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Selected Letters Of Gandhiji
To Kishorelal Mashruwala
July 29, 1918
[Nadiad]
July 29,1918
DEAR KISHORELAL,
This letter is meant for you and
Shri Narahari. To the extent that Shri Narayanrao's charge that distinctions are
made between Maharashtrians and Gujaratis is justified, it is our duty to try to
remove the causes. Here is a field for the exercise of non-violence. The first
step to take is for you all to come together and examine how much of truth there
is in the charge. The Gujarati ladies should try to mix freely with the
Maharashtrian ladies. The most important thing is to see that the children make
no such distinction. It is not necessary to give exaggerated importance to what
I have said; just reflect over it for a moment and do all that may need to be
done.
As for prayers, I place this before
you for consideration. We should not take the plea of inability so far that, in
the end, we find ourselves incapable of doing anything at all. We should do the
teaching as well as we can and overcome our shortcomings by gradual effort. Do
you think I would use the plea of inability if I was myself required to teach
Sanskrit? I know that my Sanskrit is no Sanskrit. But I would certainly teach it
if no other person was available and I would get over my deficiency day by day.
It was in this way that Parnell topped them all in his knowledge of the rules of
business in the House of Commons. You always think of your weakness and are
afraid of doing anything. Would you not be happier if, using all your strength,
you disposed of every task that fell to you?
In what manner should the children
learn to use their strength? It is a difficult thing to teach them to defend
themselves and yet not be over-bearing. Till now, we used to teach them not to
fight back if everyone beat them. Can we go on doing so now? What will be the
effect of such teaching on a child? Will he, in his youth, be a forgiving or a
timid man? My powers of thinking fail me. Use yours. This new aspect of
non-violence which has revealed itself to me has enmeshed me in no end of
problems. I have not found one master-key for all the riddles, but it must be
found. Shall we teach our boys to return two blows for one, or tolerate a blow
from anyone weaker than themselves but to fight back, should a stronger one
attack them, and take the beating that might follow? What should one do if
assaulted by a Government official? Should the boy submit to the beating at the
moment and then come to us for advice, or should he do what might seem best in
the circumstances and take the consequences? These are the problems which face
us if we give up the royal road of turning the other cheek. Is the first course
the right one because easier to take? Or is it that we shall come upon the right
path only by treading through a dangerous one? The foot-tracks which go up the
Himalayas lead in the end to the summit. One cannot climb the Himalayas in a
straight line. Can it be that, in like fashion, the path of non-violence, too,
is difficult? May God protect us, may He indeed.
Vande Mataram from,
MOHANDAS
Collected Works of Mahatma Gandhi,
Vol. XIV, pp. 151-16
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