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Famous Speeches Of Gandhiji
The 'Quit India'
Speeches
August 8, 1942
{Gandhiji
addressed the A.I.C.C. at Bombay on 8-8-42 outlining his plan of action,
in Hindustani, as follows;}
Before you
discuss the resolution, let me place before you one or two things, I want you to
understand two things very clearly and to consider them from the same point of
view from which I am placing them before you. I ask you to consider it from my
point of view, because if you approve of it, you will be enjoined to carry out
all I say. It will be a great responsibility. There are people who ask me
whether I am the same man that I was in 1920, or whether there has been any
change in me. You are right in asking that question.
Let me, however,
hasten to assure that I am the same Gandhi as I was in 1920. I have not changed
in any fundamental respect. I attach the same importance to non-violence that I
did then. If at all, my emphasis on it has grown stronger. There is no real
contradiction between the present resolution and my previous writings and
utterances.
Occasions like
the present do not occur in everybody’s and but rarely in anybody’s life. I want
you to know and feel that there is nothing but purest Ahimsa1 in all that I am
saying and doing today. The draft resolution of the Working Committee is based
on Ahimsa, the contemplated struggle similarly has its roots in Ahimsa. If,
therefore, there is any among you who has lost faith in Ahimsa or is wearied of
it, let him not vote for this resolution.
Let me
explain my position clearly. God has vouchsafed to me a priceless gift in the
weapon of Ahimsa. I and my Ahimsa are on our trail today. If in the present
crisis, when the earth is being scorched by the flames of Himsa2 and crying for
deliverance, I failed to make use of the God given talent, God will not forgive
me and I shall be judged unwrongly of the great gift. I must act now. I may not
hesitate and merely look on, when Russia and China are threatened.
Ours
is not a drive for power, but purely a non-violent fight for India’s
independence. In a violent struggle, a successful general has been often known
to effect a military coup and to set up a dictatorship. But under the Congress
scheme of things, essentially non-violent as it is, there can be no room for
dictatorship. A non-violent soldier of freedom will covet nothing for himself,
he fights only for the freedom of his country. The Congress is unconcerned as to
who will rule, when freedom is attained. The power, when it comes, will belong
to the people of India, and it will be for them to decide to whom it placed in
the entrusted. May be that the reins will be placed in the hands of the Parsis,
for instance-as I would love to see happen-or they may be handed to some others
whose names are not heard in the Congress today. It will not be for you then to
object saying, “This community is microscopic. That party did not play its due
part in the freedom’s struggle; why should it have all the power?” Ever since
its inception the Congress has kept itself meticulously free of the communal
taint. It has thought always in terms of the whole nation and has acted
accordingly. . .
I know
how imperfect our Ahimsa is and how far away we are still from the ideal, but in
Ahimsa there is no final failure or defeat. I have faith, therefore, that if, in
spite of our shortcomings, the big thing does happen, it will be because God
wanted to help us by crowning with success our silent, unremitting Sadhana1 for
the last twenty-two years.
I
believe that in the history of the world, there has not been a more genuinely
democratic struggle for freedom than ours. I read Carlyle’s French Resolution
while I was in prison, and Pandit Jawaharlal has told me something about the
Russian revolution. But it is my conviction that inasmuch as these struggles
were fought with the weapon of violence they failed to realize the democratic
ideal. In the democracy which I have envisaged, a democracy established by
non-violence, there will be equal freedom for all. Everybody will be his own
master. It is to join a struggle for such democracy that I invite you today.
Once you realize this you will forget the differences between the Hindus and
Muslims, and think of yourselves as Indians only, engaged in the common struggle
for independence.
Then,
there is the question of your attitude towards the British. I have noticed that
there is hatred towards the British among the people. The people say they are
disgusted with their behaviour. The people make no distinction between British
imperialism and the British people. To them, the two are one This hatred would
even make them welcome the Japanese. It is most dangerous. It means that they
will exchange one slavery for another. We must get rid of this feeling. Our
quarrel is not with the British people, we fight their imperialism. The proposal
for the withdrawal of British power did not come out of anger. It came to enable
India to play its due part at the present critical juncture It is not a happy
position for a big country like India to be merely helping with money and
material obtained willy-nilly from her while the United Nations are conducting
the war. We cannot evoke the true spirit of sacrifice and velour, so long as we
are not free. I know the British Government will not be able to withhold freedom
from us, when we have made enough self-sacrifice. We must, therefore, purge
ourselves of hatred. Speaking for myself, I can say that I have never felt any
hatred. As a matter of fact, I feel myself to be a greater friend of the British
now than ever before. One reason is that they are today in distress. My very
friendship, therefore, demands that I should try to save them from their
mistakes. As I view the situation, they are on the brink of an abyss. It,
therefore, becomes my duty to warn them of their danger even though it may, for
the time being, anger them to the point of cutting off the friendly hand that is
stretched out to help them. People may laugh, nevertheless that is my claim. At
a time when I may have to launch the biggest struggle of my life, I may not
harbour hatred against anybody.
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II
{Gandhiji’s address before the A.I.C.C. at Bombay on 8-8-’42 delivered in
Hindustani :}
I
congratulate you on the resolution that you have just passed. I also
congratulate the three comrades on the courage they have shown in pressing their
amendments to a division, even though they knew that there was an overwhelming
majority in favour of the resolution, and I congratulate the thirteen friends
who voted against the resolution. In doing so, they had nothing to be ashamed
of. For the last twenty years we have tried to learn not to lose courage even
when we are in a hopeless minority and are laughed at. We have learned to hold
on to our beliefs in the confidence that we are in the right. It behaves us to
cultivate this courage of conviction, for it ennobles man and raises his moral
stature. I was, therefore, glad to see that these friends had imbibed the
principle which I have tried to follow for the last fifty years and more.
Having
congratulated them on their courage, let me say that what they asked this
Committee to accept through their amendments was not the correct representation
of the situation. These friends ought to have pondered over the appeal made to
them by the Maulana to withdraw their amendments; they should have carefully
followed the explanations given by Jawaharlal. Had they done so, it would have
been clear to them that the right which they now want the Congress to concede
has already been conceded by the Congress.
Time
was when every Mussalman claimed the whole of India as his motherland. During the
years that the Ali brothers were with me, the assumption underlying all their
talks and discussions was that India belonged as much to the Mussalman as to the
Hindus. I can testify to the fact that this was their innermost conviction and
nor a mask; I lived with them for years. I spent days and nights in their
company. And I make bold to say that their utterances were the honest expression
of their beliefs. I know there are some who say that I take things too readily
at their face value, that I am gullible. I do not think I am such a simpleton,
nor am I so gullible as these friends take me to be. But their criticism does
not hurt me. I should prefer to be considered gullible rather deceitful.
What
these Communist friends proposed through their amendments is nothing new. It has
been repeated from thousands of platforms. Thousands of Mussalman have told me,
that if Hindu-Muslim question was to be solved satisfactorily, it must be done
in my lifetime. I should feel flattered at this; but how can I agree to proposal
which does not appeal to my reason? Hindu-Muslim unity is not a new thing.
Millions of Hindus and Mussalman have sought after it. I consciously strove for
its achievement from my boyhood. While at school, I made it a point to cultivate
the friendship of Muslims and Parsi co-students. I believed even at that tender
age that the Hindus in India, if they wished to live in peace and amity with the
other communities, should assiduously cultivate the virtue of neighbourliness.
It did not matter, I felt, if I made no special effort to cultivate the
friendship with Hindus, but I mast make friends with at least a few Mussalman.
It was as counsel for a Mussalman merchant that I went to South Africa. I made
friends with other Mussalman there, even with the opponents of my client, and
gained a reputation for integrity and good faith. I had among my friends and
co-workers Muslims as well as Parsis. I captured their hearts and when I left
finally for India, I left them sad and shedding tears of grief at the
separation.
In
India too I continued my efforts and left no stone unturned to achieve that
unity. It was my life-long aspiration for it that made me offer my fullest
co-operation to the Mussalman in the Khilafat movement. Muslims throughout the
country accepted me as their true friend.
How
then is it that I have now come to be regarded as so evil and detestable? Had I
any axe to grind in supporting the Khilafat movement? True, I did in my heart of
hearts cherish a hope that it might enable me to save the cow. I am a worshipper
of the cow. I believe the cow and myself to be the creation of the same God, and
I am prepared to sacrifice my life in order to save the cow. But, whatever my
philosophy of life and my ultimate hopes, I joined the movement in no spirit of
bargain. I co-operated in the struggle for the Khilafat solely on order to
discharge my obligation to my neighbour who, I saw, was in distress. The Ali
brothers, had they been alive today, would have testified to the truth of this
assertion. And so would many others bear me out in that it was not a bargain on
my part for saving the cow. The cow like the Khilafat. Stood on her own merits.
As an honest man, a true neighbour and a faithful friend, it was incumbent on me
to stand by the Mussalman in the hour of their trial.
In
those days, I shocked the Hindus by dinning time they have now got used to it.
Mualana Bari told me, however, that through he would not allow me dine with him,
lest some day he should be accused of a sinister motive. And so, whenever I had
occasion to stay with him, he called a Brahmana cook and made social
arrangements for separate cooking. Firangi ,Mahal, his residence, was an
old-styled structure with limited accommodation; yet he cheerfully bore all
hardships and carried out his resolve from which I could not dislodge him. It
was the spirit of courtesy, dignity and nobility that inspired us in those days.
They respected one another’s religious feelings, and considered it a privilege
to do so. Not a trace of suspicion lurked in anybody’s heart. Where has all that
dignity, that nobility of spirit, disappeared now? I should ask all Mussalman,
including Quaid-I-Azam Jinnah, to recall those glorious days and to find out
what has brought us to the present impasse. Quaid-i-Azam Jinnah himself was at
one time a Congressman. If today the Congress has incurred his wrath, it is
because the canker of suspicion has entered his heart. May God bless him with
long life, but when I am gone, he will realize and admit that I had no designs
on Mussalman and that I had never betrayed their interests. Where is the escape
for me, if I injure their cause or betray their interests? My life is entirely
at their disposal. They are free to put an end to it, whenever they wish to do
so. Assaults have been made on my life in the past, but God has spared me till
now, and the assailants have repented for their action. But if someone were to
shoot me in the belief that he was getting rid of a rascal, he would kill not
the real Gandhi, but the one that appeared to him a rascal.
To
those who have been indulging in a campaign of a abuse and vilification I would
say, “Islam enjoins you not to revile even an enemy. The Prophet treated even
enemies with kindness and tried to win them over by his fairness and generosity.
Are you followers of that Islam or of any other? If you are followers of the
true Islam, does it behave you to distrust the words of one who makes a public
declaration of his faith? You may take it from me that one day you will regret
the fact that you distrusted and killed one who was a true and devoted friend of
yours.” It cuts me to the quick to see that the more I appeal and the more the
Maulana importunes, the more intense does the campaign of vilification grow. To
me, these abuses are like bullets. They can kill me, even as a bullet can put an
end to my life. You may kill me. That will not hurt me. But what of those who
indulge in abusing? They bring discredit to Islam. For the fair name of Islam, I
appeal to you to resist this unceasing campaign of abuse and vilification.
Maulana
Saheb is being made a target for the filthiest abuse. Why? Because he refuses to
exert on me the pressure of his friendship. He realizes that it is a misuse of
friendship to seek up to compel a friend to accept as truth what he knows is an
untruth.
To the
Quaid-Azam I would say: Whatever is true and valid in the claim for Pakistan is
already in your hands. What is wrong and untenable is in nobody’s gift, so that
it can be made over to you. Even if someone were to succeed in imposing an
untruth on others, he would not be able to enjoy for long the fruits of such a
coercion. God dislikes pride and keeps away from it. God would not tolerate a
forcible imposition of an untruth.
The
Quaid-Azam says that he is compelled to say bitter things but that he cannot
help giving expression to his thoughts and his feelings. Similarly I would say :
“I consider myself a friend of Mussalman. Why should I then not give expression
to the things nearest to my heart, even at the cost of displeasing them? How can
I conceal my innermost thoughts from them? I should congratulate the
Quaid-i-Azam on his frankness in giving expression to his thoughts and feelings,
even if they sound bitter to his hearers. But even so why should the Mussalman
sitting here be reviled, if they do not see eye to eye with him? If millions of
Mussalman are with you can you not afford to ignore the handful of Mussalman who
may appear to you to be misguided? Why should one with the following of several
millions be afraid of a majority community, or of the minority being swamped by
the majority? How did the Prophet work among the Arabs and the Mussalman? Ho0w
did he propagate Islam? Did he say he would propagate Islam only when he
commanded a majority? I appeal to you for the sake of Islam to ponder over what
I say. There is neither fair play nor justice in saying that the Congress must
accept a thing, even if it does not believe in it and even if it goes counter to
principles it holds dear.
Rajaji
said : “I do not believe in Pakistan. But Mussalman ask for it, Mr. Jinnah asks
for it, and it has become an obsession with them. Why not then say, “yes” to
them just now? The same Mr. Jinnah will later on realize the disadvantages of
Pakistan and will forgo the demand.” I said : “It is not fair to accept as true
a thing which I hold to be untrue, and ask others to do say in the belief that
the demand will not be pressed when the time comes for settling in finally. If I
hold the demand to be just, I should concede it this very day. I should not
agree to it merely in order to placate Jinnah Saheb. Many friends have come and
asked me to agree to it for the time being to placate Mr. Jinnah, disarm his
suspicious and to see how he reacts to it. But I cannot be party to a course of
action with a false promise. At any rate, it is not my method.”
The
Congress as no sanction but the moral one for enforcing its decisions. It
believes that true democracy can only be the outcome of non-violence. The
structure of a world federation can be raised only on a foundation of
non-violence, and violence will have to be totally abjured from world affairs.
If this is true, the solution of Hindu-Muslim question, too, cannot be achieved
by a resort to violence. If the Hindus tyrannize over the Mussalman, with what
face will they talk of a world federation? It is for the same reason that I do
not believe in the possibility of establishing world peace through violence as
the English and American statesmen propose to do. The Congress has agreed to
submitting all the differences to an impartial international tribunal and to
abide by its decisions. If even this fairest of proposals is unacceptable, the
only course that remains open is that of the sword, of violence. How can I
persuade myself to agree to an impossibility? To demand the vivisection of a
living organism is to ask for its very life. It is a call to war. The Congress
cannot be party to such a fratricidal war. Those Hindus who, like Dr. Moonje and
Shri Savarkar, believe in the doctrine of the sword may seek to keep the
Mussalman under Hindus domination. I do not represent that section. I represent
the Congress. You want to kill the Congress which is the goose that lays golden
eggs. If you distrust the Congress, you may rest assured that there is to be
perpetual war between the Hindus and the Mussalman, and the country will be
doomed to continue warfare and bloodshed. If such warfare is to be our lot, I
shall not live to witness it.
It is
for that reason that I say to Jinnah Saheb, “You may take it from me that
whatever in your demand for Pakistan accords with considerations of justice and
equity is lying in your pocket; whatever in the demand is contrary to justice
and equity you can take only by the sword and in no other manner.”
There
is much in my heart that I would like to pour out before this assembly. One
thing which was uppermost in my heart I have already dealt with. You may take it
from me that it is with me a matter of life and death. If we Hindus and
Mussalman mean to achieve a heart unity, without the slightest mental
reservation on the part of either, we must first unite in the effort to be free
from the shackles of this empire. If Pakistan after all is to be a portion of
India, what objection can there be for Mussalman against joining this struggle
for India’s freedom? The Hindus and Mussalman must, therefore, unite in the
first instance on the issue of fighting for freedom. Jinnah Saheb thinks the war
will last long. I do not agree with him. If the war goes on for six months more,
how shall we able to save China?
I,
therefore, want freedom immediately, this very night, before dawn, if it can be
had. Freedom cannot now wait for the realization of communal unity. If that
unity is not achieved, sacrifices necessary for it will have to be much greater
than would have otherwise sufficed. But the Congress must win freedom or be
wiped out in the effort. And forget not that the freedom which the Congress is
struggling to achieve will not be for the Congressmen alone but for all the
forty cores of the Indian people. Congressmen must for ever remain humble
servants of the people.
The
Quaid-i-Azam has said that the Muslim League is prepared to take over the rule
from the Britishers if they are prepared to hand it over to the Muslim League,
for the British took over the empire from the hands of the Muslims. This,
however, will be Muslim Raj. The offer made by Maulana Saheb and by me does not
imply establishment of Muslim Raj or Muslim domination. The Congress does not
believe in the domination of any group or any community. It believes in
democracy which includes in its orbit Muslims, Hindus, Christians, Parsis,
Jews-every one of the communities inhabiting this vast country. If Muslim Raj is
inevitable, then let it be; but how can we give it the stamp of our assent? How
can we agree to the domination of one community over the others?
Millions of Mussalman in this country come from Hindu stock. How can their
homeland be any other than India? My eldest son embraced Islam some years back.
What would his homeland be-Porbandar or the Punjab? I ask the Mussalman: “If
India is not your homeland, what other country do you belong to? In what
separate homeland would you put my son who embraced Islam?” His mother wrote him
a letter after his conversion, asking him if he had on embracing Islam given up
drinking which Islam forbids to its follower. To those who gloated over the
conversion, she wrote to say: “I do not mind his becoming a Mussalman, so much
as his drinking. Will you, as pious Mussalman, tolerate his drinking even after
his conversion? He has reduced himself to the state of a rake by drinking. If
you are going to make a man of him again, his conversion will have been turned
to good account. You will, therefore, please see that he as a Mussalman abjures
wine and woman. If that change does not come about, his conversion goes in vain
and our non-co-operation with him will have to continue.”
India
is without doubt the homeland of all the Mussalman inhabiting this country.
Every Mussalman should therefore co-operate in the fight for India’s freedom. The
Congress does not belong to any one class or community; it belongs to the whole
nation. It is open to Mussalman to take possession of the Congress. They can, if
they like, swamp the Congress by their numbers, and can steer it along the
course which appeals to them. The Congress is fighting not on behalf of the
Hindu but on behalf of the whole nation, including the minorities. It would hurt
me to hear of a single instance of a Mussalman being killed by a Congressman. In
the coming revolution, Congressmen will sacrifice their lives in order to
protect the Mussalman against a Hindu’s attack and vice versa. It is a part of
their creed, and is one of the essentials of non-violence. You will be excepted
on occasions like these not to lose your heads. Every Congressman, whether a
Hindu or a Mussalman, owes this duty to the organization to which will render a
service to Islam. Mutual trust is essential for success in the final nation-wide
struggle that is to come.
I
have said that much greater sacrifice will have to be made this time in the wake
of our struggle because of the opposition from the Muslim League and from
Englishmen. You have seen the secret circular issued by Sir Frederick Puckle. It
is a suicidal course that he has taken. It contains an open incitement to
organizations which crop up like mushrooms to combine to fight the Congress. We
have thus to deal with an empire whose ways are crooked. Ours is a straight path
which we can tread even with our eyes closed. That is the beauty of Satyagraha .
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In
Satyagraha, there is no place for fraud or falsehood, or any kind of untruth.
Fraud and untruth today are stalking the world. I cannot be a helpless witness
to such a situation. I have traveled all over India as perhaps nobody in the
present age has. The voiceless millions of the land saw in me their friend and
representative, and I identified myself with them to an extent it was possible
for a human being to do. I saw trust in their eyes, which I now want to turn to
good account in fighting this empire upheld on untruth and violence. However
gigantic the preparations that the empire has made, we must get out of its
clutches. How can I remain silent at this supreme hour and hide my light under
the bushel? Shall I ask the Japanese to tarry awhile? If today I sit quite and
inactive, God will take me to task for not using up the treasure He had given
me, in the midst of the conflagration that is enveloping the whole world. Had
the condition been different, I should have asked you to wait yet awhile. But
the situation now has become intolerable, and the Congress has no other course
left for it.
Nevertheless, the actual struggle does not commence this moment. You have only
placed all your powers in my hands. I will now wait upon the Viceroy and plead
with him for the acceptance of the Congress demand. That process is likely to
take two or three weeks. What would you do in the meanwhile? What is the
programme, for the interval, in which all can participate? As you know, the
spinning wheel is the first thing that occurs to me. I made the same answer to
the Maulana. He would have none of it, though he understood its import later.
The fourteen fold constructive programme is, of course, there for you to carry
out. What more should you do? I will tell you. Every one of you should, from
this moment onwards, consider yourself a free man or woman, and acts as if you
are free and are no longer under the heel of this imperialism.
It is
not a make-believe that I am suggesting to you. It is the very essence of
freedom. The bond of the slave is snapped the moment he consider himself to be a
free being. He will plainly tell the master: “I was your bond slave till this
moment, but I am a slave no longer. You may kill me if you like, but if you keep
me alive, I wish to tell you that if you release me from the bondage, of your
own accord, I will ask for nothing more from you. You used to feed and cloth me,
though I could have provided food and clothing for myself by my labour. I
hitherto depended on you instead of on God, for food and raiment. But God has
now inspired me with an urge for freedom and I am to day a free man, and will no
longer depend on you.”
You
may take it from me that I am not going to strike a bargain with the Viceroy for
ministries and the like. I am not going to be satisfied with anything short of
complete freedom. May be, he will propose the abolition of salt tax, the drink
evil, etc. But I will say, “Nothing less than freedom.”
Here
is a mantra,1 a short one, that I give you. You may imprint it on your hearts
and let every breath of yours give expression to it. The mantra is : ‘Do or
Die’. We shall either free India or die in the attempt; we shall not live to see
the perpetuation of our slavery. Every true Congressman or woman will join the
struggle with an inflexible determination not to remain alive to see the country
in bondage and slavery. Let that be your pledge. Keep jails out of your
consideration. If the Government keep me free, I will not put on the Government
the strain of maintaining a large number of prisoners at a time, when it is in
trouble. Let every man and woman live every moment of his or her life hereafter
in the consciousness that he or she eats or lives for achieving freedom and will
die, if need be, to attain that goal. Take a pledge, with God and your own
conscience as witness, that you will no longer rest till freedom is achieved and
will be prepared to lay down your lives in the attempt to achieve it. He who
loses his life will gain it; he who will seek to save it shall lose it. Freedom
is not for the coward or the faint-hearted.
A word
to the journalists. I congratulate you on the support you have hitherto given to
the national demand. I know the restrictions and handicaps under which you have
to labour. But I would now ask you to snap the chains that bind you. It should
be the proud privilege of the newspapers to lead and set an example in laying
down one’s life for freedom.
You have
the pen which the Government can’t suppress. I know you have large properties in
the form of printing presses, etc., and you would be afraid lest the Government
should attach them. I do not ask you to invite an attachment of the
printing-press voluntarily. For myself, I would not suppress my pen, even if the
press was to be attached. As you know my press was attached in the past and
returned later on. But I do not ask from you that final sacrifice. I suggest a
middle way. You should now wind up your standing committee, and you may declare
that you will give up the pen only when India has won her freedom. You may tell
Sir Frederick Puckle that he can’t except from you a command performance, that
his press notes are full of untruth, and that you will refuse to publish them.
You will openly declare that you are wholeheartedly with the Congress. If you do
this, you will have changed the atmosphere before the fight actually begins.
From the
Princes I ask with all respect due to them a very small thing. I am a
well-wisher of the Princes. I was born in a State. My grandfather refused to
salute with his right hand any Prince other than his own. But he did not say to
the Prince, as I fell he ought to have said, that even his own master could not
compel him, his minister, to act against his conscience. I have eaten the
Prince's salt and I would not be false to it. As a faithful servant, it is my
duty to warn the Princes that if they will act while I am still alive, the
Princes may come to occupy an honourable place in free India. In Jawaharlal’s
scheme of free India, no privileges or the privileged classes have a place.
Jawaharlal considers all property to be State-owned. He wants planned economy.
He wants to reconstruct India according to plan. He likes to fly; I do not. I
have kept a place for the Princes and the Zamindars1 in India that I envisage. I
would ask the Princes in all humility to enjoy through renunciation. The Princes
may renounce ownership over their properties and become their trustees in the
true sense of the term. I visualize God in the assemblage of people. The Princes
may say to their people : “You are the owners and masters of the State and we
are your servants.” I would ask the Princes to become servants of the people and
render to them an account of their own services. The empire too bestows power on
the Princes, but they should prefer to derive power from their own people; and
if they want to indulge in some innocent pleasures, they may seek to do so as
servants of the people. I do not want the Princes to live as paupers. But I
would ask them : “Do you want to remain slaves for all time? Why should you,
instead of paying homage to a foreign power, not accept the sovereignty of your
own people?” You may write to the Political Department : “The people are now
awake. How are we to withstand an avalanche before which even the Large empire
are crumbling? We, therefore, shall belong to the people from today onwards. We
shall sink or swim with them.” Believe me, there is nothing unconstitutional in
the course I am suggesting. There are, so far as I know, no treaties enabling
the empire to coerce the Princes. The people of the States will also declare
that though they are the Princes’ subjects, they are part of the Indian nation
and that they will accept the leadership of the Princes, if the latter cast
their lot with the people, the latter will meet death bravely and unflinchingly,
but will not go back on their word.
Nothing,
however, should be done secretly. This is an open rebellion. In this struggle
secrecy is a sin. A free man would not engage in a secret movement. It is likely
that when you gain freedom you will have a C.I.D. of your own, in spite of my
advice to the contrary. But in the present struggle, we have to work openly and
to receive bullets on our chest, without taking to heels.
I have a
word to say to Government servants also. They may not, if they like, resign
their posts yet. The late Justice Ranade did not resign his post, but he openly
declared that he belonged to the Congress. He said to the Government that though
he was a judge, he was a Congressman and would openly attend the sessions of the
Congress, but that at the same time he would not let his political views warp
his impartiality on the bench. He held Social Reform Conference in the very
Pandal1 of the Congress. I would ask all the Government servants to follow in
the footsteps of Ranade and to declare their allegiance to the Congress as an
answer to the secret circular issued by Sir Frederick Puckle.
This is
all that I ask of you just now. I will now write to the Viceroy. You will be
able to read the correspondence not just now but when I publish it with the
Viceroy’s consent. But you are free to aver that you support the demand to be
put forth in my letter. A judge came to me and said : “We get secret circulars
from high quarters. What are we to do?” I replied, “If I were in your place, I
would ignore the circulars. You may openly say to the Government : ‘I have
received your secret circular. I am, however, with the Congress. Though I serve
the Government for my livelihood, I am not going to obey these secret circulars
or to employ underhand methods,’”
Soldiers too are
covered by the present programme. I do not ask them just now to resign their
posts and to leave the army. The soldiers come to me, Jawaharlal and the Maulana
and say : “We are wholly with you. We are tired of the Governmental tyranny.” To
these soldiers I would say : You may say to the Government, “Our hearts are with
the Congress. We are not going to leave our posts. We will serve you so long as
we receive your salaries. We will obey your just orders, but will refuse to fire
on our own people.”
To those who
lack the courage to do this much I have nothing to say. They will go their own
way. But if you can do this much, you may take it from me that the whole
atmosphere will be electrified. Let the Government then shower bombs, if they
like. But no power on earth will then be able to keep you in bondage any longer.
If the students
want to join the struggle only to go back to their studies after a while, I
would not invite them to it. For the present, however, till the time that I
frame a programme for the struggle, I would ask the students to say to their
professors : “We belong to the Congress. Do you belong to the Congress, or to
the Government? If you belong to the Congress, you need not vacate your posts.
You will remain at your posts but teach us and lead us unto freedom.” In all
fights for freedom, the world over, the students have made very large
contributions.
If in the
interval that is left to us before the actual fight begins, you do even the
little I have suggested to you, you will have changed the atmosphere and will
have prepared the ground for the next step.
There is much I
should et like to say. But my heart is heavy. I have already taken up much of
your time. I have yet to say a few words in English also. I thank you for the
patience and attention with which you have listened to me even at this late
hour. It is just what true soldiers would do. For the last twenty-two years, I
have controlled my speech and pen and have stored up my energy. He is a true
Brahmacharri1 who does not fritter away his energy. He will, therefore, always
control his speech. That has been my conscious effort all these years. But today
the occasion has come when I had to unburden my heart before you. I have done
so, even though it meant putting a strain on your patience; and I do not regret
having done it. I have given you my message and through you I have delivered it
to the whole of India.
Top
III
{The
following is the concluding portion of Gandhiji’s speech before the A.I.C.C. at
Bombay on 8-8-`42 which was delivered in English :}
I have
taken such an inordinately long time over pouring out, what was agitating my
soul, to those whom I had just now the privilege of serving. I have been called
their leader or, in the military language, their commander. But I do not look at
my position in that light. I have no weapon but love to wield my authority over
any one. I do sport a stick which you can break into bits without the slightest
exertion. It is simply my staff with the help of which I walk. Such a cripple is
not elated, when he has been called upon to bear the greatest burden. You can
share that burden only when I appear before you not as your commander but as a
humble servant. And he who serves best is the chief among equals.
Therefore, I was bound to share with you such thoughts as were welling up in my
breast and tell you, in as summary a manner as I can, what I except you to do as
the first step.
Let me
tell you at the outset that the real struggle does not commence today. I have
yet to go through much ceremonial as I always do. The burden, I confess, would
be almost unbearable. I have to continue to reason in those circles with whom I
have lost my credit and who have no trust left in me. I know that in the course
of the last few weeks I have forfeited my credit with a large number of friends,
so much so, that they have begun to doubt not only my wisdom but even my
honesty. Now I hold my wisdom is not such a treasure which I cannot afford to
lose; but my honesty is a precious treasure to me and I can ill-afford to lose
it. I seem however to have lost it for the time being.
Friend of the
Empire
Such occasions
arise in the life of the man who is a pure seeker after truth and who would seek
to serve the humanity and his country to the best of his lights without fear or
hypocrisy. For the last fifty years I have known no other way. I have been a
humble servant of humanity and have rendered on more than one occasion such
services as I could to the Empire, and here let me say without fear of challenge
that throughout my career never have I asked for any personal favour. I have
enjoyed the privilege of friendship as I enjoy it today with Lord Linlithgow. It
is a friendship which has outgrown official relationship. Whether Lord
Linlithgow will bear me out, I do not know, but there is a personal bond between
him and myself. He once introduced me to his daughter. His son-in law, the A.D.C.
was drawn towards me . he fell in love with Mahadev more than with me and Lady
Anna and he came to me. She is an obedient and favourite daughter. I take
interest in their welfare. I take the liberty to give out these personal and
sacred tit-bits only to give you an earnest of the personal bond will never
interfere with the stubborn struggle on which, if it falls to my lot, I may have
to launch against Lord Linlithgow, as the representative of the Empire. I will
have to resist the might of that Empire with the might of the dumb millions with
no limit but of non-violence as policy confined to this struggle. It is a
terrible job to have to offer resistance to a Viceroy with whom I enjoy such
relations. He has more than once trusted my word, often about my people. I would
love to repeat that experiment, as it stands to his credit. I mention this with
great pride and pleasure. I mention it as an earnest of my desire to be true to
the Empire when that Empire forfeited my trust and the Englishman who was its
Viceroy came to know it.
Charlie Andrews
Then
there is the sacred memory of Charlie Andrews which wells up within me. At this
moment the spirit of Andrews hovers about me. For me he sums up the brightest
traditions of English culture. I enjoyed closer relations with him than with
most Indians. I enjoyed his confidence. There were no secrets between us. We
exchanged our hearts every day. Whatever was in his heart, he would blurt out
without the slightest hesitation or reservation. It is true he was a friend of
Gurudev1 but he looked upon Gurudev with awe. He had that peculiar humility. But
with me he became the closest friend. Years ago he came to me with a note of
introduction from Gokhale. Pearson and he were the first-rank specimens of
Englishmen. I know that his spirit is listening to me.
Then I
have got a warm letter of congratulations from the Metropolitan of Calcutta. I
hold him to be a man of God. Today he is opposed to me.
Voice of
Conscience
With all
this background, I want to declare to the world, although I may have forfeited
the regard of many friends in the West and I must bow my head low; but even for
their friendship or love I must not suppress the voice of conscience – promoting
of my inner basic nature today. There is something within me impelling me to cry
out my agony. I have known humanity. I have studied something of psychology.
Such a man knows exactly what it is. I do not mind how you describe it. That
voice within tells me, “You have to stand against the whole world although you
may have to stand alone. You have to stare in the face the whole world although
the world may look at you with bloodshot eyes. Do not fear. Trust the little
voice residing within your heart.” It says : “Forsake friends, wife and all; but
testify to that for which you have lived and for which you have to die. I want
to live my full span of life. And for me I put my span of life at 120 years. By
that time India will be free, the world will be free.
Real Freedom
Let me
tell you that I do not regard England or for that matter America as free
countries. They are free after their own fashion, free to hold in bondage
coloured races of the earth. Are England and America fighting for the liberty of
these races today? If not, do not ask me to wait until after the war. You shall
not limit my concept of freedom. The English and American teachers, their
history, their magnificent poetry have not said that you shall not broaden the
interpretation of freedom. And according to my interpretation of that freedom I
am constrained to say they are strangers to that freedom which their teachers
and poets have described. If they will know the real freedom they should come to
India. They have to come not with pride or arrogances but in the spite of real
earnest seekers of truth. It is a fundamental truth which India has been
experimenting with for 22 years.
Congress and
Non-violence
Unconsciously from its very foundations long ago the Congress has been building
on non-violence known as constitutional methods. Dadabhai and Pherozeshah who
had held the Congress India in the palm of their hands became rebels. They were
lovers of the Congress. They were its masters. But above all they were real
servants. They never countenanced murder, secrecy and the like. I confess there
are many black sheep amongst us Congressmen. But I trust the whole of India
today to launch upon a non-violent struggle. I trust because of my nature to
rely upon the innate goodness of human nature which perceives the truth and
prevails during the crisis as if by instinct. But even if I am deceived in this
I shall not swerve. I shall not flinch. From its very inception the Congress
based its policy on peaceful methods, included Swaraj and the subsequent
generations added non-violence. When Dadabhai entered the British Parliament,
Salisbury dubbed him as a black man; but the English people defeated Salisbury
and Dadabhai went to the Parliament by their vote. India was delirious with joy.
These things however India has outgrown.
I will go Ahead
It is,
however, with all these things as the background that I want Englishmen,
Europeans and all the United Nations to examine in their hearts what crime had
India committed in demanding Independence. I ask, is it right for you to
distrust such an organization with all its background, tradition and record of
over half a century and misrepresent its endeavors before all the world by
every means at your command? Is it right that by hook or by crook, aided by the
foreign press, aided by the President of the U.S.A., or even by the
Generalissimo of China who has yet to win his laurels, you should present
India’s struggle in shocking caricature? I have met the Generalissimo. I have
known him through Madame Shek who was my interpreter; and though he seemed
inscrutable to me, not so Madame Shek; and he allowed me to read his mind
through her. There is a chorus of disapproval and righteous protest all over the
world against us. They say we are erring, the move is inopportune. I had great
regard for British diplomacy which has enabled them to hold the Empire so long.
Now it stinks in my nostrils, and others have studied that diplomacy and are
putting it into practice. They may succeed in getting, through these methods,
world opinion on their side for a time; but India will speak against that world
opinion. She will raise her voice against all the organized propaganda. I will
speak against it. Even if all the United Nations opposed me, even if the whole
of India forsakes me, I will say, “You are wrong. India will wrench with
non-violence her liberty from unwilling hands.” I will go ahead not for India’s
sake alone, but for the sake of the world. Even if my eyes close before there is
freedom, non-violence will not end. They will be dealing a mortal blow to China
and to Russia if they oppose the freedom of non-violent India which is pleading
with bended knees for the fulfillment of debt along overdue. Does a creditor
ever go to debtor like that? And even when, India is met with such angry
opposition, she says, “We won’t hit below the belt, we have learnt sufficient
gentlemanliness. We are pledged to non-violence.” I have been the author of
non-embarrassment policy of the Congress and yet today you find me talking this
strong language. I say it is consistent with our honour. If a man holds me by
the neck and wants to drawn me, may I not struggle to free myself directly?
There is no inconsistency in our position today.
Appeal to
United nations
There
are representatives of the foreign press assembled here today. Through them I
wish to say to the world that the United Powers who somehow or other say that
they have need for India, have the opportunity now to declare India free and
prove their bona fides. If they miss it, they will be missing the opportunity of
their lifetime, and history will record that they did not dis charge their
obligations to India in time, and lost the battle. I want the blessings of the
whole world so that I may succeed with them. I do not want the United Powers to
go beyond their obvious limitations. I do not want them to accept non-violence
and disarm today. There is a fundamental difference between fascism and this
imperialism which I am fighting. Do the British get from India which they hold
in bondage. Think what difference it would make if India was to participate as a
free ally. That freedom, if it is to come, must come today. It will have no
taste left in it today you who have the power to help cannot exercise it. If you
can exercise it, under the glow of freedom what seems impossible, today, will
become possible tomorrow. If India feels that freedom, she will command that
freedom for China. The road for running to Russia’s help will be open. The
Englishmen did not die in Malaya or on Burma soil. What shall enable us to
retrieve the situation? Where shall I go, and where shall I take the forty
crores of India? How is this vast mass of humanity to be aglow in the cause of
world deliverance, unless and until it has touched and felt freedom. Today they
have no touch of life left. It has been crushed out of them. It lustre is to be
put into their eyes, freedom has to come not tomorrow, but today.
Do or Die
I have
pledged the Congress and the Congress will do or die.
My Non-violence (1960), pp. 183-205
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