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Gandhi's
Views
& Work For Village Development
All-Round Village
Service
Village service
THE REAL India lies in the 7,00,000
villages. If Indian civilization is to make its full contribution to the
building up of a stable world order, it is this vast mass of humanity
that has….to be made to live again.
We have to tackle the triple malady
which holds our villages fast in its grip : (I) want of corporate
sanitation ; (ii) deficient diet; (iii) inertia . . . They [villagers]
are not interested in their own welfare. They don't appreciate modern
sanitary methods. They don't want to exert themselves beyond scratching
their farms or doing such labour as they are used to. These difficulties
are real and serious. But they must not baffle us…
We must have an unquenchable faith in
our mission. We must be patient with the people. We are ourselves
novices in village work. We have to deal with a chronic disease.
Patience and perseverance, if we have them, overcome mountains of
difficulties. We are like nurses who may not leave their patients
because they are reported to have an incurable disease.
Villages have suffered long from neglect
by those who have had the benefit of education. They have chosen the
city life. The village movement is an attempt to establish healthy
contact with the villages by inducing those who are fired with the
spirit of service to settle in them and find self-expression in the
service of villagers….
Those who have settled in villages in
the spirit of service are not dismayed by the difficulties facing them.
They knew before they went that they would have to contend against many
difficulties, including even sullenness on the part of villagers. Only
those, therefore, who have faith in themselves and in their mission will
serve the villagers and influence their lives.
Harijan, 20-2-1937
Workers
A true life lived amongst the people is
in itself an object lesson that must produce its own effect upon
immediate surroundings. The difficulty with the young is, perhaps, that
he has gone to the village merely to earn a living without the spirit of
service behind it.
I admit that village life does not offer
attractions to those who go there in search of money. Without the
incentive of service village life would jar after the novelty has worn
out. No young man having gone to a village may abandon the pursuit on
the slightest contact with difficulty. Patient effort will show that
villagers are not very different from city-dwellers and that they will
respond to kindness and attention.
It is no doubt true that one does not
have in the villages the opportunity of contact with the great ones of
the land. With the growth of village mentality the leaders will find it
necessary to tour in the villages and establish a living touch with
them. Moreover, the companionship of the great and the good is available
to all through the works of saints like Chaitanya, Ramakrishna,
Tulsidas, Kabir, Nanak, Dadu, Tukaram, Tiruvalluvar, and others too
numerous to mention, though equally known and pious.
Harijan, 20-21937
Top
LITERATURE
The difficulty is to get the mind tuned
to the reception of permanent values. If it is modern thought-political,
social, economic, scientific-that is meant, it is possible to procure
literature that will satisfy curiosity. I admit, however, that one does
not find such as easily as one finds religious literature. Saints wrote
and spoke for the masses. The vogue for translating modern thought to
the masses in an acceptable manner has not yet quite set in. but it must
come in time.
I would, therefore, advise young men….
Not to give in, but persist in their effort and by their presence make
the villages more livable and lovable. That they will do by serving the
villages in a manner acceptable to the villagers. Everyone can make a
beginning by making the villages cleaner by their own labour and
removing illiteracy to the extent of their ability. And if their lives
are clean, methodical and industrious, there is no doubt that the
infection will spread in the villages in which they may be working.
Harijan, 20-21937
SAMAGRA GRAMASEVA
A Samagra Gramaseva must know everybody
living in the village and render them such service as he can. That does
not mean that the worker will be able to do everything single-handed. He
will show them the way of helping themselves and procure for them such
help and materials as they require. He will train up his own helpers. He
will so win over the villagers that they will seek and follow his
advice.
Supposing I go and settle down in a
village with a GHANI (village oil press), I won't be an ordinary GHANCHI
(oil presser) earning 15-20 rupees a month. I will be a Mahatma GHANCHI.
I will be a Mahatma GHANCHI. I have used the word 'Mahatma' in fun , but
what I mean to say is that as a GHANCHI I will become a model for the
villagers to follow. I will be a GHANCHI who knows the Gita and the
Quran. I will be learned enough to teach their children. I may not be
able to do so for lack of time. The villagers will come to me and ask
me: "Please make arrangements for our children's education". I
will tell them: "I can find you a teacher, but you will have to
bear the expenses". And they will be prepared to do so most
willingly.
I will teach them spinning and when they
come and ask me for the services of a weaver, I will find them a weaver
on the same terms as I found them a teacher. And the weaver will teach
them how to weave their own cloth. I will inculcate in them the
importance of hygiene and sanitation, and when they come and ask me for
a sweeper, I will tell them: "I will be your sweeper and I will
train you all in the job."
This is my conception of Samagra
Gramaseva. You may tell me that I will never find a GHANCHI of this
description in this age. Then I will say that we cannot hope to improve
our villages in this age. . . . After all, the man who runs an oil mill
is a GHANCHI. He has money but his strength does not lie in his money.
Real strength lies in knowledge. True knowledge gives a moral standing
and moral strength. Everyone seeks the advice of such a man.
Harijan, 17-3-1946
ECONOMIC SURVEY
The villages will be surveyed and a list
prepared of things that can be manufactured locally with little or no
help which may be required for village use or for sale outside, such for
instance as GHANI-pressed oil and cakes, burning oil prepared through
GHANIS, hand-pounded rice, TADGUD, honey, toys, mats, hand-made paper,
village soap, etc. if enough care is thus taken, the villages, most of
them as good as dead or dying, will hum with life and exhibit the
immense possibilities they have of supplying most of their wants
themselves and of the cities and towns of India.
Harijan, 28-4-1946
ARTS AND CRAFTS
The villagers should develop such a high
degree of skill that articles prepared by them should command a ready
market outside. When our villages are fully developed, there will be no
dearth in them of men with a high degree of skill and artistic talent.
There will be village poets, village artists, village architects,
linguists and research workers. In shout, there will be nothing in life
worth having which will not be had in the villages.
Today the villages are dung heaps.
Tomorrow they will be like tiny gardens of Eden where dwell highly
intelligent folk whom no one can deceive or exploit. The reconstruction
of the villages along these lines should begin right now….. The
reconstruction of the villages should not be organized on a temporary
but permanent basis.
Harijan, 10-11-1946
Top
ECONOMIC REORGANIZATION
In my writing on cent per cent Swadeshi.
I have shown how some aspects of it can be tackled immediately with
benefit to the starving millions both economically and hygienically. The
richest in the land can share the benefit. Thus, if rice can be pounded
in the villages after the old fashion, the wages will fill the pockets
of the rice-pounding sisters and the rice-eating millions will get some
sustenance from the unpolished rice instead of pure starch which the
polished rice provides.
Human greed, which takes no account of
the health or the wealth of the people who come under its heels, is
responsible for the hideous rice-mills one sees in all the
rice-producing tracts. If public opinion was strong, it will make
rice-mills an impossibility by simply insisting on unpolished rice and
appealing to the owner of rice-mills to stop a traffic that undermines
the health of a whole nation and robs the poor of an honest means of
livelihood.
Harijan, 26-10-1934
….. I would say that, if the village
perishes, India will perish too. India will be no more India. Her own
mission in the world will get lost. The revival of the village is
possible only when it is no more exploited. Industrialization on a mass
scale will necessarily lead to passive or active exploitation of the
villagers as the problems of competition and marketing come in.
Therefore, we have to concentrate on the
village being self-contained, manufacturing mainly for use. Provided
this character of the village industry is maintained, there would be no
objection to villagers using even the modern machines and tools that
they can make and can afford to use. Only, they should not be used as a
means of exploitation of others.
Harijan, 29-8-1936
NON-VIOLENT ECONOMY
You cannot build non-violence on a
factory civilization, but it can be built on self-contained villages. .
. . Rural economy as I have conceived it, eschews exploitation
altogether, and exploitation is the essence of violence. You have,
therefore, to be rural-minded before you can be non-violent, and to be
rural-minded you have to have faith in the spinning wheel.
Harijan, 4-11-1939
We have to make a choice between India
of the villages that are as ancient as herself and India of the cities
which are a creation of foreign domination. Today the cities dominate
and drain the villages so that they are crumbling to ruin. My Khadi
mentality tells me that cities must subserve villages when that
domination goes. Exploiting of villages is itself organized violence. If
we want Swaraj to be built on non-violence, we will have to give the
villages their proper place.
Harijan, 20-1-1940
FOOD REFORM
Since the economic reorganization of the
villages has been commenced with food reform, it is necessary to find
out the simplest and cheapest foods that would enable the villagers to
regain the lost health. The addition of green leaves to their meals will
enable the villagers to avoid many diseases from which they are now
suffering.
The villagers' food is deficient in
vitamins; many of them can be supplied by fresh green leaves. An eminent
doctor told me a proper use of green leaves is calculated to
revolutionize the customary notions of food and much of what was today
being supplied by mild may be supplied by green leaves.
Harijan, 15-2-1935
POWER MACHINERY
If we could have electricity in every
village home, I should not mind villagers plying their implements and
tools, with the help of electricity. But then the village communities or
the State would own power-houses just as they have their grazing
pastures. But where there is no electricity and no machinery, what are
idle hands to do.
Harijan, 22-6-1935
I regard the existence of power wheels
for the grinding of corn in thousands of villages as the limit of our
helplessness. I suppose India does not produce all the engines or
grinding machines. . . . The planting of such machinery and engines on a
large scale in villages is also a sign of greed. Is it proper to fill
one's pocket in this manner at the expense of the poor? Every such
machinery puts thousands of hand-CHAKKIS out of work and takes away
employment from thousand of housewives and artisans who make these
CHAKKIS.
Moreover, the process is infective and
will spread to every village industry. The decay of the latter spells
too the decay of art. If it meant replacement of old crafts by new ones,
one might not have much to say against it. But this is not what is
happening. In the thousands of villages where power machinery exists,
one misses the sweet music, in the early morning, of the grinders at
work.
Harijan, 10-3-1946
[This
article is taken from the book "The mind of Mahatma Gandhi "]
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