BOMBAY,
March 18, 1920
DEAR MR. SASTRI,
As I took an active part in the Congress affairs last year I
have been asked to interest myself still more actively to the extent of joining
an organization. The demand has come from those with whom I have had the
privilege of working although I was not connected with their organization. They
have asked me to join the All-India Home Rule League. I have told them that at
my time of life and with views firmly formed on several matters I could only
join an organization to affect its policy and not be affected by it. This does
not mean that I would not keep or that I do not have an open mind to receive new
light. I simply wish to emphasize the fact that any new light will have to be
specially dazzling in order to entrance me. I placed before the friends the
following points on which I hold decided views :
1. [The] highest honesty must be introduced in the political
life of the country if we are to make our mark as a nation. This presupposes at
the present moment a very firm and definite acceptance of the creed of Truth at
any cost.
2. Swadeshi must be our immediate goal. The future aspirants
after membership of the Council2 should be asked to pledge
them-selves to an out and out protection of the country’s industries—specially
cloth manufacture.
3. Definite acceptance of Hindustani—a resultant of Hindi and
Urdu—as a national language of intercourse in the immediate future. The would-be
members will be therefore pledged so to work in the Imperial Council as to
introduce Hindustani and in the Local Councils the respective vernaculars, at
least as an optional medium for the time being till we are able to dispense with
English for the conduct of national affairs. They will also be pledged to
introduce Hindustani as a compulsory second language in our schools with
Devanagari or Urdu as an optional script. English will be recognized as a
language of Imperial intercourse, diplomacy and international commerce.
4. Acceptance of the principle of redistribution of provinces
so far as possible on a linguistic basis at the earliest opportunity.
5. Hindu-Mohammedan unity in its essence and from a political
and religious standpoint as an unalterable article of faith. This contemplates
mutual help, mutual toleration and recognition of the sufferings of one section
to be the sufferings of all. This will exclude, from the official programme of
the League, the unity propaganda by means of inter-dining and intermarriage and
will include vigorous co-operation on the Khilafat question. In my discussions
amongst the friends I have also told them that I will not think of asking for
official recognition of my creed of civil disobedience and that I do not belong
to any party and would like to make the League a non-party organization helping
all honest men if they are otherwise capable of doing justice to the service
they may choose irrespective of party. The League, according to my opinion,
cannot become an anti-Congress organization but it should work as it is now
doing to further the interests of the Congress.
Do you advise me, knowing me as you do with my qualifications
and limitations, to join the League?1
Yours sincerely,
M. K. GANDHI
Letters of V. S. Srinivasa Sastri, pp. 69-71
1. Copies of this letter were also addressed by Gandhiji to
other friends, like Natesan, for private circulation.
2. Gandhiji presumably has in mind the Imperial Legislative
Council, Delhi.