| |
Back
Selected Letters Of Gandhiji
To Chiang Kai-Shek
June 14, 1942
SEVAGRAM,
June 14, 1942
DEAR GENERALISSIMO,
I can never forget the five hours' close contact I had with you and your noble
wife in Calcutta1. I had always felt' drawn towards you in your fight
for freedom, and that contact and our conversation brought China and her
problems still nearer to me. Long ago, between 1905 and 1913, when I was in
South Africa, I was in constant touch with the small Chinese colony in
Johannesburg. I knew term first as clients and then as comrades in the Indian
passive resistance struggle in South Africa. I came in touch with them in
Mauritius also. I learnt then to admire their thrift, industry, resourcefulness
and internal unity. Later in India I had a very fine Chinese friend living with
me for a few. years and we all learnt to like him. I have thus felt greatly
attracted towards your great country and, in common with my countrymen, our
sympathy has gone out to you in your terrible struggle. Our mutual friend,
Jawaharlal Nehru, whose love of China is only excelled, if at all, by his love
of his own country, has kept us in intimate touch with the developments of the
Chinese struggle.
Because of this feeling I have towards China and my earnest desire that our two
great countries should come closer to one another and co-operate to their mutual
advantage, I am anxious to explain to you that my appeal to the British power to
withdraw from India is not meant in any shape or form to weaken India's defence
against the Japanese or embarrass you in your struggle. India must not submit to
any aggressor or invader and must resist him. I would not be guilty of
purchasing the freedom of my country at the cost of your country's freedom. That
problem does not arise before me as I am clear that India cannot gain her
freedom in this way, and a Japanese domination of either India or China would be
injurious to the other country and to world peace. domination must therefore be
prevented and I should like to play her natural and rightful part in this.
I feel India cannot do so while she is in bondage. India has been a helpless
witness of the withdrawals from Malaya, Singapore and Burma. We must learn the
lesson from these tragic events and prevent by all means at our disposal a
repetition of what befell these unfortunate countries. But unless we are free we
can do nothing to prevent it, and the same process might well occur again,
crippling India and China disastrously. I do not want a repetition of this
tragic tale of woe.
Our preferred help has repeatedly been rejected by the, British Government and
the recent failure of the Cripps Mission has left a deep wound which is still
running. Out of that anguish has come the cry for immediate withdrawal of
British power so that India can look after herself and help China to the best of
her ability.
I have told you of my faith in nonviolence and of my be. life in the
effectiveness of this method if the whole nation could turn to it. That faith in
it is as firm as ever. But I realize that India today as a whole has not that
faith and belief, and the Government in free India would be formed from the
various elements composing the nation.
Today the whole of India is impotent and feels frustrated. The Indian Army
consists largely of people who have joined up because of economic pressure. They
have no feeling of a cause to fight for, and in no sense are they a national
army" Those of us who would fight for a cause, for India and China, with armed
forces or with nonviolence, cannot under the! he foreign heel, function as they
want to. And yet our people know for certain that India free dm play even a
decisive part not only on her own behalf, but also on behalf of China and world
peace. Many like me feel that it is not proper or manly the to remain in this
helpless state and allow events to overwhelm us when a way to effective action
can be opened to us. They feel, therefore, that every possible effort should be
made to ensure independence and that freedom of action which is so urgently
needed. This is the origin of my appeal to the British power to end immediately
the unnatural connection between Britain and India.
Unless we make the effort there is a grave danger of public feeling in India
going into wrong and harmful channels. There is every likelihood of subterranean
sympathy for Japan growing simply in order to weaken and oust British authority
in India. This feeling may take the place of robust confidence in our ability
never to look to outsiders for help in winning our freedom. We have to learn
self-reliance and develop the strength to work out our own salvation. This is
only possible if we make a determined effort to free ourselves from bondage.
That freedom has become a present necessity to enable us to take our due place
among the free nations of the world.
To make it perfectly clear that we want to prevent in every way Japanese
aggression, I would personally agree that the Allied Powers might, under treaty
with us, keep their armed forces in India and use the country as a base for
operations against the threatened Japanese attack.
I need hardly give you my assurance that, as the author of the new move in
India, I shall take no hasty action. And whatever action I may recommend will be
governed by the consideration that it should not injure China, or encourage
Japanese aggression in India or China. I am trying to enlist world opinion in
favour of a proposition which to me appears self-proved and which must lead to
the strengthening of India's and China's defence. I am also educating public
opinion in India and, conferring with my colleagues. Needless to say, any
movement against the British Government with which I may be connected will be
essentially non-violent. I am straining every nerve to avoid a conflict with
British authority. But if in the vindication of the freedom which has become an
immediate desideratum, this becomes inevitable, I shall not hesitate to run any
risk however great.
Very soon you will have completed five ,years of war against Japanese aggression
and invasion and all the sorrow and misery that these have brought to China. My
heart goes out to the people of China in deep sympathy and in admiration for
their heroic struggle and endless sacrifices in the cause of their country's
freedom and integrity against tremendous odds. I am convinced that this heroism
and sacrifice cannot be in vain; they must bear fruit. To you, to Madame Chiang
and to the great people of China, I send my earnest and sincere wishes for your
success. I look forward to the day when a free India and a free China will
co-operate together in friend- ship and brotherhood for their own good and for
the good of Asia and the world.
I anticipation of your permission, I
am taking liberty of publishing this letter in Harijan.2
Yours sincerely,
M. K. Gandhi
-
Vide Vol. LXXV, pp.333-4.[CWMG]
-
Nonviolence in Peace and War, Vol.
I, Also C. W. 10367.
Courtesy: India Office Library,
London. Also The Transfer of Power, Vol. II, pp. 346-8
|
|
 |