When one looks at one man’s journey through oppression, perseverance and rigorous imprisonment, it is hard to imagine how it led to millions being empowered
A simple man, who believed in the idea of justice and equality, this is his journey from Mohan to how we know him today, the Mahatma means. At the same time, we must realise that Gandhiji’s commitment to truth and nonviolence was more than a philosophical commitment to a set of abstract ideas.
He belonged to a family of administrators from the princely state of Rajkot and on account of that affiliation, from an early age, he was well-versed in the necessities of statecraft. Not even once during his illustrious political career did he underrate the centrality of state to the well being of its citizens. The practices and methods of Gandhian politics, specially those aimed at curbing the various forms of violence that we see in the world, create a regime of peace which is truly lasting and sustainable. Reflecting on the question of violent political confrontations of his own times, Gandhiji argued that getting rid of a man who obstructs him will only produce a sense of security that is both false and short-lived. On the other hand, engaging with one’s detractors and studying grounds of disagreement will produce a lasting truce. Gandhiji’s policy of debate and dialogue, when invoked in situations of global terrorism and trade conflicts, will eventually produce international cooperation, and a sustainable and conflict-free world order.
Words of the Mahatma
“Live as if you were to die tomorrow. Learn as if you were to live forever. It’s the quality of your life that matters not the speed with which you live”.
“If I have the belief that I can do it, I shall surely acquire the capacity to do it even if I may not have it at the beginning”.
“If we could change ourselves, the tendencies in the world would also change. As a man changes his own nature, so does the attitude of the world change towards him. We need not wait to see what others do”
Sustainable ecology and Indian outlook
Undoubtedly, environmental crisis is one of the gravest of all problems that our generation faces. It is a commonplace wisdom that the present crisis is a result of reckless exploitation of nature. It originates in a mercantile philosophy which misled people into believing that our success at deciphering a few of its laws was a sufficient enough proof of man’s dominance over nature. According to E F Schumacher, modern economies and developmental models have treated nature as an expendable income and that “modern man does not experience himself as a part of nature but as an outside force destined to dominate and conquer it”. Gandhi never subscribed to the idea of men waging war against nature. He held a quasi-religious attitude, which was premised on the theory of both empirical and transcendental continuity between human societies and environment. This quasi-religious worldview is informed by environmental ethics found in texts from ancient India. It is rooted in texts like the Athrvaveda which proclaim that earth is our mother and we are her sons.
In Vedic philosophy, our interaction with nature is guided by considerations of balance and man’s inextricable bond with his environment. The tales of Panchatantra repeatedly remind us that “if one hopes to reach heaven by cutting trees and by hurting animals, what is the way to hell?” In ancient Indian literature, we find an attitude of empathy for each element in man’s environment – man, animals, plants, rivers, mountains, soil and such. This attitude led to a culture wherein cutting a tree got compared to betraying a friend. This belief system, in which nature is projected as an intimate member of an extended family, precipitated an ethic of consumption which was not exploitative, but recuperative and regenerative. In January 1910, when residents of Paris were stunned by what is described as ‘the flood of the century,’ Gandhiji wrote a piece for Indian Opinion (a newspaper he established) decrying reckless tinkering with nature and its laws. He argued that event though the people of Paris harboured the illusion that they had built the city to last for ever, nature has “given a warning that even whole of Paris may be destroyed.”
For Gandhi, the word prakriti implied the original character of an idea or a thing. When men tinker with prakriti, they corrupt both environment and themselves. If we return to Gandhiji’s idea of prakrit, and through him to the ancient Indian environmental ethics, we are sure to find strategies and moral courage to tackle the environmental crisis.
Correspondance with memories
To commemorate the life of Mahatma Gandhi, a champion of truth and non violence across the world, almost 300 postage stamps have been released by countries other than India. On January 26, 1961 USA became the first country other than India to release a postage stamp in honour of Gandhiji. In 1969, celebrating 100 years since the birth of Mahatma Gandhi, more than 40 countries released postage stamp as a mark of respect. In India, the first postage stamp on Gandhiji was released by Pt Jawahar Lal Nehru on the occasion of the Independence Day in 1948.