|
Introduction
Introducción
Calendar
Current Briefing Activities
Camp
Internet Peace Studies Campus
Gandhi on
Peace
"Gandhi
continues what the Buddha began.
In the Buddha the spirit of love set itself
the task of creating different spiritual
conditions in the world;
in Gandhi it undertakes to transform all
worldly conditions."
Albert Schweitzer
"Nonviolence 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."
Mahatma Gandhi
"If man will only realize that it is unmanly
to obey laws that are unjust, no man's
tyranny will enslave him."
Mahatma Gandhi
"There can be no inward peace without
true knowledge."
Mahatma Gandhi
"Science of war leads one to dictatorship
pure and simple. Science of nonviolence
can alone lead one to pure democracy."
Mahatma Gandhi "For self-defense, I would
restore the spiritual culture. The best
and most lasting self-defense is self-purification."
Mahatma Gandhi
Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi was born on
October 2, 1869 in western India.
His father was a local politician, and
his mother was a religious Vaishnavite.
At the age of 13 Mohandas was married
to a girl his own age.
After some undistinguished education it
was decided that he should go to England
to study law. He gained his mother's permission
by promising to refrain from wine, women,
and meat, but he defied his caste's regulations
which forbade travel to England.
He joined the Inner Temple law college
in London.
In searching for a vegetarian restaurant
he discovered its philosophy in Henry
Salt's A Plea for Vegetarianism and became
convinced.
He organized a vegetarian club and met
people with theosophical and altruistic
interests.
His first reading of the Bhagavad-Gita
was in Edwin Arnold's poetic translation
The Song Celestial. This Hindu scripture
and the Sermon on the Mount later became
his bibles and spiritual guidebooks. He
memorized the Gita and often recited its
original Sanskrit at his prayer meetings.
When Gandhi returned to India in 1891
his mother had died, and he was not successful
at breaking into the legal profession
due to his shyness. So he took the opportunity
of representing an Indian firm in Natal,
South Africa for a year.
South Africa, which is still notorious
for racial discrimination, gave Gandhi
the insults which awakened his social
conscience. He refused to remove his turban
in court: he was thrown out of a first-class
railway compartment; and he was beaten
for refusing to move to the footboard
of a stage-coach for the sake of a European
passenger.
As a lawyer Gandhi did his best to discover
the facts and get the parties to accept
arbitration and compromise in order to
settle out of court. After solving a difficult
case in this way he was elated and commented,
"I had learnt to find out the better side
of human nature and to enter men's hearts.
I realized that the true function of a
lawyer was to unite parties riven asunder."
He also insisted on receiving the truth
from his clients, and if he found out
that they had lied he dropped their cases.
He believed that the lawyer's duty was
to help the court discover the truth,
not to try to prove the guilty innocent.
At the end of the year during a farewell
party before he was to sail for India,
Gandhi noticed in the newspaper that a
bill was being proposed that would deprive
Indians of the vote. His friends urged
him to stay and lead the fight for their
rights in South Africa. Gandhi founded
the Natal Indian Congress in 1894, and
their efforts were given considerable
notice by the press. When he returned
from fetching his family from India in
January 1897 the South Africans tried
to stop him from landing by bribing and
threatening the shipowner Dada Abdulla
Sheth; but Dada Abdulla was Gandhi's client,
and finally after a long quarantine period
Gandhi was allowed to land. The waiting
mob recognized Gandhi, and some whites
began to hit his face and body until the
Police Superintendent's wife came to his
rescue. The mob threatened to Iynch him,
but Gandhi escaped in a disguise. Later
he refused to prosecute anyone, holding
to the principle of self-restraint in
regard to a personal wrong; besides, it
had been the community leaders and the
Natal government who caused the problem.
Nevertheless Gandhi felt it his duty to
support the British during the Boer War
which he did by organizing and leading
an Indian Ambulance Corps to nurse the
wounded on the battlefield. Even this
effort was somewhat delayed by race prejudice,
but when three hundred free Indians and
eight hundred indentured servants volunteered,
the whites were impressed. Gandhi ended
up spending twenty years-in South Africa.
He experimented with celibacy during his
thirties, and in 1906 took the Brahmacharya
vow for the rest of his life.
The first use of civil disobedience on
a mass scale came in September 1906. The
Transvaal government wanted to register
the entire Indian population. The Indians
held a mass meeting in the Imperial Theatre
of Johannesburg; they were angry at the
humiliating ordinance, and some threatened
a violent response if put to the test.
However, they decided as a group to refuse
to comply with the registration provisions;
there was complete unanimity. Yet Gandhi
suggested that they take a pledge in the
name of God; even though they were Hindus
and Moslems they all believed in one and
the same God. Every one of the nearly
three thousand Indians present took the
solemn pledge. Gandhi decided to call
this technique of refusing to submit to
injustice "Satyagraha" which means literally
"holding to the truth." One week after
the pledge Asiatic women were excused
from having to register. When the Transvaal
government finally put the Asiatic Registration
Act into effect in 1907, Gandhi and several
other Indians were arrested. He was given
only two months without hard labor, and
he spent the time reading. Yet during
his life Gandhi would spend a total of
more than six and a half years in jail.
Gandhi was called to meet with General
Jan Christiaan Smuts, and they agreed
on a compromise. Gandhi declared to his
followers that a Satyagrahi must be fearless
and always trust his opponent, "for an
implicit trust in human nature is the
very essence of his creed." Satyagraha
uncovers hidden motives and reveals the
truth; even if it results in the opponent's
falseness, the wrong will be more sharply
felt and will be more clearly seen, and
we must continually give him the opportunity
to be true. While reading in jail Gandhi
discovered Thoreau's "Civil Disobedience"
and the works of Tolstoy. He was "overwhelmed"
by The Kingdom of God is Within You and
"began to realize more and more the infinite
possibilities of universal love."
The protest movement for Indian rights
in South Africa continued to grow; at
one point out of the 13,000 Indians in
the province 2,500 Indians were in jail,
while 6,000 had fled Transvaal. In being
civil to the opponents during the disobedience
Gandhi developed the use of ahimsa, which
means "non-hurting" and is usually translated
"nonviolence." Gandhi followed the precept
"Hate the sin and not the sinner." Since
we are all one spiritually, to hurt or
attack another person is to attack oneself.
Though we may attack an unjust system,
we must always love the persons involved.
Thus "ahimsa is the basis of the search
for truth."
Gandhi was also attracted to the simple
agricultural life. He started two rural
communes for Satyagrahis-Phoenix Farm
and Tolstoy Farm. He wrote and edited
the journal Indian Opinion to elucidate
the principles and practice of Satyagraha.
Three issues brought the quest for Indian
rights in South Africa to a crisis-the
tax on ex-serfs, the ban on Asiatic immigrants,
and the invalidating of all but Christian
marriages. In November 1913 Gandhi led
a march of over two thousand people. Gandhi
was arrested and released on bail, arrested
again and released, and arrested once
more all within four days. He was sentenced
to three months' hard labor, but the strikes
and demonstrations went on with about
50,000 indentured laborers on strike and
thousands of free Indians in prison. The
Christian missionary Charles F. Andrews
donated all his money to the movement.
Gandhi and the other leaders were released
and announced another march. However,
Gandhi refused to take advantage of a
railway strike by white employees and
called off the march in spite of Smut's
broken pledge in 1908. "Forgiveness is
the ornament of the brave," Gandhi explained.
Finally by negotiation the issues were
resolved. All marriages regardless of
religion were valid; the tax on indentured
laborers was canceled including arrears;
and Indians were allowed to move more
freely. Gandhi summarized the power of
the Satyagraha method and prophesied how
it could transform modern civilization.
"It is a force which, if it became universal,
would revolutionize social ideals and
do away with despotisms and the ever-growing
militarism under which the nations of
the West are groaning and are being almost
crushed to death, and which fairly promises
to overwhelm even the nations of the East."
Smuts expressed his respect for Gandhi
and his gentle but powerful methods which
had made him realize that the law had
to be repealed.
Meanwhile India was still suffering under
British colonial rule. In 1909 Gandhi
had written Hind Swaraj which means "Indian
Self-Rule." In this diatribe against the
corruption of Western civilization Gandhi
suggests that India can gain its independence
by nonviolent means and self-reliance.
He rejects brute force and its oppression
and declares that soul force or love is
what keeps people together in peace and
harmony. History ignores the peaceful
qualities but takes note of the interruptions
and violations which disrupt civilization.
Gandhi returned to India in 1915 and again
supported the British during the First
World War by raising and leading an ambulance
corps.
The great poet Rabindranath Tagore gave
Gandhi the title "Mahatma" meaning "Great
Soul," and Gandhi founded the Satyagraha
Ashram for his family and co-workers near
the textile city of Ahmedabad. When a
family of untouchables asked to live in
the ashram, Gandhi admitted them. Orthodox
Hindus believed this polluted them. Funds
ran out, and Gandhi was ready to live
in the untouchable slums if necessary,
but an anonymous benefactor donated enough
money to last a year. To help change people's
attitudes about these unfortunate pariahs,
Gandhi renamed them "Harijans" or "Children
of God." Later he called his weekly magazine
Harijan also.
In 1917 Gandhi helped the indigo sharecroppers
of Champaran throw off the unfair exploitation
of their landlords. He was arrested, but
the officials soon realized that the Mahatma
was the only one who could control the
crowds. Reforms were won again by civil
disobedience, this time in India. The
textile workers of Ahmedabad were also
economically oppressed. Gandhi suggested
a strike, and when the workers were weakening
in their resolve he went on a fast to
encourage them to continue the strike.
Gandhi explained that he did not fast
to coerce the opponent but to strengthen
or reform those who loved him. He did
not believe in fasting for higher wages,
but he fasted so that the workers would
accept the system of arbitration to resolve
the conflict, which they did.
Gandhi's first challenge to the British
government in India was in response to
the arbitrary powers of the Rowlatt Act
in 1919. India had cooperated with Britain
during the war, and instead of receiving
Dominion Status civil liberties were being
curtailed. Guided by a dream or inner
experience Gandhi decided to call for
a one-day hartal or general strike on
all economic activity. Many signed the
Satyagraha pledge, and Gandhi suggested
making "a continuous and persistent effort
to return good for evil." However, the
philosophy was not well understood by
the masses, and violence erupted in various
places. The Mahatma repented declaring
he had made "a Himalayan miscalculation,"
and he called off the campaign. In one
infamous incident General Dyer had ordered
his soldiers to fire into a crowd, wounding
1,137 and killing 379. The Hunter Report
indicated that he was less concerned with
dispersing the crowd and more intent on
"producing a sufficient moral effect from
a military point of view." Another general
made the statement: "Force is the only
thing that an Asiatic has any respect
for." The report concluded that the moral
effect was quite opposite from the one
intended.
Gandhi founded and published two weeklies
without advertisements - Young India in
English and Navajivan in Gujarati. In
1920 Gandhi initiated a nation-wide campaign
of non-cooperation with the British government,
which for the peasant meant non-payment
of taxes and no buying of liquor since
the government gained revenue from its
sale. Gandhi traveled throughout India
addressing mass meetings. He urged people
to spin their own cloth and designed a
Congress flag with a spinning wheel in
the center. By January 1922 thirty thousand
Indians had been jailed for civil disobedience.
Some nationalist patriots urged revolution,
but Gandhi would never forsake nonviolence.
Gandhi decided to try mass civil disobedience
in Bardoli, a county of 87,000, but news
of how an Indian mob had murdered some
constables reached him. Although it was
eight hundred miles from Bardoli, he once
again canceled the campaign, this time
before it had started. In March the British
Viceroy ordered Gandhi's arrest. This
was the only time that the British allowed
him a trial. He made no apology and suggested
the highest penalty "for what in law is
a deliberate crime and what appears to
me to be the highest duty of a citizen."
Gandhi explained, "In my opinion, non-cooperation
with evil is as much a duty as is cooperation
with good." The judge sentenced him to
six years and hoped the government would
reduce the term. He was in fact released
after twenty-two months when he had an
appendectomy.
Perhaps the greatest block to Indian unity
and self government was the conflict between
Hindus and Moslems. In 1924 Gandhi went
on a twenty-one day fast to bridge this
strife. He pleaded for unity in diversity,
religious tolerance, and love for one
another.
During the late 1920s Gandhi wrote an
autobiography which he called his experiments
with truth; it is quite candid and humble
in the- way he examines his faults and
his efforts to overcome them. In his speeches
he pointed out his five-point program
on the fingers of his hand: equality for
untouchables, spinning, no alcohol or
drugs, Hindu-Moslem friendship, and equality
for women. They were all connected to
the wrist which stood for nonviolence.
Finally in 1928 he announced a Satyagraha
campaign in Bardoli against a 22% increase
in British-imposed taxes. Refusing to
pay taxes the people had their possessions
confiscated and some were driven off their
land, but they remained nonviolent. It
lasted several months, and hundreds were
arrested. Finally the government gave
in and agreed to cancel the tax increase,
release all prisoners, and return confiscated
land and property; the peasants agreed
to pay their taxes at the previous rate.
The Indian Congress wanted self-government
and considered war for independence. Gandhi
naturally refused to support a war but
declared that if India was not free under
Dominion Status by the end of 1929, then
he would demand independence. Consequently
in 1930 he informed the Viceroy that civil
disobedience would begin on March 11.
"My ambition is no less than to convert
the British people through nonviolence,
and thus make them see the wrong they
have done to India. I do not seek to harm
your people." Gandhi decided to disobey
the Salt Laws which forbade Indians from
making their own salt; this British monopoly
especially struck at the poor. Beginning
with seventy-eight members of his ashram
Gandhi led a two-hundred mile march to
the sea over twenty-four days. Thousands
had gathered at the start, and several
thousands joined them on the march. First
Gandhi and then others all along the seacoast
gathered some salt water in pans to dry
it. In Bombay the Congress had pans on
the roof; 60,000 people assembled, and
hundreds were arrested. At Karachi where
50,000 watched the salt being made, the
crowd was so thick that the police could
make no arrests. The jails were filled
with at least 60,000 offenders. Amazingly
enough there was practically no violence
at all; the people did not want Gandhi
to cancel the movement. Gandhi was arrested
before he could invade the Dharasana Salt
Works, but his friend Mrs. Sarojini Naidu
led 2,500 volunteers and warned them not
to resist the blows of the police. According
to an eye-witness account by the reporter
Webb Miller, they continued to march in
until beaten down with steel-shod lathis
by the four hundred police, but they did
not try to fight back. Tagore declared
that Europe had lost her moral prestige
in Asia. Soon more than 100,000 Indians
were in prison, including almost all the
leaders.
Gandhi was called to a meeting with Viceroy
Irwin in 1931, and they came to an agreement
in March. Civil disobedience was called
off; prisoners were released; salt manufacture
was permitted on the coast; and Congress
leaders would attend the next Round Table
Conference in London. Gandhi traveled
to London where he met Charlie Chaplin,
George Bernard Shaw, and Maria Montessori
among others. On radio to the United States
he spoke of a way better than brute force
more consistent with human dignity. In
discussing relations with the British
he said he did not want isolated independence
but voluntary interdependence based on
love.
While in prison in 1932 Gandhi went on
a fast on behalf of the Harijans because
they had been given a separate electorate.
It was to be a "fast unto death" unless
he could awaken the Hindu conscience.
The issue was resolved, and even Hindu
temples were opened to untouchables for
the first time. The next year Gandhi went
on a twenty-one day fast for purification,
and British officials, afraid he might
die, released him from prison. Gandhi
announced that he would not engage in
civil disobedience until his sentence
was completed. By the time the second
world war was approaching Gandhi had been
confirmed in his pacifist principles.
He pointed out how Abyssinia could have
used nonviolence against Mussolini, and
he recommended it to the Czechs and China.
"If it is brave, as it is, to die to a
man fighting against odds, it is braver
still to refuse to fight and yet to refuse
to yield to the usurper." As early as
1938 he exhorted the Jews to stand up
for their rights and die if necessary
as martyrs. "A degrading manhunt can be
turned into a calm and determined stand
offered by unarmed men and women possessing
the strength given to them by Jehovah."
Gandhi even recommended to the British
nonviolent methods of fighting Hitler;
no longer could he support any kind of
war or killing. He decided on mass Satyagraha
in defiance of the ban on propaganda against
the war. Gandhi promised Congress he would
stay out of jail, but 23,223 others were
arrested including Vinoba Bhave, Nehru,
and Patel. In 1942 Gandhi suggested ways
to resist the Japanese nonviolently. He
sent an appeal to the Japanese people
for the sake of "world federation and
brotherhood without which there can be
no hope for humanity."
However, Gandhi continued to preach a
nonviolent revolution for India, and in
1942 he and other leaders were arrested.
He decided to fast again; he barely survived.
When the war ended he asserted the need
for "a real peace based on the freedom
and equality of all races and nations."
In his last years he became more of a
socialist. He said, "Violence is bred
by inequality, nonviolence by equality."
He went on a pilgrimage to Noakhali to
help the poor. Independence for India
was now imminent, but Jinnah the Moslem
leader was holding out for the creation
of a separate state of Pakistan. Gandhi
prayed for unity and tolerance, and he
even read from the Koran at his prayer
meetings. Hindus attacked him because
they thought he was partial to Moslems,
and Moslems demanded he let them have
Pakistan. Gandhi went to Calcutta to calm
the Hindu-Moslem strife and violence.
Once more he fasted until the community
leaders signed a pledge to keep the peace;
before they signed he warned them that
if they broke their word he would fast
until he died. His last fast in January
1948 also did much to heal the conflicts
between the Hindus and the Moslems over
the division into two countries which
left minorities in both nations. Although
this religious hatred saddened Gandhi,
India had gained her independence on August
15, 1947 accomplishing the greatest nonviolent
revolution in the history of the world.
Finally Gandhi was assassinated by an
outraged Hindu on January 30, 1948 at
a prayer meeting; with his last breath
the Mahatma chanted the name of God.
Albert Einstein declared that Gandhi showed
how someone could win allegiance, "not
merely by the cunning game of political
fraud and trickery, but through the living
example of a morally exalted way of life."
Einstein considered Gandhi to be the most
enlightened statesman of their time, and
he predicted, "The problem of bringing
peace to the world on a supranational
basis will be solved only by employing
Gandhi's method on a large scale." The
Encyclopedia Britannica summarizes Gandhi's
significance with the statement, "He was
the catalyst if not the initiator of three
of the major revolutions of the 20th century:
the revolutions against colonialism, racism,
and violence." What was his philosophy
of nonviolent soul-force, and what instructions
did he give in the use of these methods?
Satyagraha means literally holding on
to the Truth. The Hindu understanding
of Sat is more than conceptual truth but
means also being, existence, reality;
ultimately we realize that our spiritual
beingness is the essence of Truth as a
reality greater than any concept of the
mind. Thus the term "soul-force" conveys
the idea of employing our spiritual energies.
For Gandhi this Truth or spiritual reality
is the goal, and the means to the goal
must be as pure and loving as possible.
Ahimsa therefore is the way of acting
without hurting anyone or inflicting oneself
against another spiritual being. We may
hate an injustice for the harm that it
brings to people, but we must always love
all the people involved out of respect
for human dignity. Satyagraha attempts
to awaken an awareness of the truth about
the injustice in the perpetrators, and
by ahimsa this is done without hurting
them. Since humans are subject to error
and we cannot be sure we are judging accurately.
we must refrain from punishing. Thus ahimsa
is an essential safeguard in the quest
for truth and justice.
Gandhi explains that Satyagraha is not
a method of the weak, like passive resistance,
but "a weapon of the strong and excludes
the use of violence in any shape or form."
Satyagraha is insisting on the truth and
can be offered in relation to one's family,
rulers, fellow citizens, or even the whole
world. Gandhi elucidates three necessary
conditions for its success:
1) The Satyagrahi should not have any
hatred in his heart against the opponent.
2) The issue must be true and substantial.
3) The Satyagrahi must be prepared to
suffer till the end for his cause.
Gandhi emphasized self-suffering rather
than inflicting suffering on others. By
undergoing suffering to reveal the injustice
the Satyagrahi strives to reach the consciences
of people.
Satyagraha does not try to coerce anyone
but rather to convert by persuasion, to
reach the reason through the heart.
Satyagraha appeals to intelligent public
opinion for reform.
In the political field the struggle on
behalf of the people leads to the challenging
of unjust governments or laws by means
of non-cooperation or civil disobedience.
When petitions and other remedies fail,
then a Satyagrahi may break an unjust
law and willingly suffer the penalty in
order to call attention to the injustice.
However, he does not hide or try to escape
from the law like a criminal, rather he
openly and civilly disobeys the law as
a protest, fully expecting to be punished.
In Hind Swaraj Gandhi wrote, "It is contrary
to our manhood if we obey laws repugnant
to our conscience."
By eliminating violence Satyagraha gives
the opponent the same rights and liberties.
Satyagraha requires self-discipline, self
control, and self-purification, and Satyagrahis
must always make the distinction between
the evil and the evil-doer.
They must overcome evil with good, hatred
with love, anger with patience, untruth
with truth, and violence with ahimsa.
This takes a perfect person for complete
success, and therefore training and education
are essential to even make it workable.
Gandhi emphasizes that every child "should
know what the soul is, what truth is,
what love is, what powers are latent in
the soul."
Both men and women, and even children,
may participate, and it demands the courage
that comes from spiritual strength and
the power of love.
Surely it takes more courage to face the
weapons of death without fighting than
it does to fight and kill. From his experience
Gandhi believed that those who wished
to serve their country through Satyagraha
should "observe perfect chastity, adopt
poverty, follow truth, and cultivate fearlessness."
It is through fearlessness that we can
have the courage to renounce all harmful
weapons, filling and surrounding ourselves
with the spiritual protection of a loving
and peaceful consciousness.
Gandhi elucidated specific guidelines
for Satyagraha and civil disobedience.
A Satyagrahi will not harbor anger but
will suffer the opponent's anger and assaults
without retaliating. However, he or she
will not submit out of fear of punishment
nor obey any order given in anger. Satyagrahis
will voluntarily and civilly submit to
arrest and will not resist the confiscation
of their property; but if a civil resister
has the property of another as a trustee,
he will refuse to surrender it, holding
on to it at the cost of his life. Satyagrahis
will not insult or curse their opponents
nor participate in shouted cries which
are contrary to the spirit of love (ahimsa).
Civil resisters will not salute the flag
of the government against which they are
protesting, but they will not insult it
or the government officials. In fact they
will protect officials from assault even
at the risk of life.
Non-cooperation is a comprehensive policy
used by people when they can no longer
in good conscience participate in or support
a government that has become oppressive,
unjust, and violent. Although Satyagrahis
do not attack the wrong-doer, it is their
responsibility not to promote or support
the wrong actions. Thus non-cooperators
withdraw from government positions, renounce
government programs and services, and
refuse to pay taxes to the offending government.
While challenging the power of the state
in this way non-cooperators have the opportunity
to learn greater self-reliance. Gandhi
held that non-cooperation with an unjust
government was not only an inherent right
but as much a duty as is cooperation with
a just government. Ahimsa or nonviolence
is absolutely essential to Gandhi's civil
disobedience. Satyagrahis were expected
to give their lives in efforts to quell
violence if it erupted. Gandhi interpreted
ahimsa broadly as refraining from anything
at all harmful. "The principle of ahimsa
is hurt by every evil thought, by undue
haste, by Iying, by hatred, by wishing
ill to anybody. It is also violated by
our holding on to what the world needs."
Thus even greed and avarice can violate
ahimsa. Nonviolence has a great spiritual
power, but the slightest use of violence
can taint a just cause. The strength is
not physical but comes from the spiritual
will. The following is Gandhi's summary
of the implications of nonviolence: 1)
Nonviolence 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
possess a living faith in the God of Love.
3) Nonviolence affords the fullest protection
to one's self-respect and sense of honor,
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. Nonviolence, in the very nature
of things, is of no assistance in the
defense of ill-gotten gains and immoral
acts. 4) Individuals or nations who would
practice nonviolence must be prepared
to sacrifice (nations to the last man)
their all except honor. 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.
Gandhi's struggle was so overwhelming
and significant, because he challenged
the institutional violence of the modern
state. He not only recommended refusing
military service but also refusing to
pay taxes to a militarized state. In addition
to citizens' non-cooperating with an evil
government, a neutral country also has
the obligation to refuse to support or
assist a military state or aggressor.
Gandhi suggested a nonviolent army that
could engage in constructive activities,
lessen tensions, and sacrifice their lives
to calm mobs and end riots. The qualifications
for such a peace brigade would be complete
faith in and adherence to nonviolence,
equal respect for all religions, personal
service and good human relations with
the community, integrity and impartiality,
and anticipation of brooding conflicts.
The cost of training and equipping such
a peace brigade would be practically nothing
compared to the expenses of the modern
military establishment. Gandhi envisioned
a nonviolent state which would protect
itself by not cooperating with any aggressor.
Gandhi was concerned that the democracies
would adopt the forceful methods of the
fascists; but true democracy must ultimately
be nonviolent, for violence is an obvious
restriction of liberty. In 1946 Gandhi
asserted, "Democracy to be true should
cease to rely upon the army for anything
whatsoever. It will be a poor democracy
that depends for its existence on military
assistance. Military force interferes
with the free growth of the mind. It smothers
the soul of man." He criticized America
for its treatment of the Negro. Gandhi
observed that armaments are used for greedy
exploitation and that the competition
and desire for material possessions and
the Great Power's imperialistic designs
are the biggest blocks to world peace.
Also they must shed their fear of destruction;
then by disarmament peace can be attained.
Gandhi warned, "If the mad race for armaments
continues, it is bound to result in a
slaughter such as has never occurred in
history. If there is a victor left, the
very victory will be a living death for
the nation that emerges victorious. There
is no escape from the impending doom save
through a bold and unconditional acceptance
of the nonviolent method with all its
glorious implications." Gandhi urged us
to go beyond family and country to consider
the good of the world, and he recommended
a world governing body which would recognize
the equal independence of each nation.
He once said, "The golden way is to be
friends with the world and to regard the
whole human family as one."
|
|
Peace
Rally
|
|

|
| Peace
rally, took part to promote peace. |
|
Peace
March
|
|
|
| People
marching to promote peace |
|
GIS
Maps
|
|
|
| GIS
wharehouse, where you will find maps |
|