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Gandhi's Views On Nonviolence
Nonviolence Vs. Violence
I must resume the argument about the
implications of the Rajkot where I left it the week before.
In theory, if there is sufficient
non-violence developed in any single person, he should be able to discover the
means of combating violence, no matter how wide-spread or severe, within his
jurisdiction. I have, repeatedly admitted my imperfections. I am no example of
perfect ahimsa. I am evolving. Such ahimsa as has been developed in me has been
found enough to cope with situations that have hitherto arisen. But today I feel
helpless in the face of the surrounding violence. There was a penetrating
article in the Statesman on my Rajkot statement. The editor therein contended
that the English had never taken our movement to rue Satyagraha, but being
practical people they had allowed the myth to continue though they had known it
to be a violent revolt. It was none the less so because the rebels had no arms.
I have quoted the substance from memory. When I read the article, I felt the
force of the argument. Through I had intended the movement to be purely
non-violent resistance, as I look back upon the happenings of those days, there
was undoubtedly violence among the resisters. I must own that had I been
perfectly tuned to the music of ahimsa, I would have sensed the slightest
departure from d my sensitiveness would have rebelled against any discord in it.
It seems to me that the united
action of the Hindus and the Muslims Jed me to the violence that was lurking in
the breasts of many. The English who are trained diplomats and administrators
are accustomed to line of least resistance, and when they found that it was more
profitable to conciliate a big organization than to crush it by extensive
frightfulness, they yielded to the extent that they thought was necessary. It
is, however, my conviction that our resistance was predominantly, non-violent in
action and will be accepted as such by the future historian. As a seeker of
truth and non-violence, however, I must not be satisfied mere action if it is
not from the heart. I must declare from the house-tops that the non-violence of
those days fell far short of the violence as I have so often defined.
Non-violent action without the
co-operation of the heart and the head cannot produce the intended result. The
failure of our imperfect ahimsa is visible to the naked eye. Look at the feud
that is going on between Hindus and Muslims. Each is arming for the fight with
the other. The violence that we had harboured in our breasts during the
non-cooperation is now recoiling upon ourselves. The violent energy that was,
generated among the masses, but was kept under cheek in the pursuit of common
objective, has now been let-loose and is being used among against ourselves.
The same phenomenon is discernible,
though in a less crude manner, in the dissension among Congressmen themselves
and the use of forcible methods that the Congress ministers are obliged to adopt
in running the administrations under their charge.
This narrative clearly shows that
the atmosphere is surcharged with violence. I hope it also shows that
non-violent mass movement is an impossibility unless the atmosphere is radically
changed. To blind one's eyes to the events happening around us is to court
disaster. It has been suggested to me that I should declare mass civil
disobedience and all internal strife will cease, Hindus and Muslims will compose
their differences, Congressmen will forget mutual jealousies and fights for
power. My reading of the situation is wholly different. If any mass movement is
undertaken at the present moment in the name of non-violence, it will resolve
itself into violence largely unorganized and organized in some cases. It will
bring discredit on the Congress, spell disaster for the Congress struggle for
independence and bring ruin to many a home. This may be a wholly untrue picture
born of my weakness. If so, unless I shed that weakness, I cannot lead a
movement which requires great strength and resolution.
But if I cannot find an effective
purely non-violent method, outbreak of violence seems to be a certainty. The
people demand self-expression. They are not satisfied with the constructive
programme prescribed by me and accepted almost unanimously by the Congress. As I
have said before, the imperfect response to the constructive programme is itself
proof positive of the skin-deep nature of the non-violence of Congressmen.
But, if there is an outbreak of
violence, it would not be without cause. We are yet far from the independence of
our dream. The irresponsibility of the Centre, which eats up 80 per cent of the
revenue, grinds down the people and thwarts their aspirations, is daily proving
more and more intolerable.
There is a growing consciousness of
the terrible autocracy of the majority of the States. I admit my responsibility
for the suspension of civil resistance in several States. This has resulted in
demoralization both among the people and the Princes. The people have lost nerve
and feel that all is lost. The demoralization among the Princes consist in their
thinking that now they have nothing to fear from their people, nothing
substantial to grant. Both are wrong. The result does not dismay me. In fact I
had foretold the possibility of these results when I was discussing with Jaipur
workers the advisability of suspending the movement, even though it was well
circumscribed with rules and restrictions. The demoralization among the people
shows that there was not non-violence in thought and word, and therefore, when
the intoxication and excitement of jail-going and the accompanying
demonstrations ceased, they thought that the struggle was over. The Princes came
to the hasty conclusion that they could safely consolidate their autocracy by
adopting summary measures against the resisters and placating the docile element
by granting eye-wash reforms.
Both the people and the Princes
might have reacted in the right manner -- the people by recognizing the
correctness of my advice and calmly generating strength and energy by quiet and
determined constructive effort, and the Princes by seizing the opportunity,
afforded by suspension, of doing justice for the sake of justice and granting
reforms that would satisfy the reasonable but advanced section among their
people. This could only happen, if they recognized the time-spirit. It is
neither too late for the people nor the Princes.
In this connection I may not omit
the Paramount Power. There are signs of the Paramount Power repenting of the
recent declarations about the freedom to the Princes to grant such reforms to
their people as they chose. There are audible whispers that the Princes may not
take those declarations literally. It is an open secret that the Princes dare
not do anything that they guess is likely to displease the Paramount Power. They
may not even meet persons whom the Paramount Power may not like them to meet.
When there is this tremendous influence exercised over the Princes, it is but
natural to hold the Paramount Power responsible for the unadulterated autocracy
that reigns supreme in many States.
So, if violence breaks out in this
unfortunate land, the responsibility will have to be shared by the Paramount
Power, the Princes, and above all by Congressmen. The first two have never
claimed to be non-violent. Their power is frankly derived from and based on the
use of violence. But the Congress has since 1920 adopted non-violence as its
settled policy and has undoubtedly striven to act up to it. But as Congressmen
never had non-violence in their hearts, they must reap the fruit of the defect,
however unintentional it was. At the crucial moment the defect has come to the
surface and the defective method does not seem to meet the situation.
Non-violence is never a method of coercion, it is one of conversion. We have
failed to convert the Princes, we have failed to convert the English
administrators. It is no use saying that it is impossible to persuade persons
willingly to part with their power. I have claimed that Satyagraha is a new
experiment. It will be time to pronounce it a failure when Congressmen have
given it a genuine trial. Even a policy, if it is honestly pursued, has to be
pursued with all one's heart. We have not done so. Hence Congressmen have to
convert themselves before the Paramount Power and the Princes can be expected to
act justly.
But if the Congressmen can or will
go no further than they have done in the direction of non-violence, and if the
Paramount Power and the Princes do not voluntarily and selfishly do the right
thing, the country must be prepared for violence, unless the new technique
yields a new mode of non-violent action which will become an effective
substitute for violence as a way of securing redress of wrongs. The fact that
violence must fail will not prevent its outbreak. Mere constitutional agitation
will not do.
By M. K. Gandhi
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