| |
Back
Selected Letters Of Gandhiji
To Carl Heath
December 10, 1934
Wardha (C. P.)
10th December, 1934
DEAR FRIEND,
I have your letter of 19th
November. I have not been able to understand it, in spite of the help I sought
from Charlie Andrews.
I have no hesitation in agreeing
with you that any solution of the present deadlock should be just and creative;,
and that it should be neither imposed nor extorted; in other words, it should be
an agreed solution honourable to both the countries. I should know too the
suffering of India and the suffering of Lancashire. But if the cause of the
suffering of either is identical I would dissent from any such view. The
suffering of India is imposed upon her; the suffering of Lancashire is partly
due to the world causes and partly to its own short-sightedness and selfishness.
So far as it was possible for me to suggest an alleviation of the suffering of
Lancashire through India's help I had made a definite offer when I was in
England in 1931. But my offer proved to be of no avail. The offer was those: If
there was a free settlement between England and India, a favored nation clause
was quite possible, in so far as India might need any foreign cloth in order to
supplement her output of cloth, whether through the village spinning wheel of
through her mills. I do not know how far such treatment is possible today for,
even during the short period that has elapsed since the meeting of the round
table conference, India has become better organized for the manufacture of all
her clothing requirements, in spite of the fact that she is importing fine-count
calico both from England and Japan. the chief point, however, is not how
Lancashire can send its calico to India, but how the whole of England can
benefit in every way by the benefit that India must derive from attainment of
complete freedom, political and economic. The more I study the villages of India
the more intensely do i realize that India has no need to be a pauper country if
she can get the chance to grow without the fetters that today prevent her
natural growth.
Your last paragraph seems to imply
that there is no longer any repression in India. I can only tell you that
repression is there to be seen by any one with the naked eye. I do not know of
any single repressive law that has been repealed. The Press is effectively
gagged, there is no such thing as freedom of movement on Bengal as also in the
frontier Province. If you hear nothing of imprisonments and Lathi charges it is
because civil disobedience is suspended and the Congress has resolved in
furtherance of the spirit of non-violence, to submit to repressive laws in so
far as it is humanly possible to do so. On the top of all this comes the
Parliamentary committee's proposals for a new constitution. It is as I red
it, a bare-faced denial of freedom. I see in it no scope for expansion. I would
any day prefer the existing state to the crushing burden that threatens to
overwhelm India and tighten the British hold upon her. My own power of endurance
is tested beyond my capacity. My way to the Frontier Province is blocked.
But in spite of the blackness of the
horizon, I have no sense of despair in me. I believe in the existence of a
beneficent Power that overrides and upsets all human plans. It ever produces
order out of chaos, and redresses wrongs in spite of the tyranny of tyrants.
India must come to her own one day.
But she will do so chiefly if her own sons and daughters behave themselves and
prove worthy of her freedom. We must exert our utmost to prove our worth, and
you, friends of Conciliation Group, will, I know, do your level best according
to your lights to help a just solution.
Yours sincerely,
M. K. GANDHI
CARL HEATH ESQ.,
INDIA CONCILIATION GROUP,
FRIENDS HOUSE,
EUSTON ROAD,
LONDON, N. W. 1
|
|
 |