      their suffering and their strength, constitute themselves into a class or 
      an organisation refuse to cooperate with the evil and demonstrate their 
      power to the evil-doers or exploiters. Thus arousing of consciousness, 
      continuing them with a powerful organisation are the more essential 
      phenomena in the Marxian and Gandhian techniques of social action.  
      
      Both these 
      thinkers recognised the existence of social conflicts as a fact and 
      advocated their own methods to resolve them. They believed that 
      exploitation of the masses can be extinguished by the exploited class 
      itself and, therefore, they put the burden of their programme of action on 
      the shoulders of the exploited class. To that extent the "nonviolent non 
      cooperation or satyagraha" of Gandhi and the 
		
 "class struggle" of Marx are 
      based on the same technique of social action. 
      
       Gandhi 
      identified two areas in which class conflict is more conspicuous: 
      
        - 
        
        conflict 
        between capitalists and workers in industry.   
        - 
        
        conflict 
        between landlords and tenants in agriculture.  
       
      
      Gandhi's method 
      of conflict resolution is based on a greater understanding and love 
      between the two parties involved in it. He prescribed the trusteeship 
      formula to the rich and the weapon of nonviolent Non-cooperation or 
      Satyagraha to the poor and exploited to bring change in the attitude of 
      the rich. Satyagraha is a technique of action wherein the ideal of love 
      would reign in the place of hatred and killing. It is based on truth, 
      works through nonviolence and achieves its end by converting or compelling 
      the opponent through self-suffering. 
       
      
      Capital and 
      Labour 
      
      Gandhi pleaded 
      for mutual love between the capital and the labour. He demanded equal 
      status and dignity for capital and labour to avoid conflict between them. 
      Why should million rupees put together be more than million men put 
      together?, he questioned. Without labour, gold, silver, and copper are a 
      useless burden. A nation may do without its millionaires and without its 
      capitalists but a nation can never do with out its labour. The labour is 
      far superior to capital because it is less dependent on capital than the 
      latter is on the labour. The capital at present is able to control labour 
      because it has learnt the art of combination before labour. Gandhi thought 
      that if all the labourers could combine in the true nonviolent spirit, 
      capital would inevitably come under their control. He advised the workers 
      to refuse to serve under degrading conditions and for insufficient wages. 
      
      Gandhi, like 
      any other socialist thinker, believed that all forms of property and human 
      accomplishments are either gifts of nature or products of collective 
      social effort. As such, they must belong not to the individual but to 
      society as a whole and therefore should be used for the good for all. He 
      made a distinction between legal ownership and moral ownership. Legally 
      wealth belongs to the owner, but morally to the whole society. In this 
      sense of moral ownership, the labourers are also the owners of the wealth 
      possessed by mill-owners. 
      
      Marx and Gandhi 
      have similar views regarding the institution of private property and they 
      intended to abolish not only private property but also the inheritance of 
      property rights. Marx held that communism "wants to destroy everything 
      which is not capable of being possessed by all as private property."2 Gandhi also expressed a similar view and said: "I can only possess 
      certain things which I know that others who  also want to possess similar 
      things, are able to do so”3 
       
      
      Class 
      Collaboration 
      
      Unlike Marx, 
      Gandhi did not believe in class war. He said there may be conflicts 
      between workers and employees but there was no reason why they should be 
      fomented or intensified. His belief in the innate goodness of man and his 
      capacity for improvement implies that mutual conflict cannot be regarded 
      as the dominant or governing principle of human life. Therefore he argued 
      that "class war" as superfluous and unnecessary. He thought that only 
      through class collaboration can the interests of both the individual and 
      the society as a whole be advanced. If the idea of trusteeship is accepted 
      and implemented by capital and labour, there will be no scope for 
      conflicts. If the workers non-cooperate with the evil of capitalism, it 
      must die of in-animation. Thus Gandhi mainly relied on the nonviolent 
      non-cooperation of the workers to bring about the conversion of 
      capitalists. 
      
      Exploitation of 
      the poor can be extinguished not by effecting the destruction of a few 
      millionaires but by removing the ignorance of the poor and teaching them 
      to non-cooperate with their exploiters. That will convert the exploiters 
      also.4 
      
      Moral 
      Conversion 
      
      Gandhi 
      emphasized the need for adopting pure means for achieving the goals in 
      life. His approach was indeed moral transformation of the individual 
      heart, which is the basis of all social dynamics. He believed that the 
      duty of renunciation differentiates mankind from the beast and held that 
      "man becomes great exactly in the degree in which he works for the welfare 
      of his fellow-men."5 The means proposed by Gandhi are based on 
      voluntary conversion of the exploiting class to the cause of 
      socio-economic justice by moral appeal to their conscience. His emphasis 
      on moral conversion not only includes the moral transformation of the 
      exploiter but also the awakening of the workers and peasants to realize 
      their moral strength. He felt that most of the evils of the modern 
      economic system existed because we co-operated with them or tolerated 
      them. Cooperation with the good and non-cooperation with the evil should 
      be the duty of every citizen. The exploiters would deprive their power of 
      exploitation if, the labourers realize that exploitation could take place 
      only with their cooperation.  
      
      Unlike Gandhi, 
      Marx did not plead for a change of heart because he considered it to be a 
      substitute for one set of illusions to another. He believed that men just 
      simply do not give us their riches on hearing a socialist sermon. Marx, 
      therefore, relied on revolutionary means rather than on reformist means of 
      Gandhi.  
      
      Gandhi's method 
      of Satyagraha is based on three fundamental assumptions: 
      
        - 
        
        Man's nature 
        is not beyond redemption and it can be perfectible.  
        - 
        
        Human nature 
        is one in its essence and responds to love, and   
        - 
        
        What is 
        possible to do for one man is equally possible for all.   
          
       
       
      
      
      Salient Features of Satyagraha 
      
        - 
        
        The 
        underlying principle of satyagraha is not to destroy or injure the 
        opponent, but to convert or win him by sympathy, patience, and 
        self-suffering.   
        - 
        
        The doctrine 
        of satyagraha is based on the metaphysical belief that the tyrant may 
        have power over the body and material possessions of a satyagrahi, but 
        not over his soul. Hence the soul can remain unconquered and 
        unconquerable even when the body is imprisoned.  
        - 
        
        Satyagraha, 
        as a tool of social action, is based on a strong moral content. 
        Self-suffering is its unique character which distinguishes it from all 
        other forms of violent methods of action. Self-suffering is infinitely 
        more superior and powerful than the law of the Jungle for converting the 
        opponent and opening his ears to the voice of reason.  
        - 
        
        
        Self-sacrifice of one innocent man, in a satyagraha movement, is a 
        million times more potent than the sacrifice of a million men who die in 
        the act of killing others.  
        - 
        
        Non-violence 
        is not a negative virtue. It is not merely abstaining from violence or 
        harmlessness, but a positive state of love or doing good even to the 
        evil-doer. In other words, to resist his evil acts without hatred or 
        harm to him.  
        - 
        
        The 
        underlying principle of nonviolence is "hate the sin but not the 
        sinner." The philosophy of nonviolence is aimed at reconstructing, 
        remoulding, and reshaping human nature.  
        - 
        
        Non-violent 
        non-cooperation should not be equated with inaction or non-action. It is 
        an active condemnation of untruth, without violence, anger, or malice. 
        It is an active fight against all wickedness or putting of one's soul 
        against the will of the tyrant to win him over by love.  
        - 
        
        The scope of 
        satyagraha is much wider as it can be applied against our dearest and 
        nearest since there is no hatred or anger or violence in it.  
        - 
        
        The 
        significant feature of satyagraha method lies in arousing consciousness 
        of the masses, continuing education, maintaining the unity of the 
        sufferers and make them as fearless soldiers, providing them with a 
        powerful organization and throw them into heroic battles.  
        - 
        
        The 
        multi-class or non-class character of satyagraha movement is distinct 
        from other methods which mainly consists of the same class.         
          
       
      
      Thus the basic 
      aim of Satyagraha movement is to educate the masses, make them conscious 
      of the exploitation, prepare them into a broad front, provide them a 
      powerful organization, and finally lead them in their struggle against the 
      exploiters. Gandhi's satyagraha method fulfils all the necessary 
      requirements for a revolution, no matter, whether that revolution is 
      nonviolent or violent. Once the masses realize their strength and become 
      conscious of the exploitation they would certainly revolt against the 
      existing social order. Gandhi, as a man of practical affairs, visualized 
      this possibility and rightly predicted that: 
      
      I see coming 
      the days of the rule of the poor, whether that rule be through force of 
      arms or of nonviolence.6 
      
      Whether 
      Satyagraha is a universal panacea or not, it served some positive function 
      in a specific historical context in India. On the political front it 
      contributed a major share for achieving independence to the country, on 
      the social front it minimized the evils of untouchability and communal 
      riots, but it failed to bring any worth mentioning results on the economic 
      front. 
       
      
      Theory of 
      Trusteeship 
      
      Gandhi's theory 
      of trusteeship is based on two basic premises. 
      
        - 
        
        The rich 
        cannot accumulate wealth without the cooperation of the poor.  
        - 
        
        Western 
        socialism and communism are not the last word on the question of mass 
        poverty.  
       
      
      He developed 
      the theory of trusteeship as an alternative to capitalism and scientific 
      socialism. He was opposed to the western capitalism, which necessarily 
      leads to oppression, exploitation, concentration of wealth and inequality. 
      At the same time, he was against an increase in the power of the state 
      which, in his opinion, is essentially based on violence. Gandhi, 
      therefore, wanted to provide the institution of trusteeship as a 
      compromise between private enterprise and state controlled enterprise. 
      
      As an ardent 
      advocate of democracy and adult franchise, he believed that the 
      poverty-stricken people would be able to bring their electoral pressure on 
      government to restructure the society on the basis of trusteeship. He 
      thought that the only alternative to trusteeship would be bloody 
      revolution and put before the capitalists to make a choice between class 
      war arid trusteeship. He warned them: 
      
      A violent and 
      bloody revolution is a certainty one day unless there is a voluntary 
      abdication of riches and  of power that riches gave and sharing them for 
      the common good.7 
       
      
      Conclusion 
      
      Gandhi's 
      thought process was an outcome of his political struggle first in South 
      Africa as a revolt against the practice of apartheid and later in India as 
      a battle against British imperialism for national independence. 
      
      Gandhian 
      thought, as a philosophy of life, did not believe in a set of doctrines 
      claiming finality. It is neither a drama nor a closed system of thought. 
      Since human knowledge and achievements are a continuous process, they need 
      not stop growing with Gandhi. Hence we may not necessarily stick to the 
      ideas of Gandhi expressed in a particular historical situation and from 
      his own experiences of his life. It should be the duty of a true follower 
      of Gandhi, to elaborate, amplify, and even revise his ideas in the light 
      and experiences of contemporary changing situations it the national and 
      international spheres. In this context, it seems to be more appropriate 
      and necessary, to re-read and re-judge his ideas from a new angle of 
      vision on various aspects. 
       
      
      Is Gandhi's 
      Vision of Ramarajya Realizable? 
      
      The 
      imperfections or the existing social order demanded many philosophers and 
      thinkers to visualize an ideal social order of their own conception 
      wherein man can realize all his potentialities and lead a happy and 
      peaceful life. Marx and Gandhi visualized an "exploitation free" society 
      of their own conception. For Marx the ideal society is the "communist 
      society" and for Gandhi it is "Ramarajya". Though Marx and Gandhi wanted 
      an egalitarial social order, they differed in their methods of approach to 
      the realization of their ideal society. 
      
      The ideal 
      society of Gandhi's concept is based on the moral evolution of 
      individuals. Gandhi was of the opinion that his ideal society may not be 
      possible in the present state of, but it can be realizable in future in 
      the course of evolution of human society. If people become genuinely 
      nonviolent, morally elevated, mutually affectionate, learn to cooperate 
      voluntarily among themselves, and averse to anti-social activities then 
      the society will be elevated to a higher plane of culture. Gandhi's vision 
      of ideal society is nothing but an expression of his striving for a just 
      and perfect society, i.e., the Kingdom of righteousness on earth. 
      
      What are the 
      stages through which the evolution of human society has advanced till now 
      and in what direction it tends to in future? 
      
      If we 
      understand the different stages of human evolution, we can arrive at an 
      indication of the next possible stages of evolution of human society. If 
      an answer could be found to the question, in what direction the evolution 
      of human society is progressing?, it would be possible for us to draw a 
      programme of action suitable to the present stage and to work for the 
      realization of an ideal society. 
      
      Gandhi firmly 
      believed that history is steadily progressing towards ahimsa or 
      nonviolence working on the law of love. Thus he argued: 
      
      If we turn our 
      eyes to the time of which history has any record down to our time, we 
      shall find that man has been steadily progressing towards ahimsa. Our 
      remote ancestors were cannibals. . . . Next came a stage when ashamed of 
      leading the life of a wandering hunter, man took to agriculture . . . . 
      Thus from being a nomad he settled down to civilized stable life, founded 
      villages and towns, and from a member of a family he became a member of a 
      community and a nation. All these are signs of progressive ahimsa and 
      diminishing himsa. Had it been otherwise, the human species should have 
      been extinct by now, even as many of the lower species have disappeared.8 
      
      If we accept 
      that mankind has steadily progressed towards ahimsa till now, it follows 
      that it has to progress still further and further and raise itself from 
      the human plane to the divine plane. 
      
      Gandhi accepted 
      man's animal ancestry and said "in our present state, we are partly men 
      and partly beasts."9 He also admitted Darwinism and said "we 
      have become men by a slow process of evolution from the brute."10 
      The evolution of species has made man the highest creature in the cycle of 
      creation. Though man is a rational animal, his nature is still dominated 
      by qualities of the beast in him because the human species is still in the 
      process of evolutionary development. Man is distinguished from the beast 
      in his ceaseless striving to rise above the beast on the moral plane. 
      Gandhi, therefore, argued that man is superior to selfishness and 
      violence, which belong to the beast nature, not to the nature of man. 
      
      Violence and 
      nonviolence are the two natural impulses of all cerebral beings. These two 
      distinct instincts have been inherited from nature. When compared to human 
      species, the violent impulse is dominant and pervasive in creatures than 
      in men. Thus, on the one hand, man has his animal nature and, on the 
      other, he has his power of reason and judgment which no other animal 
      possesses. In the course of evolution, man has made continuous progress in 
      the cultivation of nonviolent tendencies in him and the violent aspect of 
      him has been gradually suppressed. 
      
      Man as a social 
      being understands that mutual assistance and cooperation with his fellow 
      beings may render his life more easy and happy. So he has been able to 
      build up his civilization and culture with the cooperation of his fellow 
      beings. Human species by applying reason and judgment have been able to 
      make astonishing progress. When the bestial part of human nature is tamed, 
      the scope of nonviolence tendency increases and human society will be 
      elevated to a higher plane. A civilization may be said to have advanced as 
      far as it has succeeded in controlling the animal passions of man. 
      Violence is counter-productive resulting in anger, hatred, jealousy, 
      revenge, and bloodshed. Therefore nonviolent means is the only alternative 
      to eradicate the beastly and anti-social tendencies from the human mind 
      and to elevate human society to a superior plane wherein the entire 
      humanity can live in peace and harmony. 
      
      Gandhi's 
      concept of Ramarajya stands for an egalitarian, nonviolent, and democratic 
      social order, wherein moral values pervade all spheres of human life. 
      Politically it is a form of stateless society, socially it is a form of 
      classless society where all persons are equally treated irrespective of 
      caste, colour, religion, sex etc., and economically it is a form of 
      socialist society in which inequalities based on possession and 
      non-possession vanish because all wealth belongs to the society as a 
      whole. 
      
      The law of 
      "dharma" and the inward morality of the individuals bind together the 
      members of the society and make them fulfill their social obligations. 
      Dharma or social ethics exerts strong moral pressure on the individuals 
      and sustains social cohesion. Each individual works for the "greatest good 
      for all" and the society will provide maximum opportunities to all 
      individuals to develop their potentialities. 
      
      Marx 
      scientifically explained the rise, development, and decline of particular 
      forms of societies in human history due to their inherent contradictions 
      and conflicts. He conceived that the germs of the future society are 
      contained within the present society. Capitalism has not only developed 
      the economic and technological prerequisites of a future society, but it 
      has also created a political force for its own destruction. He apprehended 
      that a society based on class antagonisms had a need of the state to 
      subjugate other classes by the ruling class. Once the classes are 
      abolished, he argued, there is no need of the state and it gradually 
      withers away, which finally leads to a classless and stateless communist 
      society. 
      
      For Marx, 
      communism as such is not the fulfillment of man's life, but it is the 
      condition for such a fulfillment. He conceived communism as the condition 
      of human freedom and creativity, but not as the final goal of humanity. In 
      communist society, the struggle for existence ceases and man emerges from 
      mere animal conditions of existence into truly human conditions. It 
      assures the basic necessaries of life to all members of the society; 
      creates suitable conditions for the development of physical and mental 
      faculties; liberates man from his one sided, partial, and alienated labour 
      activity; and creates conditions for a free and creative labour activity 
      to develop talents and interests to each member of the society. 
      
      The material 
      abundance of communism will make it possible to distribute foods, "from 
      each according to his ability, to each according to his needs.”11
      Thus Marx's conception of communist society is not merely a society of 
      plenty, but also a society of human dignity and fredom.12 The 
      communist society, as Marx envisaged it, will not make angels out of 
      devils, nor will it bring heaven on earth, but will solve only those 
      problems that can be solved at this present stage in the development of 
      man. 
       
      
      Notes and 
      References 
      
        - 
        
        G.W.F. Hegel, 
        Eng. Tr. T.M. Knox, Philosophy of Right, (London: Oxford 
        University Press, 1953), p. 295.  
        - 
        
        Karl Marx,
        Economic and Philosophical Manuscripts of 1844, (Moscow: Progressive 
        Publishers, 1977), p. 94.  
        - 
        
        M.K. Gandhi, 
        Quoted in Dr. V.K.R.V. Rao, The Gandhian Alternative to Western 
        Socialism, (Bombay: Bharatiya Vidya Bhavan, 1970), p. 33. 
          
        - 
        
        Harijan, 
        28 July, 1940, p. 219.   
        - 
        
        N.K. Bose,
        Selections from Gandhi, (Ahmedabad: Navajivan Publishing House, 
        1972), p. 25.   
        - 
        
        Harijan, 
        1 February 1942, p. 20.   
        - 
        
        M.K. Gandhi, Constructive Programme, (Ahmedabad: Navajivan Publishing House, 
        1968), pp. 20-21.  
        - 
        
        M.K. Gandhi, For Pacifists, (Ahmedabad: Navajivan Publishing House, 1949), p. 
        9.  
        - 
        
        Young 
        India, 9 March 1920, p. 286.   
        - 
        
        Harijan, 
        2 April 1938, p. 65.   
        - 
        
        Karl Marx, 
        "Critique of the Gotha Programme", Selected Works, Vol. 3, 
        (Moscow: Progressive Publishers, 1973), p. 19.  
        - 
        
        Eugene 
        Kamenka, The Ethical foundations of Marxism, (London: Routledge & 
        Kegan Paul, 1972), p. 157.  
       
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