Shakespeare recently celebrated his 400th birthday, or rather the world celebrated him. My article on Shakespeare in Navhind Times.
Human brain still remains largely unmapped, but illuminating studies by Sigmund Freud, Jean Paul Sartre, Albert Camus and the art of Leonardo da Vinci, Van Gogh, Egon Schiele, Pablo Picasso, Salvador Dali, Francis Bacon and FN Souza is a revelation into the dark recesses of the ‘Walnut’.
Sunday, April 24, 2016
Sunday, April 10, 2016
Faisal Devji's The Impossible Indian
http://epaper.navhindtimes.in/mainpage.aspx?pdate=2016-04-10
The Impossible Indian: Gandhi and the Temptation of Violence
Faisal Devji, the author of two
acclaimed books ‘Landscapes of the Jihad’ and ‘The Terrorist In Search of
Humanity’ presents a polemical scholarly study of Gandhi, not the Mahatma, in
his latest ‘The Impossible Indian’. Digressing
from a hagiographic text, the clichéd arguments of a spiritual man in a breech-clout
or aspects of his personal life, Devji dwells on ‘missed paths and hidden
possibilities’ of the lethal political thinker of the twentieth century.
He begins the
text with the provocative words of the labour activist, Kanji Dwarkadas, “Gandhiji
appealed to the imagination of the world as a little, scrawny, half-starved,
self-denying man, a wizened monkey defying the terrible British lion, a
reincarnation of Hanuman, the monkey-god”. But Devji fleshes him out as a
radical force, completely enmeshed with world politics of his times. He
examines the thought behind his potent legacy of ‘nonviolence’ that he
bequeathed to the world of men and politics. He directs the attention of the
reader to Gandhi’s psychoanalytic theory of transmuting or redirecting violence
through the use of nonviolence. He writes, “Gandhi, the active proponent of nonviolence or the ‘sovereign
method’, wanted not to escape violence but to tempt and convert violence by
engaging with it. He thought violence and nonviolence were so intimately linked
that one could be transformed into the other, since evil too requires goodness to sustain itself.”
Gandhi’s “fantastic, almost
crack-brained schemes” were a series of political experiments carried out in
the strife-torn soil of South Africa and colonial India; an arena seeped in
conflict, injustice and violence where a moral compass could transform human
energies and liberate them not only from imperialism, but render to the world,
a model of freedom from violence. Therefore, his agenda was not merely
nationalistic, argues Devji. He wanted to set a precedent for human force at
large in the face of political-ills of his times. His principle of nonviolence
was a moral agency and would lead to the spiritualization of politics. “Real
suffering bravely-borne melts even a heart of stone. Such is the potency of
suffering or tapa. And, there lies the key to Satyagraha.”
Quoting from Gandhi’s writings, Devji
clearly indicates that ‘Bhagawad Gita’ was a way of life for Gandhi - a
treatise on ethics. He steadfastly
emulated the teachings in his own life and then fed it to the masses through
various political non-violent protests spearheaded during the freedom struggle
of India. ‘He was as hard-hearted as
Hitler’ and would not think much about the sufferings and lives of people
sacrificed in the face of non-violent fights as long as the moral remained
untainted and won liberation for the larger good of man and posterity. Gandhi often said, “Have not our saints and
sages taught us that one who is a worshipper of ahimsa should be softer than a
flower and harder than a stone?” Non-violent sacrificial offerings and moral
acts went hand in hand against violence.
“History of suffering was preferable to
one of victimization”, says Devji, of Gandhi’s thoughts and politics. If non-violent struggle was impossible, then
the evil of violence was better than the glorification of victimization, which
Gandhi identified with cowardice. Between violence and cowardly flight, he
proffered violence. He said that as long as he himself was a coward, he
harboured violence and could not practice non-violence, which comes with
deliberate conscious effort and thought. He also believed that a human being was a
fragile animal but when doors were opened and a path stared you in the face,
then strength of word and action came from God who directs you in such times. “Never
have I attributed my independent strength to myself”, said Gandhi.
Devji explores the smorgasbord of
Gandhi’s political experiments beginning with his belief in the British Empire,
the Pan-Islamic call for upholding the Caliphate, letters to Hitler and advice to the Jews and lastly imploring the
British to leave India to anarchy and civil war. The chapter titled ‘Bastard
History’ situates his political experience and grooming more as a product of
western influences from Europe, South Africa and Russia, so much so that the ‘Gita’
that was to be his guiding light came to him in England through an English
translation. His concept of nationality was based on the needs of the minority,
for he felt that truth gets corrupted in the hands of the majority (the basic
premise because of which he was assassinated). Gandhi’s policy of non-cooperation, Swadeshi
goods and working of a moral relationship between Hindus and Muslims, is
positioned in the narrative of the warfare and the Mutiny of 1857.
Devji outlines how the Mutiny provided a
basis where Hindus and Muslims understood each other’s faith and beliefs, of
purity and pollution (adhering to caste lines and rituals) and yet stood
unified as one opposing the British hegemony of maligning their caste and
religious sentiments. This brotherhood was appropriated by Gandhi when he
established ashrams where each Indian followed his own religion and marriage
alliances, yet they lived together and waged the non-violent movement under his
aegis. It further led him to support the Ottoman Empire and the Caliphate, a
Pan-Islamic call of Muslims worldwide and in India.
Gandhi called the Jews “The Untouchables
of Christianity” and through his letters sent them a clarion call for sovereign
movement of non-violence in the face of every atrocity by Hitler and the Nazis.
If they had died as protestors rather than victims, maybe the holocaust may not
have become such a dark inerasable line in the history of mankind. He also
implored them not to take on Palestine under the protection of British bayonets,
but to seek a settlement with the Arabs. Lastly, the final political undoing that Devji
highlights is Gandhi’s call in 1946 to the British to leave India to anarchy
and civil war. That partition was imperative was clear but Gandhi argued that
if the Indians were left to sort out their own differences, there was still
hope of brotherhood between Hindus and Muslims. “If the British were not here,
we would still go through the fire, no doubt, but the fire would purify us.”After
independence, he was aghast when army was called out in the Kashmir (India)
agitation. He wanted the non-violent
cult to continue unabated whenever violent strife raised its ugly head.
Finally Gandhi upheld that the right to
live stems from a duty to be a citizen of the world. Devji highlights the
paradox of life and death that Gandhi had clarified in his late writings; the great importance that western medicine
attached to human life, prolonging its earthly existence by drugging/injecting
only to lose it carelessly in numbers on battlefields. “Only by giving up the
thirst for life, the excessive desire to live that was represented in modern
war and western medicine alike, could the urge to kill be tamed, and the art of
throwing away my life for a noble cause be mastered”.
The reader must be prepared to devote
time and energy to an intensive read of the book a couple of times, to be able
to follow Devji’s cogent argument of Gandhi’s impossible feat as a human being,
in the quagmire of the warring forces of violence and nonviolence, as they are
unleashed and comprehended in the arena of human politics. The juxtaposition of
Gandhi’s own writings and thoughts continuously alternate with his own
expositions in the book, compulsively engaging the reader all through the
text.
We have to give it to Devji; he has very
successfully rendered to us the Mahatma as a ‘philosophical anarchist’. The
latter not only cut the cord between state and sovereignty, but showed that
freedom and sovereignty was every citizen’s natural possession; if one was
fearless to suffer by withdrawing one’s cooperation (non-violently) from an
unjust order.http://epaper.navhindtimes.in/mainpage.aspx?pdate=2016-04-10
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