BOMBAY,
June 28, 1919
DEAR MR. JINNAH1,
I was delighted to receive your letter. I shall certainly
keep you informed of the doings here. I cannot say anything about the Reforms
Bill. I have hardly studied it. My preoccupation is Rowlatt legislation; add to
that the Punjab, Kalinath Roy, Transvaal and Swadeshi and I have more hay on my
work than I can carry. Our Reforms will be practically worthless, if we cannot
repeal Rowlatt legislation, if a strong committee of enquiry is not appointed to
investigate the Punjab affairs and to revise what appear to be excessive
sentences, if the glaring wrong done to Kalinath Roy is not redressed and the
Transvaal Indians not protected from further encroachments on their liberty, and
if India does not take up and appreciate the work of Swadeshi. The first four
are needed as much to test our strength as to test the measure of the goodwill
of Englishmen, and the last, viz., Swadeshi, is an earnest of our love for our
country, and I am, therefore, concentrating all my energy upon these things. And
as I can imagine no form of resistance to the Government than civil
disobedience, I propose, God willing, to resume it next week. I have taken all
precautions, that are humanly possible to take, against recrudescence of
violence. I have duly informed the authorities of my intentions and I have even
sent a cable to Mr. Montagu.
I enclose proof copy of the instructions I shall be
leaving behind. They will give you the further information I should like you to
possess. Pray tell Mrs. Jinnah that I shall expect her on her return to join the
hand-spinning class that Mrs. Banker Senior and Mrs. Ramabai, a Punjabi lady,
are conducting. And, of course, I have your promise that you would take up
Gujarati and Hindi as quickly as possible. May I then suggest that like Macaulay
you learn at least one of these languages on your return voyage ? You will not
have Macaulay’s time during the voyage, i.e., six months, but then you have not
the same difficulty that Macaulay had. I hope you will both keep well during
your stay.
If you get the time, please turn over the pages of
Young India sent under
separate cover. It is wretchedly printed because I have no kained help yet, and
I am training helpers at the expense of indulgent subscribers.
Yours sincerely,
M. K. GANDHI
From a photostat: S.N. 6698
1 Mohammed Ali Jinnah (1876-1948); Muslim leader; founder and
first Governor- General of Pakistan