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Famous Speeches Of Gandhiji
Statement In The Great
Trial Of 1922
March 18, 1922
[The
historical trial of Mahatma Gandhi and Shri Shankarlal Ghelabhai Banker,
editor, and printer and publisher respectively of Young India, on charges
under Section 124 A of the Indian Penal Code, was held on Saturday, 18th
March 1922, before Mr. C. N. Broomfield, I. C. S., District and Sessions
Judge, Ahmedabad.]
Sir J. T.
Strangman, Advocate-General, with Rao Bahadur Girdharlal Uttamram, Public
Prosecutor of Ahmedabad, appeared for the Crown. Mr. A. C. Wild, Remembrance of
Legal Affairs, was also present. Mahatma Gandhi and Shri Shankarlal Banker were
undefended.
Among the
members of the public who were present on the occasion were : Kasturba Gandhi,
Sarojini Naidu, Pandit M. M. Malaviya, Shri N. C. Kelkar, Smt. J. B. Petit, and
Smt. Anasuyaben Sarabhai.
The Judge, who
took his seat at 12 noon, said that there was slight mistake in the charges were
then read out by the Registrar. These charges were of “bringing or attempting to
excite disaffection towards His Majesty’s Government established by law in
British India, and thereby committing offences punishable under Section 124 A of
the Indian Penal Code,” the offences being in three articles published in Young
India of September 29 and December 15 of 1921, and February 23 of 1922. The
offending articles were then read out : first of them was, “Tampering with
Loyalty”; and second, “The Puzzle and its Solution”, and the last was “Shaking
the Manes”.
The Judge said
that the law required that the charges should not be read out but explained. In
this case it would not be necessary for him to say much by way of explanation.
The charge in each case was that of bringing or attempting to excite into hatred
or contempt or exciting or attempting to excite disaffection towards His
Majesty’s Government, established by law in British India. Both the accused were
charged with the three offences under Section 124 A, contained in the articles
read out, written by Mahatma Gandhi and printed by Shri Banker.
The charges
having been read out, the Judge called upon the accused to plead to the charges.
He asked Gandhiji whether he pleaded guilty or claimed to be tried.
Gandhiji said : “I plead guilty to all the charges. I observe that the King’s
name has been omitted from the charge, and it has been properly omitted.”]
The
Judge asked Shri banker the same question and he too readily pleaded guilty.
The
Judge wished to give his verdict immediately after Gandhiji had pleaded guilty,
but Sir Strangman insisted that the procedure should be carried out in full. The
Advocate-General requested the Judge to take into account “the occurrences in
Bombay, Malabar and Chauri Chaura, leading to rioting and murder”. He admitted,
indeed, that “in these articles you find that non-violence is insisted upon as
an item of the campaign and of the creed,” but the added “of what value is it to
insist on non-violence, if incessantly you preach disaffection towards the
Government and hold it up as a treacherous Government, and if you openly and
deliberately seek to instigate others to overthrow it?” These were the
circumstances which he asked the Judge to take into account in passing sentence
on the accused.
As
regards Shri Banker, the second accused, the offence was lesser. He did the
publication but did not write. Sir Strangman’s instructions were that Shri
Banker was a man of means and he requested the court to impose a substantial
fine in addition to such term of imprisonment as might be inflicted upon.
Court : Mr. Gandhi, do you wish to make any statement on the question of
sentence?
Gandhiji : I would like to make a statement.
Court : Could you give me in writing to put it on record?
Gandhiji : I shall give it as soon as I finish it.
Gandhiji then made the following oral statement followed by a written statement
that he read.]
Before I
read this statement I would like to state that I entirely endorse the learned
Advocate-General’s remarks in connection with my humble self. I think that he
has made, because it is very true and I have no desire whatsoever to conceal
from this court the fact that to preach disaffection towards the existing system
of Government has become almost a passion with me, and the Advocate-General is
entirely in the right when he says that my preaching of disaffection did not
commence with my connection with Young India but that it commenced much earlier,
and in the statement that I am about to read, it will be my painful duty to
admit before this court that it commenced much earlier than the period stated by
the Advocate-General. It is a painful duty with me but I have to discharge that
duty knowing the responsibility that rests upon my shoulders, and I wish to
endorse all the blame that the learned Advocate-General has thrown on my
shoulders in connection with the Bombay occurrences, Madras occurrences and the
Chauri Chaura occurrences. Thinking over these things deeply and sleeping over
them night after night, it is impossible for me to dissociate myself from the
diabolical crimes of Chauri Chaura or the mad outrages of Bombay. He is quite
right when he says, that as a man of responsibility, a man having received a
fair share of education, having had a fair share of experience of this world, I
should have known the consequences of every one of my acts. I know them. I knew
that I was playing with fire. I ran the risk and if I was set free I would still
do the same. I have felt it this morning that I would have failed in my duty, if
I did not say what I said here just now.
I
wanted to avoid violence. Non-violence is the first article of my faith. It is
also the last article of my creed. But I had to make my choice. I had either to
submit to a system which I considered had done an irreparable harm to my
country, or incur the risk of the mad fury of my people bursting forth when they
understood the truth from my lips. I know that my people have sometimes gone
mad. I am deeply sorry for it and I am, therefore, here to submit not to a light
penalty but to the highest penalty. I do not ask for mercy. I do not plead any
extending act. I am here, therefore, to invite and cheerfully submit to the
highest penalty that can be inflicted upon me for what in law is a deliberate
crime, and what appears to me to be the highest duty of a citizen. The only
course open to you, the Judge, is, as I am going to say in my statement, either
to resign your post, or inflict on me the severest penalty if you believe that
the system and law you are assisting to administer are good for the people. I do
not except that kind of conversion. But by the time I have finished with my
statement you will have a glimpse of what is raging within my breast to run this
maddest risk which a sane man can run.
[He
then read out the written statement : ]
I owe
it perhaps to the Indian public and to the public in England, to placate which
this prosecution is mainly taken up, that I should explain why from a staunch
loyalist and co-operator, I have become an uncompromising disaffectionist and
non-co-operator. To the court too I should say why I plead guilty to the charge
of promoting disaffection towards the Government established by law in India.
My
public life began in 1893 in South Africa in troubled weather. My first contact
with British authority in that country was not of a happy character. I
discovered that as a man and an Indian, I had no rights. More correctly I
discovered that I had no rights as a man because I was an Indian.
But I
was not baffled. I thought that this treatment of Indians was an excrescence
upon a system that was intrinsically and mainly good. I gave the Government my
voluntary and hearty co-operation, criticizing it freely where I felt it was
faulty but never wishing its destruction.
Consequently when the existence of the Empire was threatened in 1899 by the Boer
challenge, I offered my services to it, raised a volunteer ambulance corps and
served at several actions that took place for the relief of Ladysmith. Similarly
in 1906, at the time of the Zulu ‘revolt’, I raised a stretcher bearer party and
served till the end of the ‘rebellion’. On both the occasions I received medals
and was even mentioned in dispatches. For my work in South Africa I was given by
Lord Hardinge a Kaisar-i-Hind gold medal. When the war broke out in 1914 between
England and Germany, I raised a volunteer ambulance cars in London, consisting
of the then resident Indians in London, chiefly students. Its work was
acknowledge by the authorities to be valuable. Lastly, in India when a special
appeal was made at the war Conference in Delhi in 1918 by Lord Chelmsford for
recruits, I struggled at the cost of my health to raise a corps in Kheda, and
the response was being made when the hostilities ceased and orders were received
that no more recruits were wanted. In all these efforts at service, I was
actuated by the belief that it was possible by such services to gain a status of
full equality in the Empire for my countrymen.
The
first shock came in the shape of the Rowlatt Act-a law designed to rob the
people pf all real freedom. I felt called upon to lead an intensive agitation
against it. Then followed the Punjab horrors beginning with the massacre at
Jallianwala Bagh and culminating in crawling orders, public flogging and other
indescribable humiliations. I discovered too that the plighted word of the Prime
Minister to the Mussalmans of India regarding the integrity of Turkey and the
holy places of Islam was not likely to be fulfilled. But in spite of the
forebodings and the grave warnings of friends, at the Amritsar Congress in 1919,
I fought for co-operation and working of the Montagu-Chemlmsford reforms, hoping
that the Prime Minister would redeem his promise to the Indian Mussalmans, that
the Punjab wound would be healed, and that the reforms, inadequate and
unsatisfactory though they were, marked a new era of hope in the life of India.
But
all that hope was shattered. The Khilafat promise was not to be redeemed. The
Punjab crime was whitewashed and most culprits went not only unpunished but
remained in service, and some continued to draw pensions from the Indian revenue
and in some cases were even rewarded. I saw too that not only did the reforms
not mark a change of heart, but they were only a method of further raining India
of her wealth and of prolonging her servitude.
Top
I came
reluctantly to the conclusion that the British connection had made India more
helpless than she ever was before, politically and economically. A disarmed
India has no power of resistance against any aggressor if she wanted to engage,
in an armed conflict with him. So much is this the case that some of our best
men consider that India must take generations, before she can achieve Dominion
Status. She has become so poor that she has little power of resisting faminies.
Before the British advent India spun and wove in her millions of cottages, just
the supplement she needed for adding to her meager agricultural resources. This
cottage industry, so vital for India’s existence, has been ruined by incredibly
heartless and inhuman processes as described by English witness. Little do town
dwellers how the semi-starved masses of India are slowly sinking to
lifelessness. Little do they know that their miserable comfort represents the
brokerage they get for their work they do for the foreign exploiter, that the
profits and the brokerage are sucked from the masses. Little do realize that the
Government established by law in British India is carried on for this
exploitation of the masses. No sophistry, no jugglery in figures, can explain
away the evidence that the skeletons in many villages present to the naked eye.
I have no doubt whatsoever that both England and the town dweller of India will
have to answer, if there is a God above, for this crime against humanity, which
is perhaps unequalled in history. The law itself in this country has been used
to serve the foreign exploiter. My unbiased examination of the Punjab Marital
Law cases has led me to believe that at least ninety-five per cent of
convictions were wholly bad. My experience of political cases in India leads me
to the conclusion, in nine out of every ten, the condemned men were totally
innocent. Their crime consisted in the love of their country. In ninety-nine
cases out of hundred, justice has been denied to Indians as against Europeans in
the courts of India. This is not an exaggerated picture. It is the experience of
almost every Indian who has had anything to do with such cases. In my opinion,
the administration of the law is thus prostituted, consciously or unconsciously,
for the benefit of the exploiter.
The
greater misfortune is that the Englishmen and their Indian associates in the
administration of the country do not know that they are engaged in the crime I
have attempted to describe. I am satisfied that many Englishmen and Indian
officials honestly systems devised in the world, and that India is making
steady, though, slow progress. They do not know, a subtle but effective system
of terrorism and an organized display of force on the one hand, and the
deprivation of all powers of retaliation or self-defence on the other, as
emasculated the people and induced in them the habit of simulation. This awful
habit has added to the ignorance and the self-deception of the administrators.
Section 124 A, under which I am happily charged, is perhaps the prince among the
political sections of the Indian Penal Code designed to suppress the liberty of
the citizen. Affection cannot be manufactured or regulated by law. If one has no
affection for a person or system, one should be free to give the fullest
expression to his disaffection, so long as he does not contemplate, promote, or
incite to violence. But the section under which mere promotion of disaffection
is a crime. I have studied some of the cases tried under it; I know that some of
the most loved of India’s patriots have been convicted under it. I consider it a
privilege, therefore, to be charged under that section. I have endeavored to
give in their briefest outline the reasons for my disaffection. I have no
personal ill-will against any single administrator, much less can I have any
disaffection towards the King’s person. But I hold it to be a virtue to be
disaffected towards a Government which in its totality has done more harm to
India than any previous system. India is less manly under the British rule than
she ever was before. Holding such a belief, I consider it to be a sin to have
affection for the system. And it has been a precious privilege for me to be able
to write what I have in the various articles tendered in evidence against me.
In
fact, I believe that I have rendered a service to India and England by showing
in non-co-operation the way out of the unnatural state in which both are living.
In my opinion, non-co-operation with evil is as much a duty as is co-operation
with good. But in the past, non-co-operation has been deliberately expressed in
violence to the evil-doer. I am endeavoring to show to my countrymen that
violent non-co-operation only multiples evil, and that as evil can only be
sustained by violence, withdrawal of support of evil requires complete
abstention from violence. Non-violence implies voluntary submission to the
penalty for non-co-operation with evil. I am here, therefore, to invite and
submit cheerfully to the highest penalty that can be inflicted upon me for what
in law is deliberate crime, and what appears to me to be the highest duty of a
citizen. The only course open to you, the Judge and the assessors, is either to
resign your posts and thus dissociate yourselves from evil, if you feel that the
law you are called upon to administer is an evil, and that in reality I am
innocent, or to inflict on me the severest penalty, if you believe that the
system and the law you are assisting to administer are good for the people of
this country, and that my activity is, therefore, injurious to the common weal.
Mahatma, Vol. II, (1951) pp. 129-33
This speech is
from selected works of Mahatma Gandhi Volume-Six
The Voice of
Truth Part-I some Famous Speech page 14 to 24
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