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Mahatma Gandhi

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Hind Swaraj - Its Relevance Today

- By T.S. Ananthu*

The quintessence of Gandhi's thinking was contained in his little booklet Hind Swaraj. Its import is so revolutionary, so different from what most of us are used to, that a real paradigm shift is a basic pre-requisite to grasping what he had in mind. That is why even close followers and admirers of his, such as Jawaharlal Nehru, just could not stomach what he had said in Hind Swaraj.

The most important thing that Gandhi conveyed through this booklet is a meaning to Swaraj which is totally removed from the political context in which we normally understand this concept. He looked at the root meaning of the word Swaraj = Swa+Raj, that is apne ooper raj. As he explained in his booklet: Real home rule is self-rule or self-control.1 In other words, for him Swaraj stood for our taking control of ourselves, freeing ourselves from the slavery to the mind and its desires. As he explained, the way to it is the awakening of the soul- force or love-force which frees us from the ‘I’-ness of the mind. Thus, his concept of Swaraj is very different from, and in many ways diametrically opposite of, the 'independence' that we Indians celebrate on every 15th Aug. He explained this by having his imaginary "Reader" spell out the concept of independence in the political sense of the term and then went on to give his reaction:

"You have drawn the picture well. In effect it means this: that we want English rule without the Englishman. You want the tiger's nature, but not the tiger; that is to say, you would make India English.That is not the Swaraj I want."2

Later in the booklet he explains the place of the English in his concept of independent India:

"It is Swaraj when we learn to rule ourselves... But such Swaraj has to be experienced, by each one for himself... Now you can see that it is not necessary for us to have as our goal the expulsion of the English. If the English become Indianized, we can accommodate them. If they wish to remain in India along with their civilization, there is no room for them.”3

By 'Indianized' here he meant becoming Indian not in the cultural sense, but in the civilizational sense. As he explained,

"Civilization, in the real sense of the term [meaning to be civilized] consists not in the multiplication, but in the deliberate and voluntary restriction, of wants. This alone promotes real happiness and contentment, and increases the capacity for service."4

Therefore, he explained, "I bear no enmity towards the English but I do towards their civilization". Once, when touring England, when he was asked "What do you think of Western civilization?" he answered with a wonderful combination of brevity and humour "I think it would be a good idea"!

Thus, his Hind Swaraj is primarily a call for us to eschew the temptations that modern civilization offers us. It is based on a rejection of the value framework that forms its basis - wherein success, progress and development are measured in purely material terms. For instance, while our educational institutions teach us how to become better engineers, better doctors, better accountants etc, there is no course on how to become better human beings. This was his basic quarrel with modern civilization:

"This civilization takes note neither of morality nor of religion. Its votaries calmly state that their business is not to teach religion. Some even consider it to be a superstitious growth. Others put on the cloak of religion, and prate about morality. But, after twenty years' experience, I have come to the conclusion that immorality is often taught in the name of morality... Civilization seeks to increase bodily comforts, and it fails miserably even in doing so."5

Here he makes the interesting and important distinction between religion as understood these days and true religion, what he terms "the religion that underlies all religions", which teaches us the awakening of the soul-force latent within each of us. He terms this awakening as the way to real Swaraj, which each of us can strive towards irrespective of the political climate in which we find ourselves. It is our failure to do so that Gandhi blames for our political slavery as well:

"Our greatest enemy is not the foreigner, nor anyone else. Our enemies are we ourselves, that is, our own desires... The English have not taken India; we have given it to them... They came to our country originally for purposes of trade... They had not the slightest intention at the time of establishing a kingdom... Who assisted the Company's officers? Who was tempted at the sight of their silver? Who bought their goods? History testifies that we did all this. In order to become rich all at once we welcomed the Company's officers with open arms."6

It is this attempt to become "rich all at once" that forms the core of modern life today, and which Gandhi regarded as the prime obstacle to real Swaraj. But he was also non-violent enough not to impose this goal on other Indians who did not share his views. As he explained in his introduction to the 1921 edition of his booklet:

"The booklet is a severe condemnation of 'modern civilization'. It was written in 1908. My conviction is deeper today then ever. I feel that if India will discard 'modern civilization', she can only gain by doing so.

"But I would warn the reader against thinking that I am today aiming at the Swaraj described therein. I know that India is not ripe for it... I am individually working for the self-rule pictured therein. But today my corporate activity is undoubtedly devoted to the attainment of Parliamentary Swaraj in accordance with the wishes of the people of India."7

This explains why Gandhi chose Nehru as his political successor even though the latter was aghast at the wordings and message of Hind Swaraj. Gandhi knew that India was not ready for it. That was 100 years back. Is the situation any different now? Of course not, considering that we have plunged headlong into globalization and the market-oriented economy. Even more than in Nehru's days, money and material growth and industrial production are being worshipped as the only way out of our problems. We confine our appreciation of Gandhi to homilies, on 2nd October and 30th Jan. That our adoration of Gandhi is only lip service is evident when we name the biggest streets in our cities as M. G. Road, and then carry out the most ungandhian activities on it, or when we print his photos on our 500 rupee notes and then use those very notes for the most ungandhian transactions. While we may celebrate his birthday as a national holiday and praise him in our speeches and functions and newspapers, deep down we feel that in the present era of technology and modernization, rapid development and globalization, his ideas are outmoded and unsuitable for our needs. In other words, Gandhi may be a hero of our past, but has no place in our future.

And yet, there are perceptive individuals and groups who are realizing that we are moving headlong towards disaster. One kind of disaster is environmental degradation, another is water scarcity in its most acute forms, a third is new varieties of diseases caused by our modern methods of food production, and a fourth is loss of valuable top soil. All these are the direct result of ignoring what Gandhi had suggested in his Hind Swaraj.


Notes and References:

  1. M.K. Gandhi, Hind Swaraj or Indian Home Rule, Ahmedabad, Navajeevan, 1938, p. 90.
  2. Ibid., p. 26.
  3. Ibid., p. 56.
  4. Ibid., p. 32.
  5. Ibid., p. 32.
  6. Ibid., p. 34.
  7. Ibid., p. 15.

Source: Gandhi Marg, Vol. 31, Number 2, July-September 2009


* T.S. ANANTHU, after a spell as a technocrat in the U.S., returned to India and joined the Gandhi Peace Foundation, New Delhi as Research Fellow. In his quest to put into practice the insights of Gandhi's Hind Swaraj he, along with his wife Jyoti (of revered memory) and other friends, founded the centre NAVADARSHANAM near Bangalore in South India. He published a insightful monograph on Hind Swaraj in 1982 entitled Hind Swaraj: Its Appeal to Me which has gone into a second edition as well. Email: jyotiananthu@gmail.com