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Selected Letters Of Gandhiji
To Lord Irwin
May 4, 1930
DEAR FRIEND,
God willing, it is my intention..,
to set out for Dharasana and reach there with my companions. . . and demand
possession of the Salt Works. The public have been told that Dharasana is a
private property. This is mere camouflage. It is as effectively under Government
control as the Viceroy's house. Not a pinch of salt can be removed without the
previous sanction of the authorities.
It is possible for you to prevent
this raid, as it has been playfully and mischievously called, in three ways:
By removing the Salt Tax;
By arresting me and my party, unless
the country can, as I hope it will, replace every one taken away;
By sheer goondaism unless every head
broken is replaced, as I hope it will.
It is not without hesitation that
the step has been decided upon. I had hoped that the Government would fight the
civil resisters in a civilized manner. I could have had nothing to say if, in
dealing with the civil resisters, the Government has satisfied itself with
applying the ordinary processes of law. Instead, whilst the known leaders have
been dealt with more or less according to the legal formality, the rank and file
has been often savagely and in some cases even indecently assaulted. Had these
been isolated cases, they might have been overlooked. But accounts have come to
me from Bengal, Bihar, Utkal, U.P., Delhi and Bombay confirming the experiences
of Gujarat of which I have ample evidence at my disposal. In Karachi, Peshawar
and Madras the firing would appear to have been unprovoked and unnecessary.
Bones have been broken, private parts have been squeezed for the purpose of
making volunteers give up, to the Government valueless, to the volunteers
precious salt.. At Muthra an Assistant Magistrate is said to have snatched the
National Flag from a ten-year-old boy, The crowd demanding restoration of the
Flag thus illegally seized is reported to have been mercilessly beaten back.
That the Flag was subsequently restored betrayed a guilty conscience. In Bengal
there seem to have been only a few prosecutions and assaults about salt, but
unthinkable cruelties are said to have been practised in the act of snatching
flags from volunteers. Paddy fields are reported to have been burnt, eatables
forcibly taken. A vegetable market in Gujarat has been raided, because the
dealers would not sell vegetables to officials. These acts have taken place in
front of crowds who, for the sake of Congress mandate, have submitted without
retaliation. I ask you to believe the accounts given by men pledged to truth.
Repudiation even by high officials has, as in the Bardoli case, often proved
false. The officials I regret to have to say, have not hesitated to publish
falsehoods to the people even during the last five weeks. I take the following
pleas from Government notices issued from Collectors' offices in Gujarat:
1. "Adults use five pounds of salt
per year, therefore pay three annas per year as tax. If Government removed the
monopoly, people will have to pay higher prices and in addition make good to the
Government the loss sustained by the removal of the monopoly. The salt you take
from the sea-shore is not eatable, therefore the Government destroys it."
"2. Mr. Gandhi says that Government
has destroyed hand-spinning in this country, whereas everybody knows that this
is not true, because throughout the country there is not a village where
hand-spinning of cotton is not going on. Moreover in every province cotton
spinners are shown superior methods and are provided with better instruments at
less prices and are thus helped by Government."
"3. Out of every five rupees of the
debt that the Government has incurred, rupees four have been beneficially
spent."
I have taken these three sets of
statements from three different leaflets. I venture to suggest that everyone of
these statements is demonstrably false. The daily consumption of salt by an
adult is three times the amount stated and therefore the poll tax and the salt
tax undoubtedly is at least 9 as. per head per year. And this tax is levied from
man, woman, child and domestic cattle irrespective of age and health. It is a
wicked falsehood to say that every villages has a spinning wheel and that the
spinning movement is in any shape or form encouraged or supported by the
Government. Financiers can better dispose of the falsehood that four out of
every five rupees of the public debt is used for benefit of the public. But
those falsehoods are mere samples of what people know As going on in every day
contact with the Government. Only the other day a Gujarati poet, a brave man,
was convicted on prejudged official evidence in spite of his emphatic statement
that at the time mentioned he was sleeping soundly in another place.
Now for instances of official
inactivities. Liquor dealers have assaulted pickets admitted by officials to
have been peaceful and sold liquor in contravention of regulations. The
officials have taken no notice either of the assaults or the illegal sales of
liquor. As to the assaults, though they are known to everybody, they may take
shelter under the plea that they have received no complaints.
And now you have sprung upon the
country a Press Ordinance surpassing any hitherto known in India. You have found
a short cut through the law's delay in the matter of the trial of Bhagat Singh
and others by doing away with the ordinary procedure. Is it any wonder if I call
all these official activities and inactivities veiled form of Martial Law? Yet
this is only the fifth week of the struggle.
Before then the reign of terrorism
that has just begun overwhelms India, I feel that I must take a bolder step and
if possible divert your wrath in a cleaner if mere drastic channel. You may not
know the things that I have described. You may not even now believe in them. I
can but invite your serious attention to them.
Anyway I feel that it would be
cowardly on my part not to invite you to disclose to the full the leonine paws
of authority, so that the people who are suffering tortures and destruction of
their property may not feel that I, who had perhaps been the chief party
inspiring them to action that has brought to right light the Government in its
true colours, had left any stone unturned to work out the Satyagraha programme
as fully as it was possible under given circumstances.
According to the science of
Satyagraha, the greater the repression and lawlessness on the part of authority,
the greater should be the suffering courted by the victims. Success is the
certain result of suffering of the extremist character voluntarily undergone.
I know the dangers attendant upon
the methods adopted by me. But the country is not likely to mistake my meaning.
I say what I mean and think. And I have been saying for the last fifteen years
in India, and outside for twenty years more, and repeat now that the only way to
conquer violence is through non-violence pure and undefiled. I have said also
that every violent act, word and even thought interferes with the progress of
non-violent action. If in spite of such repeated warnings, people will resort to
violence, I must down responsibility save such as inevitably attaches to every
human being for the acts of every other human being. But the question of
responsibility apart, I dare not postpone action on any cause whatsoever if
non-violence is the force the seers of the world have claimed it to be and if I
am not to belie my own extensive experience of its working.
But I would fain avoid the further
steps. I would therefore ask you to remove the tax which many of your
illustrious countrymen have condemned in unmeasured terms and which, as you
could not have failed to observe, has evoked universal protest sad resentment
expressed in civil disobedience. You may condemn civil disobedience as much as
you like. Will you prefer violent revolt to civil disobedience? If you say, as
you have said, that the civil disobedience must end in violence, history will
pronounce the verdict that the British Government not bearing because not
understanding non-violence, goaded human nature to violence, which it could
understand and deal with. But in spite of the goading, I shall hope that God
will give the people of India wisdom and strength to withstand every temptation
and provocation to violence.
If, therefore, you cannot see your
way to remove the Salt Tax and remove the prohibitions on private salt- making I
must reluctantly commence the march adumbrated in the opening paragraph of my
letter.
I am,
Your sincere friend,
M. K. Gandhi
Gandhi had drafted this letter on
the eve of his arrest on May 4,1930.
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