The world is weary of hate. We
see the fatigue overcoming the Western nations. We see that this song of hate
has not benefited humanity. Let it be the privilege of India to turn a new leaf
and set a lesson to the world. - IV, I66.
My Task
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 multiplies 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.- YI, 23-3-22, 168.
I am not a visionary. I claim to
be practical idealist. The religion of non-violence is not meant merely for the
rishis and saints. It is meant for the common people as well. Non-violence is
the law of our species as violence is the law of the brute. The spirit lies
dormant in the brute and he knows no law but that of physical might. The
dignity of man requires obedience to a higher law-to the strength of the
spirit.
I have therefore ventured to
place before India the ancient law of self-sacrifice. For satyagraha and its
off-shoots, non-co-operation and civil resistance, are nothing but new names
for the law of suffering. The rishis, who discovered the law of nonviolence in
the midst of violence, were greater geniuses than Newton. They were themselves
greater warriors than Wellington. Having themselves known the use of arms, they
realized their uselessness and taught a weary world that its salvation lay not
through violence but through non-violence. - YI, 11-8-20, Tagore, 712.
Non-violence as a World-force
You might of course say that
there can be no non-violent rebellion and there has been none known to history.
Well, it is my ambition to provide an instance, and it is my dream that my
country may win its freedom through non-violence. And, I would like to repeat
to the world times without number, that I will not purchase my country’s
freedom at the cost of non-violence. My marriage to non-violence is such an
absolute thing that I would rather commit suicide than be deflected from my
position. I have not mentioned truth in this connection, simply because truth
cannot be expressed excepting by non-violence. - YI, 12-11-31, 354.
Science of war leads one to
dictatorship pure and simple. Science of nonviolence alone can lead one to pure
democracy. England, France and America have to make their choice. That is the
challenge of the two dictators.
Russia is out of the picture just
now. Russia has a dictator who dreams of peace and thinks he will wade to it
through a sea of blood. No one can say what Russian dictatorship will mean to
the world.
True democracy or the Swaraj of
the masses can never come through untruthful and violent means, for the simple
reason that the natural corollary to their use would be to remove all
opposition through the suppression or extermination of the antagonists. That
does not make for individual freedom. Individual freedom can have the fullest
play only under a regime of unadulterated ahimsa. - H, 27-5-39, 43.
Granted that India produced
sufficient arms and ammunition and men who knew the art of war, what part or
lot will those who cannot bear arms have in the attainment of Swaraj? I want
Swaraj in the winning of which even women and children would contribute an
equal share with physically the strongest. That can be under ahimsa only. I
would, therefore, stand for ahimsa as the only means for obtaining India’s
freedom even if I were alone.- H, 3-3-47, 27.
And so I plead for non-violence
and yet more non-violence. I do so not without knowledge but with sixty years’
experience behind me. - H, 24-2-26, 20.
The accumulated experience of the
past thirty years, fills me with the greatest hope that in the adoption of
non-violence lies the future of India and the world. It is the most harmless
and yet equally effective way of dealing with the political and economic wrongs
of the downtrodden portion of humanity. I have known from early youth that
non-violence is not a cloistered virtue to be practiced by the individual for
his peace and final salvation, but it is a rule of conduct for society if it is
to live consistently with human dignity and make progress towards the
attainment of peace for which it has been yearning for ages past. - GC, I70
War Vs. Non-violence
A believer in non-violence is
pledged not to resort to violence or physical force either directly or
indirectly in defense of anything, but he is not precluded from helping men or
institutions that are themselves not based on non-violence. If the reverse were
the case, I would, for instance, be precluded from helping India to attain
Swaraj because the future Parliament of India under Swaraj, I know for certain,
will be having some military and police forces, or to take a domestic
illustration, I may not help a son to secure justice, because forsooth he is
not a believer in non-violence.
Mr. Zacharias’ proposition will
reduce all commerce by a believer in non-violence to an impossibility. And
there are not wanting men, who do believe that complete non-violence means
complete cessation of all activity.
Not such, however, is my doctrine
of non-violence. My business is to refrain from doing any violence myself, and
to induce by persuasion and service as many of god’s creatures as I can to join
me in the belief and practice. But I would be untrue to my faith, if I refused
to assist in a just cause any men or measures that did not entirely coincide
with the principle of non-violence. I would be promoting violence, if finding
the Mussalmans to be in the right, I did not assist them by means strictly
nonviolent against those who had treacherously plotted the destruction of the
dignity of Islam. Even when both parties believe in violence there is often
such a thing as justice on one side or the other. A robbed man has justice on
his side, even though he may be accounted as a triumph of nonviolence, if the
injured party could be persuaded to regain his property by methods of
satyagraha, i.e. love or soul-force rather than a free fight. - YI, 1-6-21,
173.
My resistance to war does not
carry me to the point of thwarting those who wish to take part in it. I reason
with them. I put before them the better way and leave them to make the choice.
- H, I8-I-42, 4.
I accept broad facts of history
and draw my own lessons for my conduct. I do not want to repeat it in so far as
the broad facts contradict the highest laws of life. But positively refuse to
judge man from the scanty material furnished to us by history. De mortuis nil
nisi bonum. Kamal Pasha and De Valera too I cannot judge. But for me as a
believer in nonviolence out and out they cannot be my guides in life in so far
as their faith in war is concerned. I believe in Krishna perhaps more than the
writer. But my Krishna is the Lord of the Universe, the creator, preserver and
destroyer of us all. He may destroy because He creates. But I must not be drawn
into a philosophical or religious argument with my friends. I have not the
qualification for teaching my philosophy of life. I have barely qualifications
for practicing the philosophy I believe. I am but a poor struggling soul
yearning to be wholly good-wholly truthful and wholly nonviolent in thought,
word and deed, but ever failing to reach the ideal which I know to be true. I
admit, and assure my revolutionary friends, that it is a painful climb, but the
pain of it is a positive pleasure for me. Each step upward makes me feel
stronger and fit for the next. But all that pain and pleasure are for me. The revolutionaries
are at liberty to reject the whole of my philosophy. To them I merely present
my own experiences as a co-worker in the same cause even as I have successfully
presented them to the Ali Brothers and many other friends. They can and do
applaud whole-heartedly the action of Mustafa Kamala Pasha and possibly De
Valero and Lenin. But they realize with me that India is not like Turkey or
Ireland or Russia and that revolutionary activity is suicidal at this stage of
the country’s life at any rate if not for all time, in a country so vast, so
hopelessly divided and with the masses so deeply sunk in pauperism and so
fearfully terror-struck. - H, 12-7-42, 219.
I would say to my critics to
enter with me into the sufferings, not only of the people of India but of
those, whether engaged in the war or not, of the whole world. I cannot look at
this butchery going on in the world with indifference. I have an unchangeable
faith that it is beneath the dignity of men to resort to mutual slaughter. I
have no doubt that there is a way out.- HS, 20-7-44.
The accumulated experience of the
past thirty years, the first eight of which were in South Africa, fills me with
the greatest hope that in the adoption of non-violence lies the future of India
and the world. It is the most harmless and yet equally effective way of dealing
with the political and economic wrongs of the downtrodden portion of humanity.
I have known from early youth that non-violence is not a cloistered virtue to
be practiced by the individual for peace and final salvation, but it is a rule
of conduct for society if it is to live consistently with human dignity and
make progress towards the attainment of peace for which it has been yearning
for ages past. - GC, 170.
Moral Equivalent of War
Up to the year 1906, I simply
relied on appeal to reason. I was a very industrious reformer. I was a good
draftsman, as I always had a close grip of facts which in its turn was the
necessary result of my meticulous regard for truth. But I found that reason
failed to produce an impression when the critical moment arrived in South
Africa. My people were excited; even a worm will and does sometimes turn-and
there was talk of wreaking vengeance. I had then to choose between allying
myself to violence or finding out some other method of meeting the crisis and
stopping the rot and it came to me that we should refuse to obey legislation
that was degrading and let them put us in jail if they liked. Thus came into
being the moral equivalent of war. I was then a loyalist, because, I implicitly
believed that the sum total of the activities of the British empire was good
for India and for humanity. Arriving in England soon after the outbreak of the
war I plunged into it and later when I was forced to go to India as a result of
the pleurisy that I had developed, I led a recruiting campaign at the risk of
my life, and to the horror of some of my friends. The disillusionment came in
1919 after the passage of the Black Rowlatt Act and the refusal of the
Government to give the simple elementary redress of proved wrongs that we had
asked for. And so, in 1920, I became a rebel. Since then the conviction to the
people are not secured by reason alone but have to be purchased with their
suffering. Suffering is the law of human beings; war is the law of the jungle.
But suffering is infinitely more powerful than the law of the jungle for
converting the opponent and opening his ears, which are otherwise shut, to the
voice of reason. Nobody has probably drawn up more petitions or espoused more
forlorn causes than I and I have come to this fundamental conclusion that if
you want something really important to be done you must not merely satisfy the
reason, you must move the heart also. The appeal of reason is more to the head
but the penetration of the heart comes from suffering. It opens up the inner
understanding in man. Suffering is the badge of the human race, not the sword.
- YI, 5-11-31, 341.
The Essence of Non-violence
(1) Non-violence is the law of
the human race and is infinitely greater than and superior to brute force.
(2) In the last resort it does
not avail to those who do not posses a living faith in the God of Love
(3) Non-violence affords the
fullest protection to one’s self-respect and sense of honour, but not always to
possession of land or movable property, though its habitual practice does prove
a better bulwark than the possession of armed men to defend them. Non-violence
in the very nature of things is of no assistance in the defense of ill-gotten
gains and immoral acts.
(4) Individuals and nations who
would practiced non-violence must be prepared to sacrifice (nations to the last
man) their all except honour. It is therefore inconsistent with the possession
of other people’s countries, i.e. modern imperialism which is frankly based on
force for its defense.
(5) Nonviolence is a power which
can be wielded equally by all-children, young men and women or grown up people,
provided they have a living faith in the God of Love and have therefore equal
love for all mankind. When nonviolence is accepted as the law of life it must
pervade the whole being and not be applied to isolated acts.
(6) It is a profound error to
suppose that whilst the law is good enough for individuals it is not for masses
of mankind.- H, 5-9-36, 236.
Is Perfection Possible?
Perfect non-violence is
impossible so long as we exist physically, for we would want some space at
least to occupy. Perfect non-violence whilst you are inhabiting the body is
only a theory like Euclid’s pointor straight line, but we have to endeavor
every moment of our lives. - H, 21-7-40, 211.
Ahimsa, distinguished from
Non-killing
Let us now examine the root of
ahimsa. It is uttermost selflessness. Selflessness means complete freedom from
a regard for one’s body. If man desired to realize himself i.e. Truth, he could
do so only by completely detached from the body i.e. by making all other beings
feel safe from him. That is the way of ahimsa.
Ahimsa does not simply mean
non-killing. Himsa means causing pain to or killing any life out of anger, or
from a selfish purpose. Or with the intention of injuring it. Refraining from
so doing is ahimsa. - YI, 4-11-26, 385.
Violence will be violence for all
time, and all violence is sinful. But what is inevitable, is not regarded as a
sin, so much so that the science of daily practice has not only declared the
inevitable violence involved in killing for sacrifice as permissible but even
regarded it as meritorious.
It is no easy thing to walk on
the sharp sword-edge of ahimsa in this world which is full of himsa. Wealth
does not help; anger is the enemy of ahimsa; and pride is a monster that
swallows it up. In this strait and narrow observance of this religion of ahimsa
one has often to know so-called himsa as the truest form of ahimsa- YI,
21-10-26, 363.
The sin of himsa consists not in
merely taking life, but in taking life for the sake of one’s perishable body.
All destruction therefore involved in the process of eating, drinking etc. is
selfish and therefore himsa. But man regards it to be unavoidable and puts up
with it. But the destruction of bodies of tortured creatures being for their
own peace cannot be regarded as himsa, or the unavoidable destruction caused
for the purpose of protecting one’s wards cannot be regarded as himsa.
1. It is impossible to sustain
one’s body without the destruction of other bodies to some extent.
2. All have to destroy some life,
(a) for sustaining their own bodies,
(b) for protecting those under
their care, or
(c) Something for the sake of those whose life is taken.
3. (a) and (b) in ‘2’ mean himsa
to a greater or less extent. (c) means no himsa and is therefore ahimsa. Himsa
in (a) and (b) is unavoidable.
4. A progressive ahimsa-ist will,
therefore, commit the himsa contained in (a) and (b) as little as possible,
only when it is unavoidable, and after full and mature deliberation and having
exhausted all remedies to avoid it.
Taking life may be a duty. We do
destroy as much life as we think necessary for sustaining our body. Thus for
food we take life, vegetable and other, and for health we destroy mosquitoes
and the like by the use of disinfectants etc. and we do not think that we are
guilty of irreligion in doing so…for the benefit of the species, we kill
carnivorous beasts…Even man-slaughter may be necessary in certain cases.
Suppose a man runs amuck and goes furiously about sword in hand, and killing
anyone that comes in his way, and no one dares to capture him alive. Any one
who dispatches this lunatic, will earn the gratitude of the community and be
regarded as a benevolent man. - YI, 4-11-26, 385.
I see that there is an
instinctive horror of killing living beings under any circumstances whatever.
For instance, an alternative has been suggested in the shape of confining even
rabid dogs in a certain place and allowing them to die a slow death. Now my
idea of compassion makes this thing impossible for me. I cannot for a moment
bear to see a dog, or for that matter any other living being, helplessly
suffering the torture of a slow death. I do not kill a human being thus
circumstanced because I have more hopeful remedies. I should kill a dog
similarly situated, because in its case I am without a remedy. Should my child
be attacked with rabies and there was no helpful remedy to relieve his agony, I
should consider it my duty to take his life. Fatalism has its limits. We leave
things to Fate after exhausting all the remedies. One of the remedies and the
final one to relieve the agony of a tortured child is to take his life. - YI,
18-11-26, 395.
Why then not Kill Those Who
Oppress Mankind?
No human being is so bad as to be
beyond redemption, no human being is so perfect as to warrant his destroying
him whom he wrongly considers to be wholly evil.- YI, 26-3-31, 49.
A Satyagrahi must never forget
the distinction between evil and the evil-doer. He must not harbour ill-will or
bitter ness against the latter. He may not even employ needlessly offensive
language against the evil person, however unrelieved his evil might be. For it
is an article of faith with every satyagrahi that there is no one so fallen in
this world but can be converted by love. A satyagrahi will always try to
overcome evil by good, anger by love, untruth by truth, himsa by ahimsa. There
is no other way of purging the world of evil- YI, 8-8-29, 263.
Absence of Hatred
I hold myself to be incapable of
hating any being on earth. By a long course of prayerful discipline, I have
ceased for over forty years to hate anybody. I know this is a big claim.
Nevertheless, I make it in all humility. But I can and do hate evil wherever it
exists. I hate the system of government that he British people have set up in
India. I hate the ruthless exploitation of India even as I hate from the bottom
of my heart the hideous system of untouchability for which millions of Hindus
have made themselves responsible. But I do not hate the domineering Hindus. I
seek to reform them in all the loving ways that are open to me. My
non-co-operation has its roots not in hatred, but in love. My personal religion
peremptorily forbids me to hate anybody. - YI, 6-8-25, 272.
We can only win over the opponent
by love, never by hate. Hate is the subtlest form of violence. We cannot be
really non-violent and yet have hate in us. - H, 17-8-34, 212.
Truth in Speech and Non-violence
To say or write a distasteful
word is surely not violent especially when the speaker or writer believes it to
be true. The essence of violence is that there must be a violent intention
behind a thought, word or act, i.e. an intention to do harm to the opponent
so-called.
False notions of propriety or
fear of wounding susceptibilities often deter people from saying what they mean
and ultimately land them on the shores of hypocrisy. But if nonviolence of thought
is to be evolved in individuals or societies or nations, truth has to be told,
however harsh or unpopular it may appear to be for the moment.- H, 19-12-36,
362.
Satyam bruyat, Priyam bruyat na
bruyat Satyam apriyam
In my opinion the Sanskrit text
means that one should speak the truth in gentle language. One had better not
speak it, if one cannot do so in a gentle way; meaning thereby that there is no
truth in a man who cannot control his tongue.- YI, I7-9-25 3I8.
Positive Aspects of Ahimsa: Love
and Patience
In its positive form, ahimsa
means the largest love, greatest charity. If I am a follower of ahimsa, I must
love my enemy. I must apply the same rules to the wrong-doer who is my enemy or
a stranger to me, as I would to my wrong-doing father or son. This active
necessarily includes truth and fearlessness. As man cannot deceive the love
one, he does not fear or frighten him or her. Gift of life is the greatest of
all gifts; a man who gives it in reanty, disarms all hostility. He has paved
the way for an honourable understanding. And none who is himself subject to
fear can bestow that gift, He must therefore be himself fearless. A man cannot
practised ahimsa and be a coward at the same time. The practice of ahimsa calls
forth the greatest courage.- Nat, 346.
Having flung aside the sword,
there is nothing except the cup of love which I can offer to those who oppose
me. It is by offering that cup that I expect to draw them close to me. I cannot
think of permanent enmity between man and man, and believing as I do in the
theory of rebirth, I live in the hope that if not in this birth, in some other
birth, I shall be able to hug all humanity in friendly embrace.- YI, 2-4-31,
54.
Love is the strongest force the
world possesses and yet it is the humblest imaginable. - YI, 6-8-25, 272.
The hardest heart and the
grossest ignorance must disappear before the rising sun of suffering without
anger and without malice. - YI, 19-2-25, 61.
Love has special quality of
attracting abundance of love in return. - Ceylon, 150
Non-violent Resistance
My goal is friendship with the
whole world and I can combine the greatest love with the greatest opposition to
wrong. - YI, 10-3-20, Tagore, 139.
Non-violence is ‘not a
resignation from all real fighting against wickedness’. On the contrary, the
non-violence of my conception is a more active and real fight against
wickedness than retaliation whose very nature is to increase wickedness. I
contemplate, a mental and therefore a moral opposition to immoralities. I seek
entirely to blunt the edge of the tyrant’s sword, not by putting up against it
a sharper-edged weapon, but by disappointing his expectation that I would be
offering physical resistance. The resistance of the soul that I should offer
would elude him. It would at first dazzle him and at last compel recognition
from him, which recognition would not humiliate him but would uplift him. It
may be urged that this is an ideal state. And so it is. - YI, 8-10-25, 346. cf.
133, 386, 426, 551.
Non-violence, Militant in
Character
Non-violence in its dynamic
condition means conscious suffering. It does not mean meek submission to the
will of the evil-doer, but it means the putting of one’ whole soul against the
will of the tyrant. Working under this law of our beings, it is possible for a
single individual to defy the whole might of an unjust empire to save his
honour, his religion, his soul and lay the foundation for that empire’s fall or
its regeneration.- YI, II-8-20, Tagore, 7I3. Cf. 5I6.
Yours should not merely be a
passive spirituality that spends itself in idle meditation, but it should be an
active thing which will carry war into the enemy’s camp.*
Never has anything been done on
this earth without direct action. I reject the word 'passive resistance',
because of its insufficiency and its being interpreted as a weapon of the weak.
What was the larger ‘symbiosis’
that Buddha and Christ preached? Gentleness and love. Buddha fearlessly carried
the war into the enemy’s camp and brought down on its knees an arrogant
priesthood. Christ drove out the money-changers from the temple of Jerusalem
and drew down curses from heaven upon the hypocrites and the Pharisees. Both
were for intensely direct action. But even as Buddha and Christ chastised, they
showed unmistakable love and gentleness behind every act of theirs. - YI,
I2-5-20, Tagore, 1072, and 1070.
Our aim is not merely to arouse
the best in the Englishman but to do so whilst we are prosecuting our cause. If
we cease to pursue our course, we do not evoke the best in him. The best must
not be confounded with good temper. When we are dealing with any evil, we may
have to ruffle the evil-doer. We have to run the risk, if we are to bring the
best out of him. I have likened nonviolence to aseptic and violence to
antiseptic treatment. Both are intended to ward off the evil, and therefore
cause a kind of disturbance which is often inevitable. The first never harms
the evil-doer.- H, 30-3-40, 72.
NON-Violence, the Virtue of the
Strong
Non-violence presupposes ability
to strike. It is a conscious, deliberate restraint put upon one’s desire for
vengeance. But vengeance is any day superior to passive, effeminate and
helpless submission. Forgiveness is higher still. Vengeance too is weakness.
The desire for vengeance comes out of fear of harm, imaginary or real. A man
who fears no one on earth would consider it troublesome even to summon up anger
against one who is vainly trying to injure him. - YI, I2-8-26, 285.
Ahimsa is the extreme limit of
forgiveness. But forgiveness is the quality of the brave. Ahimsa is impossible
without fearlessness. - YI, 4-II-26, 384.
My creed of non-violence is an
extremely active force. It has no room for cowardice or even weakness. There is
hope for a violent man to be some day non-violent but there is none for a
coward. I have therefore said more than once in these pages that if we do not
know how to defend ourselves, our women and our places of worship by the force
of suffering, i.e. non-violence, we must, if we are men, be at least able to
defend all these by fighting. - YI, I6-6-27, I96.
There are two ways of defense.
The best and the most effective is not to defend at all, but to remain at one’s
post risking every danger. The next best but equally honourable method is to
strike bravely in self-defense and put one’s life in the most dangerous
positions. - YI, 18-12-24, 414, cf. 495.
The strength to kill is not
essential for self-defense; one ought to have the strength to die. When a man
is fully ready to die, he will not even desire to offer violence. Indeed I may
put it down as a self-evident proposition that the desire to kill is in inverse
proportion to the desire to die. And history is replete with instances of men
who by dying with courage and compassion on their lips converted the hearts of
their violent opponents.- YI, 23-I-30, 27.
Non-violence and cowardice go ill
together. I can imagine a fully armed man to be at heart a coward. Possession
of arms implies an element of fear, if not cowardice. But true non-violence is
an impossibility without the possession of unadulterated fearlessness.- H,
15-7-39, 201.
True and False Nonviolence
Non-violence to be a potent force
must begin with the mind. Non-violence of the mere body without the
co-operation of the mind is non-violence of weak or the cowardly, and has
therefore no potency. If we hear malice and hatred in our bosoms and pretend
not to retaliate, it must recoil upon us and lead to our destruction. For
abstention from mere body violence not to be injurious, it is at least
necessary not to entertain hatred if we cannot generate active love.
All the songs and speeches
betokening hatred must be taboo. - YI, 2-4-31, 58.
The mysterious effect of
non-violence is not to be measured by its visible effect. But we dare not rest
content so long as the poison of hatred is allowed to permeate society. This
struggle is a stupendous effort at conversion. We aim at nothing less than the
conversion of the English. It can never be done by harbouring ill-will and
still pretending to follow nonviolence. Let those therefore who want to follow
the path of nonviolence and yet Harbour ill-will retrace their steps and repent
of the wrong they have done to themselves and the country.- YI, 2-4-3I, 58.
If we are unmanly today, we are
so, not because we do not know how to strike, but because we fear to die. He is
no follower of Mahavira, the apostle of Jainism, or of Buddha or of the Vedas
who, being afraid to die, takes flight before any danger, real or imaginary,
all the while wishing that somebody else would remove the danger by destroying
the person causing it. He is no follower of ahimsa who does not care a straw if
he kills a man by inches by deceiving him in trade, or who would protect by
force of arms a few cows and make away with the butcher or who, in order to do
a supposed good to his country, does not mind killing off a few officials. All
these are actuated by hatred, cowardice and fear. Here the love of the cow or
the country is a vague thing intended to satisfy one’s vanity or soothe a
stinging conscience.
Ahimsa, truly understood, is in
my humble opinion a panacea for all evils mundane and extra-mundane. We can
never over do it. Just at present we are not doing it at all. Ahimsa does not
displace the practice of other virtues, but renders their practice imperatively
necessary before it can be practiced even in its rudiments. Mahavira and Buddha
were soldiers, and so was Tolstoy. Only, they saw deeper and truer into their
profession and found the secret of a true, happy, honourable and godly life.
Let us be joint-sharers with these teachers, and this land of ours will once
more be the abode of gods. - Nat, 348.
Violence, rather than Cowardice
I do believe that, where there is
only a choice between cowardice and violence, I would advise violence. I would
rather have India resort to arms in order to defend her honour than that she
should, in a cowardly manner, become or remain a helpless witness to her own
dishonour.
But I believe that non-violence
is infinitely superior to violence, forgiveness is more manly than punishment.
Forgiveness adorns the soldier. But abstinence is forgiveness only when there
is the power to punish; it is meaningless when it pretends to proceed from a
helpless creature. But I do not believe India to be helpless. I do not believe
myself to be a helpless creature. Strength does not come from physical
capacity. It comes from an indomitable will. - YI, 11-8-20, Tagore, 711
The people of a village near
Bettiah told me that they had run away whilst the police were looting their
houses and molesting their womenfolk. When they said that they had run away
because I had told them to be non-violent, I hung my head in shame. I assured
them that such was not the meaning of my nonviolence. I expected them to
intercept the mightiest power that might be in the act of harming those who
were under their protection, and draw without retaliation all harm upon their
own heads even to the point of death, but never to run away from the storm
centre. It was manly enough to defend one’s property, honour o0r religion at
the point of the sword. It was manlier and nobler to defend them without
seeking to injure the wrongdoer. But it was unmanly, unnatural and dishonorable
to forsake the post of duty and, in order to save one’s skin, to leave
property, honour or religion to the mercy of the wrongdoer. I could see my way
of delivering the message of ahimsa to those who knew how to die, not to those
who were afraid of death.- IV, 254.
The weakest of us physically must
be taught the art of facing dangers and giving a good account of ourselves. I want
both the Hindus and the Mussalman to cultivate the cool courage, to die without
killing. But if one has not that courage, I want him to cultivate the art of
killing and being killed, rather than in a cowardly manner flee from danger.
For the latter in spite of his flight does commit mental himsa. He flees
because he has not the courage to be killed in the act of killing.- YI,
20-I0-2I, 335.
Self-defense is the only
honourable course where there is unread ness for self-immolation. - H, 20-7-35,
181.
I would risk violence a thousand
times than the emasculation of a whole race.- YI, 4-8-20, Tagore, 32I
The Hindus think that they are
physically weaker than the Mussalman. The latter consider themselves weak in
educational and earthly equipment. They are now doing what all weak bodies have
done hitherto. This fighting, therefore, however unfortunate it may be, is a
sign of growth. It is like the Wars of the Roses. Out of it will rise a mighty
nation.- YI, 9-9-26, 3I6.
Limitations of Violence
Hitherto I have given historical
instances of bloodless non-co-operation. I will not Insult the intelligence of
the reader by citing historical instances on non-co-operation combined with
violence, but I am free to confess that there are on record as many successes
as failures in violent non-co-operation.- YI, 4-8-20, Tagore, 320.
Revolutionary crime is intended
to exert pressure. But it is the insane pressure of anger and ill-will. I
contend that non-violent acts exert pressure far more effective than violent
acts, for that pressure comes from goodwill and gentleness. - YI, 26-I2-24,
420.
I do not blame the British. If we
were weak in numbers as they are, we too would perhaps have resorted to the
same methods as they are now employing. Terrorism and deception are weapons not
of the strong but of the weak. The British are weak in numbers, we are weak in
spite of our numbers. The result is that each is dragging the other down. It is
common experience that Englishmen lose in character after residence in India
and that Indians lose in courage and manliness by contact with Englishmen. This
process of weakening is good neither for us two nations, nor for the world.-
YI, 22-9-20, Tagore, I092.
I object to violence because when
it appears to do good, the good is only temporary; the evil it does is
permanent. I do not believe that the killing of even every Englishman can do
the slightest good to India. The millions will be just as badly off as they are
today, if someone made it possible to kill of every Englishman tomorrow. The
responsibility is more ours than that of the English for the present state of
things. The English will be powerless to do evil if we will but be good. Hence
my incessant emphasis o reform from within.- YI, 21-5-25, 178.
Good brought through force
destroyed individuality. Only when the change was effected through the
persuasive power of non-violent non-co-operation, i.e. love, could the
foundation of individuality be preserved, and real, abiding progress be assured
for the world.- H, 9-3-47, 58.
History teaches one that those
who have, no doubt with honest motives, ousted the greedy by using brute force
against them, have in their turn become a prey to the disease of the conquered.
- YI, 6-5-26, 164.
To the Revolutionary
Those whom you seek to depose are
better armed and infinitely better organized than you are. You may not care for
your own loves, but you dare not disregard those of your countrymen who have no
desire to die a martyr’s death.- YI, 26-I2-24, 428.
Form violence done to the foreign
ruler, violence to our own people whom we may consider to be obstructing the
country’s progress is an easy natural step. Whatever may have been the result
of violent activities in other countries and without reference to the
philosophy of nonviolence, it does not require much intellectual effort to see
that if we resort to violence for ridding society of the many abuses which
impede our progress, we shall add to our difficulties and postpone the day of
freedom. The people unprepared for reform because unconvinced of their
necessity will be maddened with rage over their coercion, and will seek the
assistance of the assistance of the foreigner in order to retaliate. Has not
this been happening before our eyes for the past many years of which we have
still painfully vivid recollections?- YI, 2-I-30, 4.
I hold that the world is sick of
armed rebellions. I hold too that whatever may be true of other countries, a
bloody revolution will not succeed in India. The masses have no active part can
do no good to them. A successful bloody revolution can only mean further misery
for the masses. For it would be still foreign rule for them. The nonviolence I
teach is active nonviolence of the strongest. But the weakest can partake in it
without becoming weaker. They can only be the stronger for having been in it.
The masses are far bolder today than ever were. A nonviolent struggle
necessarily involves construction on a mass scale. It cannot therefore lead to
tamas or darkness or inertia. It means a quickening of the national life. That
movement is still going on silently almost imperceptibly, but none the less
surely.
I do not deny the revolutionary's
heroism and sacrifice. But heroism and sacrifice in a bad cause are so much
waste of splendid energy and hurt the good cause by drawing away attention from
it by the glamour of the misused heroism and sacrifice in a bad cause.
I am not ashamed to stand erect
before the heroic and self-sacrificing revolutionary because I am able to pit
an equal measure of nonviolent men's heroism and sacrifice untarnished by the
blood of the innocent. Self-sacrifice of one innocent man is a million times
more potent than the sacrifice of million men who die in the act of killing
others. The willing sacrifice of the innocent is the most powerful retort to
insolent tyranny that has yet been conceived by God or man.�YI, I2-2-25, 60.
Nonviolence, the Swifter Way
The spiritual weapon of self-purification,
intangible as it seems, is the most potent means of revolutionizing one’s
environment and loosening external shackles. It works subtly and invisibly; it
is an intense process though it might often seem a weary and long-drawn
process, it is the straightest way to liberation. The surest and quickest and
no effort can be too great for it. What it requires is faith-an unshakable
mountain-like faith that flinches from nothing.
You need not be afraid that the
method of nonviolence is a slow long-drawn out process. It is the swiftest the
world has seen, for it is the surest.- YI, 30-4-25, 153.
India’s freedom is assured if she
has patience. That way will be found to be the shortest even though it may
appear to be the longest to our impatient nature. The way of peace insures
internal growth and stability.- YI, 20-5-26, I84.
Non-violence also the Noble Way
I am more concerned in preventing
the brutalization of human nature than in the prevention of the sufferings of
my own people. I know that people who voluntarily undergo a course of suffering
raise themselves and the whole of humanity; but I also know that people who
become brutalized in their desperate efforts to get victory over their
opponents or to exploit weaker nations or weaker men, not only drag down
themselves but mankind also. And it cannot be a matter of pleasure to me or
anyone else to see human nature dragged to the mire. If we are all sons of the
same God and partake of the same divine essence, we must partake of the sin of every
person whether he belongs to us or to another race. You can understand how
repugnant it must be to invoke the beast in any human being, how mush more so
in Englishmen, among whom I count numerous friends. I invite you all to give
all the help that you can in the endeavour that I am making.- YI, 29-10-31,
325.
The doctrine of violence has
reference only to the doing of injury by one to another. Suffering injury in
one’s own person is on the contrary of the essence of non-violence and is the
chosen substitute for violence to others. It is not because I value life low
that I can countenance with joy thousands voluntarily losing their lives for
satyagraha, but because I know that it results in the long run in the least
loss of life and what is more, it ennobles those who lose their lives and
morally enriches the world for their sacrifice. - YI, 8-10-25, 345
The method of passive resistance
is the clearest and safest, because, if the cause is not true, it is the
resisters, and they alone, who suffer.- Nat. 305.
Passive resistance is an
all-sided sword; it can be used anyhow; it blesses him who uses it and him
against whom it is used.- IHR, 48.
The beauty of satyagraha, of
which non-co-operation is but a chapter, is that it is available to either side
in a fight; that it has checks that automatically work for the vindication of
truth and justice for that side, whichever it may be, that has truth and
justice in preponderating measure. It is as powerful and faithful a weapon in
the hand of the capitalist as in that of the labourer. It is as powerful in the
hands of the government, as in that of the people, and will bring victory to
the government, if people are misguided or unjust, as it will win the battle
for the people if the government be in the wrong. Quick disorganization and
defeat are bound to be the fate of bolstered up cases and artificial
agitations, if the battle is fought with satyagraha weapons. Suppose the people
are unfit to rule themselves, or are unwilling to sacrifice for a cause, then,
no amount of noise will bring them victory in non-co-operation.- YI, 23-6-20.
Tagore, 42.
Criminal Assaults
The main thing, however, is for
women to know how to be fearless. It is my firm conviction; that a fearless
woman who knows that her purity is her best shield can never be dishonored.
However beastly the man, he will bow in shame before the flame of her dazzling
purity. There are examples even in modern times of women who have thus defended
themselves. I can, as I write, recall two such instances. I therefore recommend
women who read this article to try to cultivate this courage. They will become
wholly fearless, if they can and cease to tremble as they do today at the mere
thought of assaults. It is not, however, necessary for a woman to go through a
bitter; experience for the sake of passing a test of courage. These experiences
mercifully do not come in the way of lakhs or even thousands. Every soldier is
not a beast. It is a minority that loses all sense of decency. Only twenty per
cent of snakes are poisonous, and out of these a few only bite. They do not
attack unless trodden on. But this knowledge does not help those who are full
of fear and tremble at the sight of a snake. Parents and husbands should,
therefore, instruct women in the art of becoming fearless. It can best be
learnt from a living faith in God. Though He is invisible, He is one’s
unfailing protector. He who has this faith is the most fearless of all.
But such faith or courage cannot
be acquired in a day. Meantime we must try to explore4 other means. When a
woman is assaulted she may not stop to think in terms of himsa or ahimsa. Her
primary duty is self-protection. She is at liberty to employ every method or
means that come to her mind in order to defend her honour. God has given her
nails and teeth. She must use them with all her strength and, if need be, die
in the effort. The man or woman who has shed all fear of death will be able not
only to protect himself or herself but others also through laying down his
life. In truth we fear death most, and hence we ultimately submit to superior
physical force. Some will bend the knee to the invader, some will resort to
bribery, some will crawl on their bellies or submit to other forms of
humiliation, and some women will even give their bodies rather than die. I have
not written this in a carping spirit. I am only illustrating human nature.
Whether we crawl on our belies or whether a woman yields to the lust of man it
is symbolic of that same love of life which makes us stoop to anything.
Therefore only he who loses his life shall save it; (tena tyaktena bhunjithah).
Every reader should commit this matchless shloka to memory. But mere lip
loyalty to it will be of no avail. It must penetrate deep down to the innermost
recesses of his heart. Toenjoy life one should give up the lure of life. That
should be part of our nature.
So much for what a woman should
do. But what about a man who is witness to such crimes? The answer is implied
in the foregoing. He must not be a passive onlooker. He must protect the woman.
He must not run for police help; he must not rest satisfied by pulling the alarm
chain in the train. If he is able to practiced non-violence, he will die in
doing so and thus save the woman in jeopardy. If he does not believe in
non-violence or cannot practiced it, he must try to save her by using all the
force he may have. In either way there must be readiness on his part to lay
down his life. - H, 1-3-42, 60.
Q. what is a woman to do when
attacked by miscreants? To run away, or resist with violence? To; have boats in
readiness to fly or prepare to defend with weapons?
A: My answer to this question is
very simple. For me there can be no preparation for violence. All preparation
must be for nonviolence if courage of the highest type is to be developed.
Violence can only be tolerated as being preferable always to cowardice. Therefore
I would have no boats ready for a flight in emergency. For a nonviolent person
there is no emergency, but quiet dignified preparation for death. Hence whether
it Is a man or a woman he or she will defy death even when he or she is
unassisted; for the real assistance is from God. I can preach no other thing
and I am here to practiced what I preach. Whether such an opportunity will
occur to me or be given to me I do not know. If there are women who when
assailed by miscreants cannot resist themselves without arms they do not need
to be advised to carry arms. They will do so. There is something wrong in this
constant enquiry as to whether to bear arms or not. People have to learn to be
naturally independent. If they will remember the central teaching, namely, that
the real effective resistance lies in nonviolence, they will model their
conduct accordingly. And that is what the world had been doing although
unthinkingly. Since it is not the highest courage, namely, courage born of
nonviolence, it arms itself even unto the atom bomb. Those who do not see in it
the futility of violence will naturally arm themselves to the best of their
ability.
In India since my return from
South Africa, there has been conscious and constant training in non-violence
with the result we have seen.
Q. Can a woman be advised to take
her own life rather than surrender?
A. The question requires a
definite answer. I answered it in Delhi just before leaving for Noakhali. A
woman would most certainly take her own life rather than surrender. In other
words, Surrender has no room in my plan of life. But I was asked in what way to
take one’s own life. I promptly said it was not for me to prescribe the means,
and behind the approval of suicide under such circumstances was and is the belief
that one whose mind is prepared for even suicide will have the requisite
courage for such mental resistance and such internal purity that her assailant
will be disarmed. I could not carry the argument any further because it does
not admit of further development. It requires positive proof which, I own, is
lacking.
Q. If the choice is between
taking one’s own life and that of the assailant. which would you advise?
A. When it is a question of
choice between killing oneself or the assailant, I have no doubt in my mind
that the first should be the choice. - H, 9-2-47, 13.
Non-violence during Riots
497. To quell riots
non-violently, there must be true ahimsa in one’s heart, an ahimsa that takes
even the erring hooligan in its warm embrace. Such an attitude cannot be
cultivated. It can only come as a result of prolonged and patient effort which
must be made during peaceful times. The would-be members of a peace brigade
should come into close touch and; cultivate acquaintance with the so-called
goonda element in his vicinity. He should know all and be known to all and win
the hearts of al by his living and selfless service. No section should be
regarded as too contemptible or mean to mix with. Goondas do not drop from the
sky, nor do they spring from the earth like evil spirits. They are the product
of social disorganization, and society is therefore responsible for their
existence. In other words, they should be looked upon as a symptom of
corruption in our body politic. To remove the disease we must first discover
the underlying cause. To find the remedy will then be a comparatively easy
task. - H, 15-9-40, 285.
Can Aggression Be Stopped by
Non-violence?
Q. How could a disarmed neutral
country allow other nations to be destroyed? But for our army which was waiting
ready at our frontier during the last war we should have been ruined.
A. At the risk of being
considered a visionary or a fool I must answer this question in the only manner
I know. It would be cowardly of a neutral country to allow an army to devastate
a neighboring country. But there are two ways in common between soldiers of war
and soldiers of non-violence, and if I had been a citizen of Switzerland and a
President of the Federal State what I would have done would be to refuse
passage to the invading army by refusing al supplies. Secondly, by re-enacting
a Thermopylae in Switzerland, you would have presented a living wall of men and
women and children and inviting the invaders to walk over your corpses. You may
say that such a thing is beyond human experience and endurance. I say that it
is not so. It was quite possible. Last year in Gujarat, women stood lathi
charges unflinchingly and in Peshawar thousands stood hails of bullets without
resorting to violence. Imagine these men and women staying in front of an army
requiring a safe passage to another country. The army would be brutal enough to
walk over them, you might say. I would then say you will still have done your
duty by allowing yourselves to be annihilated. An army that dares to pass over
the corpses of innocent men and women would not be able to repeat that
experiment. You may, if you wish, refuse to believe in such courage on the
party of the masses of men and women; but then you would have to admit that
nonviolence is made of sterner stuff. It was never conceived as a weapon of the
weak, but of the stoutest hearts.
Q. Is it open to a soldier to
fire in the air and avoid violence?
A. A soldier who having enlisted
himself flattered himself that he was avoiding violence by shooting in the air
did no credit to his courage or to his creed of non-violence. In my scheme of
things, such a man would be held guilt of untruth and cowardice both- cowardice
in that in order to escape punishment he enlisted, and untruth in that he
enlisted to serve as soldier and did not fire as expected. Such a thing
discredits the cause of waging war against war. The war-resisters have to be
like Caesar's wife - above suspicion. Their strength lies in absolute adherence
to the morality of the question. - YI, 31-12-31, 427.
Indeed the weakest State can
render itself immune from attack if it learns the art of non-violence. But a
small State, no matter how powerfully armed it is, cannot exist in the midst of
a powerful combination of will-armed States. It has to be absorbed by or be
under the protection of one of the members of such a combination. - H, 7-10-39,
293.
Whatever Hitler may ultimately
prove to be, we know what Hitlerism has come to mean, It means naked, ruthless
force reduced to an exact science and worked with scientific precision. In its
effect it becomes almost irresistible.
Hitlerism will never be defeated
by counter-Hitlerism. It can only breed superior Hitlerism raised to nth
degree. What is going on before our eyes is the demonstration of the futility
of violence as also of Hitlerism.
What will Hitler do with his
victory? Can he digest so much power? Personally he will go as empty-handed as
his not very remote predecessor Alexander. For the Germans he will have left
not the pleasure of owning a mighty empire but the burden of sustaining its
crushing weight. For they will not be able to hold all the conquered nations in
perpetual subjection. And I doubt if the Germans of future generations will
entertain unadulterated pride in the deeds for which Hitlerism will be deemed
responsible. They will honour Herr Hitler as genius, as a brave man, a
matchless organizer and much more. But I should hope that the Germans of the
future will have learnt the art of discrimination even about their heroes.
Anyway I think it will be allowed that all the blood that has been spilled by
Hitler has added not a millionth part of an inch to the world’s moral stature.
As against this imagine the state
of Europe today if the Czechs, the Poles, the Norwegians, the French and the
English had all said to Hitler: ‘You need not make your scientific preparation
for destruction. We will meet your violence with non-violence. You will
therefore be able to destroy our non-violent army without tanks, battleships
and airships.’ It may be retorted that the only difference would be that Hitler
would have got without fighting what he has gained after a bloody fight.
Exactly. The history of Europe would then have been written differently.
Possession might (but only might) have been taken under non-violent resistance,
as it has been taken now after perpetration of untold barbarities. Under
non-violence, only those would have been killed who had trained themselves to
be killed, if need be, but without killing anyone and without bearing malice
towards anybody. I dare say that in that case Europe would have added several
inches to its moral stature. And in the end I expect it is moral worth that
will count. All else is dross.- H, 22-6-40, 172.
* No passive spirituality that
speeds itself in idle meditation , but an active thing that carries war into
the enemy camp. The enemy camp is first of all oneself, and one most continue
to turn the search-light inwards. - (Quoted in The Moral Challenge of Gandhi,
by Dorothy Hogg, Allahabad, 1946, p.19).