Thursday 3 December 2015


GANDHIAN TECHNIQUE OF SATYAGRAHA –
AN OUTLINE
 
 

 
 
 
VEENAVAS P.V.           
 
             
 
CONTENTS
 
Chapter
Title
Page No.
I
INTRODUCTION
1 – 7
 
1.1       Need for the Study
1.2       Objectives of the Study
1.3       Sources of the Study
1.4       Research Method
5
6
7
7
II
MEANING, DEFINITION AND EVOLUTION OF SATYAGRAHA
8 – 16
 
2.1       Basic Percepts of Satyagraha
2.2       Passive resistance
9
14
III
GANDHI'S CONCEPTION OF SATYAGRAHA
17 – 35
 
3.1       Role of non-violence in Satyagraha
3.2       Qualifications required for a Satyagrahi
3.3       Qualifications required for a Satyagrahi leader
3.4       Qualifications required for the participants
3.5       Rules for Satyagrahi
3.6       Gandhi's Instruction to Satyagrahis
3.7       Main Offshoots of Satyagraha
3.8       The Theory and Practice of Satyagraha
17
18
20
22
23
24
27
33
IV
CONCLUSION
36 – 37
 
SELECT BIBLIOGRAPHY
38 – 41
 
 


CHAPTER 1
 
INTRODUCTION
Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi (1869-1948) was justly famous as the as the Father of Our Nation.  He has exercised profound influence upon the people of India.  He was the legitimate and natural leader of the Indian masses in whom they find a leader who practiced what he preached.  He was not a philosopher or theoretical analyst in the strict sense of the term who sits down and write syllogistically.  He has repeatedly said that he was not made for academic writing but action was his chosen domain.
            Gandhi was an activist, a practical dreamer and above all a true Karmayogin at the core.  “My life is my message” testifies the same. Gandhiji’s life was noting but a series of experiments in the practice of truth and non-violence which he has conducted in the laboratory of his own life.  Hence there is nothing like Gandhism as such.  He was not the founder or originator of any new principle or doctrine but a seeker after truth and hence had no ‘isms’ of is own.  All ‘isms’ come into existence as a result of the limitations imposed upon the original ideas by the followers.  He does not like to leave any sect after him but was fully satisfied with a sect for a following.  It was his faith and conviction that “Blind adoration, in the age of action is perfectly valueless….”  He was only the follower of a great tradition and has simply tried in his own way to apply the eternal truths to daily life and problems.
            Gandhiji has drawn no distinction between theory and practice.  His aim was to turn dream into deed, vision into action, insight into activity.  His aim was to translate ideals into actualities.  His dreams are not ‘airy’ nothings.  He never claimed finality in his Experiments with truth with the result that he has grown from truth to truth.  “The fact of the matter is that conditions have changed……..May words and deeds are dictated by prevailing conditions.  There has been “gradual evolution in my environment and I react to it as a Satyagrahi”.[1] Satyagraha as conceived by him, is a science in the making.  He was himself daily growing in the knowledge of Satyagraha.  Gandhiji gave Satyagraha the form of movement-both moral and spiritual.  Satyagraha is understood in the sense of non-violent direct action.  Satyagraha is ‘war without violence’.  The term non-violent was seemingly a mixture of opposites was a political weapon or technique of action in the hands of Gandhiji-one of the greatest moralists that the world has ever seen.  It signifies the attainment of truthful end by non-violent means.
            Gandhiji by his life long experiments made Satyagraha ‘the moral equivalent of war’.  He was wielding the weapon of moral power.  He has applied this rule of domestic life to various spheres of human life.  He has viewed life as a unity.  Human life according to him, cannot be  compartmentalized.  All the different departments of life act and react upon one another.  No aspect of life remain untouched by him.  He has enriched and ennobled every aspect of human life by his man-centred and experiment-oriented programme.  He has given us ‘a way’ – an ‘outlook’, a ‘method’ or ‘technique’ which out-weighted all ‘isms’ and philosophies.  Thus ‘Gandhism’ is a way of life, a technique of action which can be safely and successfully practiced by people in all spheres of life, at home and else-where, in peace and in war, even in national and international spheres.
            Truth and non-violence are the two essentials of Satyagraha.  They are the central principles of his conduct and faith for he has considered truth as the substance of all morality.  Further there is no religion higher than truth and righteousness.  They are so closely related to each other that it is practically impossible to disentangle or separate them.  They are the twin pillars of his philosophy.  According to him, the propagation of Truth and non-violence can be done less by books than by actually living those principles.  Gandhi tried not only to humanise religion but to moralise it as well.  Non-violence like truth is the eternal creed for every activity.  Truth is the highest law but ahimsa is the highest duty ‘ahimsa paramodharama’.  Satyagraha is ‘Truth force’, ‘Love force’ and ‘Soul-force’.  It is a way of life as well.
            Gandhiji’s life and thought has been founded on the metaphysical conception of an omnipresent spirituality – an all-embracing ‘Living Light’ which he called.  ‘Truth’ or ‘God’ and also on the Absolute oneness of God and therefore also of humanity – “The essential unity of God and man and for that matter of all that lives”.  Gandhiji’s life and message is nothing but this ideal in action.  “Without true understanding of the ideal we can never hope to reach it”.  He does not subscribe to the view that because an ideal is impossible of attainment its pursuit must be abandoned.  The very attempt to strive for the ideal is itself a great thing.  Gandhiji wrote, “Life is an aspiration.  Its mission is to strive after perfection, which is elf-realization.  The ideal must not be lowered because of our weakness or imperfection”.  Thus Gandhiji fully concurs with the view that “Our existence is meaningless if we never expect to realize the highest perfection that there is”.
            The present project is an attempt to understand and analyse the Gandhian technique of Satyagraha in all its implications.  In the introduction an attempt has been made to outline Gandhian thought in general along with an explication of the role and significance of the twin principles of Truth and Non-violence-the twin pillars in the evolution of the non-violent technique of direct action namely Satyagraha.  The second chapter gives an exposition of the meaning, definition, and evolution of Satyagraha which he has experimented for the first time in South Africa against the Apartheid policy of the South African Government.  The third chapter presents the Gandhian conception of Satyagraha in all its details along with its principal offshoots.  The fourth chapter is conclusion followed by a select bibliography.
1.1.  Need for the Study
            Gandhi – 'the unarmed prophet' embodies all that is best and truest in Indian tradition.  He embodies the pride of India.  Gandhi has shown the world that the force of arms is powerless in comparison with the 'Force of Love' or 'Soul Force'. Gandhi's very entry into public life / national life is with a definite mission and programme of action.  Gandhi's main objective was to win the freedom of India through non-violent means. He had a dream of India in which the people would lead a life of moral dignity.  He remain the people that the war that Indians were fighting was not against the British rule policy. Gandhi declared that anarchy under home-rule is better than orderly foreign rule.  He subscribed to the view that power corrupts absolutely.  There has been an unhealthy competition for power in every walk of life.  He stood for non-violent decentralised democracy and Panchayat Raj where in man is considered supreme and his role is significant.
            Gandhi has evolved the technique of Satyagraha as a method based on non-violent resistance directed against injustice, unjust laws of the state and society.  He has turned to satyagraha only as last resort, when all the existing methods of resisting evil has failed.  He is very well conscious of the difficulties involved in its strict observance, for it needs strenuous effort on the part of the individual to order his life in unquestioning obedience to the moral code.  Satyagraha, the moral equivalent of war is the relentless pursuit of truthful end by non-violent means.  It is the vindication of truth not by infliction of suffering on the opponent but on one's self.  Hence it goes without saying that there are no parallels to Gandhi's non-violent technique of direct action.  It is a truthful, non-violent dynamic moral force which can be safely and successfully practiced by all.  Its insistence on virtues like truthfulness, non-violence, fearlessness, brahmacharya, non-possession, swadeshi, bread labour has a special appeal to the people all over the globe. The findings of the present work will encourage and enhance the quality of life – domestic, social, political and economic. This in brief is the felt need to choose this topic for my dissertation.
1.2.      Objectives of the Study
            The present work make an attempt to elucidate the concept of Satyagraha and to bring-out its contemporary relevance.
1.         The focus is to highlight the man-centred and action-oriented programme seen at work in the technique of Satyagraha.
2.         He has demonstrated that non-violence is more powerful than an atom bomb and it is radium in its action for it kills without actually killing.  Self-suffering and self-sacrifice involved in this technique of action is unique and unparalleled. 
3.         A life of utter selflessness is far superior to egoism / self centred life.
4.         He has shown than lasting and enduring world peace would be established only through non-violence – the only answer and alternative is modern times 'where there is God to help and man to act, victory is certain'.
1.3.      Sources of the Study
            Sources include both primary and secondary.  Primary sources include Collected Works of Mahatma Gandhi (relevant volumes), An Autobiography, Satyagraha in South Africa, Non-Violence in Peace and War along with other original works found relevant has been referred.  Secondary sources include works by others on Gandhi.
1.4.       Research Method
            More than one method is used in the present work. The work is purely descriptive where in data available are collected and analysed both from primary and secondary sources.  Analytic method has also been used while reviewing earlier research works done on the area.  Thus integrated methodology has been adopted in the present work.


CHAPTER II
MEANING, DEFINITION AND
EVOLUTION OF SATYAGRAHA

            Satyagraha is a popular term and to Gandhi it meant a way of opposing what one considered to be wrong.  It was used as a political weapon against the policies of British Indian Government.  The term "Satyagraha" is a compound Sanskrit word formed by Satya and Agraha.  "Satya" means 'truth' and "Agraha" means 'holding fast', 'firmness in truth', 'adherence to truth' and 'insistence on truth'. 
            Satyagraha is dynamic.  It acts positively and suffers with cheerfulness because from love and makes the sufferings fruitful.  Satyagraha is the technique of solving group conflicts.  According to Gandhi "Satyagrapha is a force that may be used by individuals as well as community.  It may be used as well in political as in domestic affairs.  Its universal applicability is a demonstration of its permanence and invisibility".
            Negatively, the Satyagrahi should try to avoid violence in all forms.  Violence seeks to destroy the opponent or at least to injure him, and this is not the way to convert or reform him.  The Satyagraphi should try to avoid all intentional injure to the opponent in thought, word and deed.  Positively, "A Satyagraphi will always try to overcome evil by good, anger by love, untruth by truth, himsa by ahimsa".  The Satyagraphi, who is conscious of the working of Soul-Force and of his own spiritual kinship with the opponent, should treat the opponent as a member of his family.  Gandhi calls Satyagraha "the law of suffering" and "tapasya for truth".
            Dr Joan V. Bondurant defines "Satyagraha became something  more than a method of resistance to particular legal norms; it became an instrument of struggle for positive objectives and for fundamental change......"[2]
            Prof. Nirmal Kumar Bose defines Satyagraha as "a way of conducting 'war' by means of non –violence".[3]
            Dr. Krishnalal Sridharani defines Satyagraha as "non-violent direct action".[4]
            Gene Sharp says:  "this weapon is an expression of a looking at life and a way of living.  Gandhi's philosophy of life and his method of opposing evil are both called 'Satyagraha'.[5]
2:1.      Basic percepts of Satyagraha
            Gandhian philosophy can be summed up in three words, namely Sarvodaya, Satyagraha and Anasakti. Gandhi has evolved Satyagraha as a movement, a technique of action and above all a ways of life.  It is a movement a mass-movement of a non-violent type, intended to replace methods of violence.  Further it is a movement based on truth.  Satyagraha is the relentless pursuit of truthful ends by non-violent means.  It is the "vindication of truth, not by the infliction of suffering on the opponent but on one's own self"[6].  In its comprehensive sense, Satyagraha includes all constructive, reforming and all acts of service.  Constructive programme is the positive aspect of Satyagraha.
            The only ways to realise the Satyagraha is to be non-violent that is to love all.  It also implies self- sacrifice and self-suffering with a view to provide maximum convenience to the evil doer.  That is, a Satyagrahi has to undergo to suffer the maximum of inconvenience with a view to provide maximum convenience to the opponent.  That is why Gandhiji has identified Satyagraha with 'Love-force', 'Truth-force' and 'Soul force'.
            Satyagraha is not merely a technique or method of resistance to particular legal norms alone but a technique to conquer evil, injustice, and solving conflicts as well.   Satyagraha has been an instrument of struggle to achieve positive objectives and fundamental change.  There should effect a heart-change or heart-transformation in the Satyagrahi so as to arouse the 'Soul force' or 'Love force'.
            Satyagraha according to Gandhi was nothing new.  The stories of Dhruva, Prahlad and Harish Chandra were all based on Satyagraha, the word was coined when Gandhi started the movement commonly called passive resistance against the while settlers of South Africa who were ill-treating the Indian laboures.  Gandhi did not like the word passive resistance as he claimed that his movement was active resistance to evil through truthful and non-violent means.  Satyagraha was a dynamic weapon.  The exact significance of Satyagraha is not known even to Gandhi. That is why he sometimes identifies Satyagraha with non-violence, and sometimes with passive resistance and so on.  Gandhi himself admits this fact when he said "I am myself daily growing in the knowledge at Satyagraha.  I have no text-book to consult in time of need..... Satyagraha as conceived by me is a science in the making".
            Gandhi's aspiration in life was to find out a method or technique to fight evil, untruth and violence.  While being is South Africa, Gandhi has imitated a mass-movement against the Apartheid policy of the rulers of South African colonies in 1896.   This movement is temporarily styled as passive resistance, but it did not convey the meaning he had in mind fully.  So he invited the attention of the readers of "Indian Opinion" to suggest an apt word to designate the movement. On such word, suggested by Maganlal Gandhi is 'Sadagraha' meaning 'firmness in a good cause'.  This word also did not fully convey what he wanted to convey. Gandhi himself changed the word to Satyagraha, which meant 'adherence to truth or 'insistence on truth'. According to Gandhi, he liked the word but it did not fully represent the whole idea he wished to convey. Therefore, Gandhi corrected it to Satyagraha and began to call the Indian movement Satyagraha.  Gandhi wrote, "I used the term 'passive resistance' in describing it.  I did not quite understand the implication of 'passive resistance' as I called it.  I only knew that some new principle had come into being".[7]
            As the struggle advanced, the phrase 'passive resistance' gave rise to confusion and it appeared shameful to permit this great struggle to be known only by an English name.  Again, that foreign phrase could hardly pass as current coin among the community.  A small prize was therefore announced in India Opinion to be awarded to the render who invented the best designation for our struggle. We thus received a number of suggestions.  The meaning of the struggle had been then fully discussed in Indian Opinion and the competitors for the prize had fairly sufficient material to serve as a basis for their exploration.
            Satyagraha was initially translated as “Passive resistance”.  But Gandhi found this version to be misleading.  The term could approximate in meaning the process of non-violent resistance but it is not convey the spirit of the movement.  Gandhi has written in his Autobiography that passive resistance was interpreted as a weapon of the weak and was characterised by hatred and could manifest in violence.  Gandhi has distinguished Satyagraha from passive resistance.  Both them are methods used the redressal of grievances and effecting social and political changes but they differ fundamentally.  First and foremost, Satyagraha through it involves resistance, is not passive.  Gandhi wrote, “It we believe .......that we are weak and helpless and therefore offer passive-resistance, own resistance would never make us strong, and at the earliest opportunity we would give up passive resistance as a weapon of the weak”[8].  On the other hand, Gandhi wrote, “If we are Satyagrahis and offer Satyagraha believing ourselves to be strong, two clear consequences result from it.  Fostering the idea of strength, we grow stronger and stronger every day.  With the increase in our strength, our Satyagraha too becomes more effective and we would never be casting about for an opportunity to give it up.  Again, while there is no scope for love in passive resistance, on the other hand not only has hatred no place in Satyagraha but is a positive breach of its ruling principle.  While in passive resistance there is a scope for the use of arms when a suitable occasion arrives, in Satyagraha physical force is forbidden even in the most favourable circumstances.  Passive resistance is often looked upon as a preparation for the use of force while Satyagraha can never be utilized as such.  Passive resistance may be offered side by side with the use of arms.  Satyagraha and brute force, being each a negation of the other, can never go together.  Satyagraha may be offered to one’s nearest and dearest, passive resistance can never be offered to them unless of course they have ceased to be dear and become an object of hatred to us.  In passive resistance there is always present an idea of harassing the other party and there is a simultaneous readiness to undergo any hardships entailed upon us by such activity; while in Satyagraha there is not the remotest idea of injuring the opponent.  Satyagraha postulates the conquest of the adversary by suffering in one’s own person".[9]
            Like passive resistance, Satyagraha is not based on weakness nor is it the weapon of the weak, the coward the unarmed and the helpless.  It is the weapon of were a choice only between cowardice or submission to tyranny and violence, he would advice violence.  If one those chose the path of Satyagraha it was because of the conviction of the superiority of soul-force over brute force and on non-violence as a way of conducting human affairs.
2.2.      Passive Resistance
            It is passivity + resistance.  It is the process of non-violent resistance.  The term passive resistance is approximate in meaning Satyagraha.  But it did not convey the spirit of the movement.  Gandhi wrote in his autobiography that, passive resistance was interpreted as a weapon of the weak.  Which was characterized by hatred and which could manifest in violence.
            Satyagraha differs from passive resistance as the North Pole from the South.  Passive resistance does not exclude the use of physical force or violence for the purpose of gaining one's end. Gandhi have no idea when the phrase 'passive resistance' was first used in English and by whom.  'Passive resistance' means resistance of evil with inner force instead of physical force. The explanations offered betrays ignorance.  A passive resister can not remain passive to everything that happens.  Passive resistance poorly express the meaning conveyed by the Satyagraha.  Passive resistance is an all sided sword.  It can be used any how.  It blesses him who uses it and him against whom it is used.  Without drawing a drop of blood it produces far reaching results.  It never rusts and cannot be stolen.
            Passive resistance is totally untrue to say that it is a force to be used only by the weak. So long as they are not capable of meeting violence by violence.  This superstition arises from the incompetence of the English expression.  This force is to violence and, therefore, to all tyranny, all injustice, what light is to darkness.  That was because our passive resistance was not to the most complete type.  All passive resistance do not understand the full value of the force, not have we men who always from conviction repair from violence.  The use of this force requires the adoption of poverty.

            So Satyagraha was coined by Gandhi, in order to distinguish it from the movement then going on in the United Kingdom and South Africa under the name of Passive Resistance.  Gandhi used the term passive resistance in describing his initial Satyagraha campaign in South Africa.


CHAPTER III

GANDHI'S CONCEPTION OF SATYAGRAHA

 

            The word Satyagraha was first coined by Gandhi in South Africa, during the movement of Indian non-violent resistance to the Asiatic law Amendment ordinance introduced into the Transavaal Legislative Council in 1906.  Gandhi began to call the Indian Movement 'Satyagraha' that is to say, the force which is born of Truth and Love or Non-Violence.  In the words of R.R. Diwakar "Satyagraha is a total and integral; ways of life based on truth and Non-Violence".[10]

3.1.      Role of Non-Violence in Satyagraha

            Satyagraha is the positive doctrine of resistance.  It is active resistance.  This resistance is not violent resistance.  It is not passive merely because  it non-violent and that is because the moral resistance of the movement is as active and determined as the violent resistance of a traditional fighter.  Passive resistance is the weapon of the weak.  It is the non-violence of a man who is not wedded to it.  It is non-violence of one who accepts non-violence not as a matter of principle but as a matter of convenience and expediency.   A Satyagrahi accepts non-violence as a matter of principle and as a way of life.  A Satyagrahi accepts love and non-violence and these for him are virtues which have universal application.             

            The characterization of Satyagraha as non-violent coercion implies the possibilities of the use of physical force to compel action contrary to the will or reasoned judgement of the individual or group subjected to such force.  Satyagraha is a way of life and a Satyagrahai has to live a life of truth.  He has to live in its truth. Truth and non-violence are his guiding stars.  They are his life-breath.  If Gandhi was ever so decided and so final about anything that he was in his adherence to the principles of truth and non-violence.  Adherence to truth and non-violence   is not to be a mechanical process.  In truth and non-violence are also implicit the vows of non-stealing and non-possession.  The first condition of Satyagraha then is strict regard for truth.  Non-violence is the natural consequence of truth.  Non-violence was the natural corollary of truth. Gandhiji says that truth and non-violence are like the two sides of an unstamped coin.   They cannot be separated. Gandhiji believed that the problems of humanity created through the exploitation of man by man group by group could be solved through Satyagraha, the organised use of truth, non-violence and the purity of means.

3.2.      Qualifications required for a Satyagrahi

            The qualifications of Satyagrahi mainly truth, Brahmacharya, Swadeshi, Control of the palate Equality of all religions, Bread labour, Fearlessness, Non-Possession, Removal of Untouchability, Equal respect.

1)     He must have a living faith in God, for he is his only Rock.

2)     He must believe in truth and non-violence as his creed and therefore, have faith in the inherent goodness of human nature which he expects to evoke by his truth and love expressed through his suffering.

3)     He must be leading a chaste life and be ready and willing for the sake of his cause, to give up his life and his possession.

4)     He must be a habitual khadi-wearer and spinner.  This is essential for India.

5)     He must be a teetotaller and be free from the use of other intoxicants in order that his reasons may be always unclouded and his mind constant.

6)     He must carry out with a willing heart all the rules of discipline as may be laid down from time to time.

7)     He should carry out the jail rules unless they are specially devised to hurt his self-respect.

            The qualifications are not to be regarded as exhaustive. They are illustrate only.

            Satyagraha is essentially a weapon of the truthful.  A Satyagrahai relies upon god for protection against the tyranny of brute force.  No confirmed Satyagrahi is dismayed by the dangers, seen or unseen, from his opponent's side.  What he must fear, as every army must, is the danger from within.

3.3.      Qualifications required for a Satyagrahi Leader

            The leaders of every clean movement are bound to see that they admit only clean fighters to it.

            Satyagraha presupposes the living presence and guidance of God.  The leader depends not on his own strength but on that of God.  He acts as the voice within guides him.

            Those who claim to lead the masses must resolutely refuse to be led by them, if we want to avoid mob law and desire ordered progress for the country.  Gandhi believe that mere protestation of one's opinion and surrender to the mass opinion is not enough, but in matters of vital importance, leaders must act contrary to the mass of opinion if it does not commend itself to their reason.

            In religious Satyagraha there can be no room for aggressiveness, demonstrativeness, show.  Those who take apart in it must have equal respect and regard for the religious convictions and susceptibilities of those who profess a different faith from theirs.  The slightest narrowness in their outlook is likely to be reflected magnified multifold in the opponent.

            Gandhi have maintained that we would require a smaller army of Satagrahis than that of soldiers trained in modern warfare, and the cost will be insignificant compared to the fabulous sums devoted by nations to armaments.

            Satyagraha by the vast masses of mankind will be impossible if they had all to assimilate the doctrine in all its implications. Gandhi cannot claim to have assimilated all its implications noir do Gandhi claim even to know them all.  A soldier of an army does not know the whole of the military science; so also does a Satyagrahi not know the whole science of Satyagraha.  It is enough if he trusts his commander and honestly follows his instructions and is ready to suffer unto death without bearing malice against the so-called enemy.

            Gandhi realized that before a people could be fit for offering civil disobedience, they should thoroughly understand its deeper implications.  That being so, before  re-starting civil disobedience on a mass scale, it would be necessary to create a band of well-tired, pure hearted volunteers who thoroughly understood the strict conditions of Satyagraha.  They could explain these to the people, and by sleepless vigilance keep them on the right path.

            A very small part of the preliminary training received by the military is common to the non-violent army.  These are discipline, drill, singing in chorus, flag hoisting, signaling and the like.  Even this is not absolutely necessary and the basis is different.  The positivity necessary training for a non-violent army is an immovable faith in God, willing and perfect obedience to the chief of the non-violent army and perfect inward and outward co-operation between the units of the army.

            Gandhi's experience has taught him that a law of progression applied to every righteous struggle.  But in the case of Satyagraha the law amounts to an axiom.  As a Satyagraha struggle progresses onward, many an other element helps to swell its current and there is a constant growth in the results to which it leads.  This is really inevitable, and is bound up with the first principles of Satyagraha.  For in Satyagraha the minimum is also the maxi8mum, and as it is the irreducible minimum, there is no question of retreat, and the only movement possible is an advance.  In other struggles, even when they are righteous, the demand is first pitched a little higher so as to admit of future reduction, and hence the law of progression does not apply to all of them without exception.

3.4.      Qualifications required for the Participants

1.      He must have sufficient moral strength and the ability to strike, for non-violent method can be used only by the brave and not by the cowards.

2.      He must have intelligent and creative belief in the efficacy and all pervasiveness of these methods and must himself be non-violent in thought, word and deed.

3.      He must rely on God and must be fearless, honest, humble, just ,patient and pure.

4.      He must have cultivated the habit of toil, vigilance self-control and self sacrifice.

5.      Be living in non-possession, he must hold his wealth as a trust.

6.      He must believe in the constructive programme and never the law into his own hands.

3.5.      Rules for Satyagrahi

1.      A Sathyagrahi, i.e., a civil resister will harbour no anger.

2.      He will suffer the anger of the opponent.

3.      In so doing he will put up with assaults from the opponent, never retaliate but he will not submit, out of fear of punishment or the like, to any order  given  in anger.

4.      When any person in authority seeks to arrest a civil resister, he will voluntarily submit to the arrest, and he will not resist the attachment or removal of his own property, if any, when it is sought to be confiscated by authorities.

5.      If a civil resister has any property in his possession as a trustee, he will refuse to surrender it, even though in defending it he might lose his life. He will, however, never retaliate.

6.      Non-retaliation excludes swearing and cursing.

7.      Therefore a civil resister will never insult his opponent, and therefore also not take part in many of the newly coined cries which are contrary to the spirit of Ahimsa.

8.      A civil resister will not salute the Union Jack, nor will he insult it or officials, English or Indian.

9.      In the course of the struggle of any one insults an official or commits an assault upon him, a civil resister will protect such official or officials from insult or attack even at the risk of his life.

3.6.      Gandhi's Instructions to Satyagrahis

1.      The volunteers must remember that, as this is a Satyagraha campaign, they must abide by truth under all circumstances.

2.      In Satyagraha, there can be no room for rancor, which means that a Satyagrahi should utter no harsh word about anyone, from a ravania to the Governor himself.  If someone does so, it is the volunteer's duty to stop him.

3.      Rudeness has no place in Satyagraha. Perfect courtesy must be shown even to those who may look upon as their enemies and the villagers must be taught to do the same.  Rudeness may harm our cause and the struggle may be unduly prolonged.  The volunteers should give the most serious attention to this matter and think out in their minds as many examples as possible of the advantages are accruing from courtesy and the disadvantages resulting from redness and explain them to the people.

4.      The volunteers must remember that this is a holy war.  We embarked upon it because, had we not, we would have failed in our dharma.  And so all the rules which are essentials for living a religious life must be observed have too.

5.      We are opposing the intoxication of power, that is, the blind application of law, and not authority as such.  The difference must never be lost sight of.  It is, therefore, our duty to help the officers in their other work.

6.      We are to apply have the same principle that we follow in a domestic quarrel.  We should think of the Government and the people as constituting a large family and act accordingly.

7.      We are not to boycott or treat with scorn those who hold different views from ours.  It must be our resolve to win them over by courteous behaviour.

8.      We must not try to be clever.  We must always be frank and straightforward.

9.      When they stay in villages, the volunteers should demand the fewest services from the village folk.  Wherever it is possible to reach a place on foot, they should avoid using a vehicle.  We must insist on being served the simplest food.   Restraining them from preparing dainties will add grace to the service we render.

10. As they move about in villages, the volunteers should observe the economic condition of the people and the deficiencies in their education and try, in their spare time, to make them good.

11. If they can they should create opportunities when they may teach the village children.

12. If they notice any violation of the rules of good health, they should draw the villager's attention to the fact.

13. If, at any place they find people engaged in quarrelling among themselves, the volunteers should try to save them from their quarrels.

14. They should read out to the people, when the latter are free, books which promote Satyagraha.  They may read out stories of Prahlad, Harichandra and others.  The people should also be made familiar with instances of pure Satyagraha to be found in the west and in Islamic literature.

15. At no time and under no circumstances is the use of arms permitted in Satyagraha.  It should never be forgotten that in this struggle the highest type of non-violence is to be maintained.  Satyagraha means fighting oppression through voluntary suffering.  There can be no question here is making anyone else suffer.  Satyagraha is always successful, it can never meet with defeat; let every volunteer understand this himself and then explain it to the people.

3:7.     Main Off-shoots of Satyagraha

            The main offshoots of Satyagraha are:

            a) (Non-violent) Non-co-operation

            b)  Civil Disobedience

            c) Fasting (Unto Death)

a)        (Non-violent) Non-co-operation

            Non-co-operation predominantly implies with drawing of co-operation from the state.  Non-co-operation is even to children of understanding.  And can be safely practiced by the masses.  It is an off-shoot of Satyagraha.  It is a mild weapon.  Gandhi says that it is humbler than dust.  Non-violence is the cornerstone of the edifice of non-co-operation.  Non-violent non-co-operation is an object lesson in democracy.

            Non-co-operation is not a passive state; it is an intensely active state.  More active than physical resistance or violence.  Passive resistance is a misnomer.  Non-co-operation in the sense used by Gandhi must be non-violent.  And therefore neither punitive nor vindictive not based on malice, ill will or hatred.

            Gandhi hold his non-co-operation is not only not a ways of violence.  But may be an act of love.   If love is the motive that has prompted his refusal.  The fact is that all non-co-operations is not violent, and non-violent non-co-operation can never be an act of violence.  The spirit of non-violence necessarily leads to humility.  Non-violence means reliance on God.  Non-violence is the most vital and integral part of non-cooperation.  Discipline is obligatory is non-co-operation.

            A non-co-cooperationist allows his solid action to speak for his creed.  His strength lies in his reliance upon the correctness of his position.  Gandhi considers non-cooperation to be such a powerful and pure instrument.  That if it is enforced in an earnest spirit.  It will be like seeking first the kingdom of God.  And everything else following as a matter of course.  People will have then realized their true power.  They would have learnt the value of discipline, self-control, joint action, non-violence, organisation.  And everything else that goes to make a nation great and good. And not merely great.

b)        Civil Disobedience

            Civil disobedience is a synthesis of civility and disobedience, that in non-violence and resistance.  Resistance to bad laws in essential for man's moral growth.  While civility in the old of  stable social order without which man's life and growth are not possible disobedience.  Civil is the opposite of criminal, uncivil and violent.  Criminal disobedience is license, lawlessness and death even as civil disobedience freedom growth and life.  Civil means strictly non-violent.  Discipline as the pure condition of civil disobedience.

            Civil-disobedience are these instrument of non-violent non-co-operation.  Through civil-disobedience Gandhi provided a weapon in the hands of helpless, unnamed people to raise their heads against evils miseries and oppressions.  It is beautiful variant to signify growth.  It needs and ask for stout heart with a faith that will not flinch from any danger and will shine the brightest in the face of severest trait, civil disobedience is synonymous with non-violence.  Gandhi practiced non-violence not only for the purification of his soul but to purity the conduct of human society.  According to Gandhi all Satya can never be civil disobedience where as all case of civil (non-violent) disobedience are case of Satyagraha.

            The term Satyagraha, in immanent as well as transcendent to civil disobedience.  Every Satyagrahi was bound to resist all these laws which he considered  to he unjust and which were not of a criminal character in order to bend the government to will of the people. Non-co-operation and civil-disobedience are nothing but two sides of a same coin.  Gandhi called "it is a complete effective and bloodless substitute of armed result".  Civil disobedience being a quicker and more drastic remedy.  Civil disobedience presupposes the habit of willing obedience to law without fear of their sanction.

            Gandhi holds the opinion that Civil disobedience is the purest type of constitutional agitation.  It becomes degrading and despicable of civil, i.e., non-violent character as a mere camouflage civil disobedience is the inherent right of citizen.  He dare not give it up without ceasing to be a man.  Civil disobedience can lead to it.

            Gandhi believes that civil disobedience is essentially an individual affair.  And so long as there even one civil resister offering resistance.  The movement of civil disobedience can not die and must succeeded in the end.  Mass civil disobedience stand on a different footing.  It can only be  trierd in a clam atmosphere.  It must be the calmness of strength not weakness of knowledge not ignorance.

            Gandhi draws a distinction between individual and mass civil disobedience and offensive or assertive and defensive civil disobedience.  Offensive, civil disobedience is non-violent willful disobedience of laws of the state.  Which is under taken as a symbol of revolt against the state.  Defensive civil disobedience on the other hand is involuntary.  Gandhi calls offensive civil disobedience "a must dangerous weapon"  Defensive civil disobedience is forced on the  Satyagrahi, when he is not permitted to prosecute his ordinary peaceful activities or when insult and humiliation are imposed upon him.

            Complete civil disobedience is a state of peaceful rebellion a refusal to obey every single state-made law.  It is certainly more dangerous than an armed rebellion.  For it can never be put down if the civil resisters are prepared to face extreme hardships.  It is based upon an implicit belief in the absolute efficiency of innocent suffering.  By noiselessly going to prison a civil resister ensures a calm atmosphere.  A civil resister never uses arms and hence he is harmless to a state that is at all willing to listen to the voice of public opinion.

c)  Fasting (Unto Death)

            Fasting unto death is the last and the most patent weapon in the armory of Satyagraha.  It is a sacred thing.  Gandhi commenced fasting as a means of self-restraint.  Fasting was necessary for self-restraint he learnt from a friend.  Gandhi did not understand the efficacy of fasting.  But seeing that friend Gandhi mentioned observing it with benefit, and with the hope of supporting the Brahmacharya vow, he followed this example and began keeping Ekadashi fast.

            In the Tolstoy Farm, Gandhi staying with A few Satyagrahi families, including young people and children.  For these last we had a school, among them were four or five Musalmans.  Gandhi always helped and encouraged them in keeping all their religious observance.  Gandhi pursuaded the Musalman youngsters to observe the Ramzan fast.  He had of course decided to observe the Pradosha himself, but he now asked the Hindu, Parsi and Christian youngsters to join him.  He explained to them that it was always a goods thing to join with others in any matter of self-denial.

            Fasting is the most potent weapon in the Satyagraha armoury.  He cannot be taken by everyone. More physical capacity to take it is no qualification for it.  It is no use without a living faith in God.  It should never be a mechanical effort or mere imitation.  It must come from the depth of one's soul.  It is, therefore, always rare.

            There can be no room for selfishness, anger, lack of faith, or impatience in a pure fast.  Infinite patience, firm resolve, single-mindedness of purpose, perfect-calm, and to anger must of necessity be there.  But since it is impossible for a person to develop all these qualities all at once, no one who has not devoted himself to following the law of ahimsa should undertake a Satyagrahi fast.

            Fasting in Satyagraha has well-defined limits, You can't fast against a tyrant, for it will be as a piece of violence done to him.  You invite penalty from his for disobedience of his orders, but you can't inflict on yourself penalties when he refused top punish and renders it impossible for you to disobey his orders so as to compel infliction of penalty.  Fasting can only be restored to against a lover, not to exhort rights but to reform him, as when a son fasts a parent who drink.

            Fasting should be inspired by perfect truth and perfect non-violence.  The call for it should come from within and it should not be imitative.  It should never be undertaken for a selfish purpose, but for the benefit of others only.

            The fast has become the normal course of Gandhi's life.  It is the spiritual medicine applied form time to time for deceases that yields to that particular treatment.  Not everyone can gain the capacity for it all of sudden.  Gandhi gained it have after a very long course of training.

3.8       The Theory and Practice of Satyagraha

            Satyagraha is independent of pecuniary of other material assistance, in its elementary form of physical force or violence.  Violence is the negation of this great spiritual force, which can only be cultivated or wielded by those who will entirely eschew violence.  It is a force that may be used by individuals as well as by the communities.  It may used as well as  in political as in domestic affairs.  Its universal applicability is a demonstration of its permanence and invincibility.  It can be used a like by men, women and children.  It is totally untrue to say that it is a force to be used only by the weak so long as they are not capable of meeting violence by violence.  This superstitions arises from the incompleteness of the English expression, 'Passive resistance'.  it is impossible for those who consider themselves to be weak to apply this force.  Only those who realize that there is something in man which is superior to the brute nature in him and that the latter always yields to it, can effectively be Satyagrahis.  This force is to violence, and therefore to all tyranny, all injustice what light is to darkness.

            All Satyagarhis do not understand the full value of the force, nor have we man who always from conviction refrain from violence.  The use of this force requires the adoption of poverty, in the sense that we must be indifferent whether we have the wherewithal to feed or clothe ourselves.  During the past struggle, all Satyagrahis, if any at all, were not prepared to go that length.  Some again were only Satyagrahis so-called.  They came without any conviction, often with mixed motives, less often with impure motives.  Some even whilst engaged in the struggle, would gladly have resorted to violence by for most vigilant supervision.  Thus it was that the struggle became prolonged; for the exercise of the purest Soul-Force, in its perfect form, brings about instantaneous relief.  For this exercise, prolonged training of the individual soul is an absolute necessity so that a perfect Satyagrahi has to be almost, if not entirely, a perfect man.

            Satyagraha is the noblest and best education.  It should come, not after the ordinary education in letters of children, but it should precede it.  It will not be denied, that a child before it begins to write its alphabet and to gain worldly knowledge, should know what the soul is, what truth is, what love is, what powers are latent in the soul is, what should be an essential of real education that a child should learn, that in the struggle of life, it can easily conquer hate by love, untruth by truth, violence by self-suffering.

 

 

 

 

           


CHAPTER IV

CONCLUSION

 

            Gandhi has no isms of his own.  Hence there is as yet nothing likes Gandhism.  He was fully satisfied with a 'sect' for a following.  Satyagraha and non-violence has become synonymous with Gandhi's name.  A true-practical idealist-an experimenter with truth at the core, Gandhi has always attempted at translating ideals into actualities.  Gandhi gave Satyagraha the form of a movement- a mass movement-truthful and non-violent technique of political action.  But the socio-economic dimension of Satyagraha cannot be be-littled.  Gandhi's identification of Satyagraha  with 'Truth-Force', 'Love-Force', and "Soul-Force' testifies the same.  Gandhi wields the weapon of moral power as an alternative to methods of violence.  And that Satyagraha was in essence war without violence and non-violent direct action not by the infliction of suffering on the opponent nor for the wholesale liquidation of the opponent but for his reformation.

            The origin of Satyagraha as a truthful and non-violent technique of action can be traced back to South Africa.  Gandhi has evolved the unique weapon of Satyagraha- the truthful and nonviolent technique of direct action for the redressal of grievances of the Indian community in South Africa.  Having experiment with Satyagraha successfully for a unbroken period of two decades. Gandhi left South Africa in 1914, after having secured the basic rights for the Indians.  In the South African Indians respectfully called him as "Deshabhakta Mahatma".  Gandhi's method of disarming his opponent through sheer love and affection enhanced their respect for him. The Indian National Congress meeting in Madras placed on record "its a warm appreciation of, and admiration for, the heroic endeavour of Mr. Gandhi and his followers, and their unparalleled sacrifice and suffering in their struggle for the maintenance of the self-respect of India and the redress of Indian grievances".

            The successful completion of Satyagraha Campaign in South Africa, Gandhi returned to India in 1915 and plunged into active public life with a definite mission and plan of action.  Satyagraha is the most significant legacy that Gandhi left behind for generation to come.  He used Satyagraha as a political weapon to fight against injustice and exploitation and also for the redressed of grievances.  Satyagraha in all its forms excludes the use of violence and untruth.  It is used for the vindication of truth and that the pursuit of truth did not admit of violence to be inflicted on the opponent but on oneself. It provides maximum convenience at the cost of maximum inconvenience to be undertaken by one self.  It is not by inflicting suffering on the opponent but on oneself.  It is suffering self-imposed beyond measure.  Satyagraha was launched with a view to convert the adversary of his wrong-doings.

SELECT BIBLIOGRAPHY

 

WORKS BY GANDHI:  PRIMARY SOURCES

Gandhi, M.K. All Men are Brothers, UNESCO Publication.  An Autobiography or The Story of My Experiments with Truth, Navajivan Publishing House, Ahmedabad.

Ashram Observances in Action, Navajivan Publishing House, Ahmedabad.

Collected works of Mahatma Gandhi, Vol. I, Vol. XV, Vol. XXIX.

From Yervada Mandir, Navajivan Publishing House Ahmedabad.

Hindu Dharma, Navajivan Publishing House, Ahmedabad.

In search of the Supreme, Vol. I, II and III Navajivan Publishing House, Ahamedabad.

India of My Dreams, Navajivan Publishing House, Ahmedabad.

My Non-Violence, Navajivan Publishing House, Ahmedabad.

My Religion, Navajivan Publishing House, Ahmedabad.

Non-violence in Peace and War, Vol.II, Navajivan Publihsing House, Ahmedabad.

Political and National Life and Affairs Vol. III, Navajivan Publishing House, Ahmedabad.

Sarvodaya, Navajivan Publishing House, Ahmedabad, 1954.

Satyagraha in South Africa, Navajivan Publishing House, Ahmedabad, 1961.

SECONDARY SOURCES

Works on Gandhi and Gandhian thought

Abluwalia, B.K., Facets of Gandhi, Luxmi Book Store, New Delhi, 1968.

Aiyer, N. Chandra Sekhara, Gandhi’s view of life, Bharatiya Vidya Bhavan, Bombay.

Ashe, Jeoffery, Gandhi, A study in Revolution, Asia Publishing House, 1968.

Bhattacharyya, Buddhadeva, Evolution of the Political Philosophy of Gandhi, Calcutta Book House, 1969.

Bondurant. Joan.V, Conquest of Violence, The Gandhian Philosophy of Conflict, Oxford University Press, Bombay, 1959.

Bose, N.K., Gandhi:  The Man and His Mission, Bharatiya Vidya Bhavan, Bombay 1966.

----------, Studies with Gandhism, Navajivan Publishing House, Ahmedabad, 1962.

Dhawan, G, The Political Philosophy of Mahatma Gandhi, Navajivan Publishing House, Ahmedabad, 1962.

Dhebar, U.N., Gandhiji – A Practical Idealist, Bharatiya Vidya Bhavan, Bombay, 1964.

Diwakar, R.R., Gandhi – The Spiritual Seeker, Bharatiya Vidya Bhavan, Bombay, 1964.

Erikson, E.H., Gandhi’s Truth, Faber and Faber, London, 1970.

Fischer, Louis, The Essential Gandhi, George Allen and Unwin, 1963.

------------, The Life of Mahatma Gandhi, Vol. I and II, Bharatiya Vidya Bhavan, Bombay, 1965.

Huxley, Aldous, Ends and Means, Bharatiya Vidya Bhavan, Bombay, 1962.

Kripalani, J.B., Gandhi:  His life and thought, Publishing Division, Government of India, 1970.

-------------, Gandhi Thought, Gandhi Smarak Nidhi, Nidhi, 1961.

Kumorappa.J.C., Gandhian way of Life, Maganvadi, Wardha, 1952.

Mahadevan, T.K., Truth and Non-Violence, Gandhi Peace Foundation, New Delhi, 1970.

Mazumdar, H.T., Mahatma Gandhi, A Prophetic voice, Navajivan Publishing House, Ahmedabad, 1963.

Prasad Rajendra, Satyagraha in Champaran, Navajivan Publishing House, Ahmedabad, 1949.

JOURNALS

Darshana International, Vol – XXIV, July – 1984, Number -3, Vol-XXXIV, October 1994, Number – 4, Vol.-XXXV, April-1994, Number-2, Vol- XXXX January 2000, Number -1

Gandhi Marg – Vol-21.

Harijan, Ahmedabad, India (1933-48) Hindu Swaraj, Navajivan, Ahmedabad, 1938.

Indian Opinion, Natal, South Africa (1903-14).

Prabuddha Bharata or Awakened India Vol-98 July-1992.

Young India, Navajivan, Ahmedabad, India (1919-32).

 

 



[1]     M.K. Gandhi Harijan, 28-01-1939, p.320.
[2]     Joan, V. Bondurant  - Conquest of Violence:  The Gandhian Philosophy of Conflict, p.3-4.
[3]     Nirmal Kumar Bose, Studies in Gandhism, p.116.
[4]     Krishnalal Sridharani – War Without Violence p.16.
[5]     Gene Sharp – Gandhi Wields the Weapon of Moral Power, p. 3-4.
[6]      M.K. Gandhi – Political and National Life and Affairs, Vol. III, p.73.
[7]     M.K. Gandhi , Satyagraha in South Africa, p.150.
[8]     M.K.Gandhi,  Satyagraha in South Africa, p.156.
[9]     M.K. Gandhi , Satyagraha in South Africa, p.156.
[10]    R.R. Diwakar, Gandhi – The Spiritual Seeker, p.74.