Mahatma Gandhi74
Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi was better known as Mahatma Gandhi. ‘Mahatma’ means ‘Great-Souled One’. His followers and admirers adorned him with this significant title, but the Mahatma’s soulful humility vehemently disclaimed the title. To be absolutely correct, Mahatma Gandhi had two more names: Ahimsa, Non-Violence, and Satyagraha, Soul-Force.Gandhi announces: “The votary of non-violence has to cultivate the capacity for sacrifice of the highest type in order to be free from fear. He recks not if he should lose his land, his wealth, his life. He who has not overcome all fear cannot practice non-violence to perfection.”
Gandhi proclaims: “Satyagraha is a force that works silently and apparently slowly. In reality, there is no force in the world that is so direct or so swift in working.”
Gandhi was born with a silver spoon in his mouth, but both of his parents cared nothing for the so-called material wealth. They did care for something else, and it was the inner wealth. His father’s indifference to material wealth, his politically oriented brain and his tremendous will; his mother’s piety, purity, simplicity, sincerity, inner hunger and conscience of the soul; and his wife’s inspiration, dedicated service and constant sacrifice all loomed large in Gandhi’s life.
He went to England to study law when he was nineteen years old. Three years later he returned to India and started practising law. Alas, in those days, in his legal practice, he received not the garland of victory, but of sad failure. Such being the case, he wanted to be a high school teacher in Bombay. Here, too, God denied him this new career. Gandhi’s application to be a teacher was not favoured with acceptance. But in 1893, opportunity knocked at his life’s door. The heart of this young barrister cried with his fellow-countrymen who were victims of ruthless injustice in South Africa. He left for Africa. He defended their case, their cause. He helped them and served them. There, in Africa, he gradually became a lawyer of the superlative degree. Mahalakshmi, the Goddess of Beauty and Plenty, blessed his heart with Her beauty, and his outer life with plenty. Money, the bird, flew towards him and sweetly sat on his hand. Success, the dog, ran towards him and faithfully sat at his feet.
Behind the bird and the dog, a human being from a far-off land came and inspired his aspiring heart and illumined his searching mind to fulfil his life’s ideals. Gandhi’s life became the perfect expression of Tolstoy’s inspiration. With a view to practising his ideals, he cast aside the crown and throne of his outer achievements. He embraced Ahimsa. He embraced Satyagraha. He was one of those who awakened the slumbering nation and inspired the oppressed and depressed country to come out of the foreign yoke. He was successful. By this time, his frail body was no longer a stranger to inhuman brutalities. He had to undergo, several times, severe prison sentences. On being imprisoned for the first time, on 11 January 1908, he remarked:
His outer life suffered. His inner life triumphed. His life and his soul’s conviction became indivisible. His country’s independence became the object of his soul’s concern. His country’s ‘untouchables’ became the object of his heart’s concern. Bharat Mata placed her hands of Infinite Bounty on the head of her devoted son. His country’s untouchables discovered their haven in his boundless heart.
For the redemption of the untold sufferings of the untouchables, Gandhi’s heart of supreme sacrifice voices forth:
The world, especially the Christian world, is afraid of the consequences of sin. A Christian is more concerned about his sin than is any other man on earth. The Indian heart in Gandhi speaks about sin: “I do not seek redemption from the consequences of sin, I seek to be redeemed from sin itself.”
A Vedantin — a student of Vedanta — will proclaim that there is no such thing as sin. It is merely a play of ignorance.
Gandhi throws light on conception and continence:
Gandhi married at the age of 13. He was blessed with four sons.
Fasting played a major role in Gandhi’s life. His sound advice is “eat only when you are hungry and when you have laboured for food.” This reminds me of a Zen story:
The Chinese Zen master, Hyakujo, used to work very hard with his disciples, even at the ripe old age of eighty. He used to prune the trees, clean the grounds, trim the garden and so forth. His disciples were extremely shocked at these exertions. They knew well that it would be of no use to suggest to him to stop working, for he would turn a deaf ear to them. Then a brilliant idea flashed through their minds. They hid his tools. The Master played his part. He stopped eating. This went on for several days. The disciples discovered why he was not eating. They returned his tools to him. With a smile, he took the tools and exclaimed, “No work, no food!” He began eating as usual.
Gandhi often fasted to get things done in his own way. Let me tell you two amusing but significant incidents in Gandhi’s life. His wife once saved twenty-five rupees to spend for a special purpose. When Gandhi came to know about it, he brought his poor wife’s conduct to the attention of the public. He was furious. He exposed her in his weekly Young India under the caption, “My shame, my sorrow,” and observed a three-day fast! He had taught his wife that there should be no personal belongings and no hoarding up of money.
On another occasion Gandhi took a vow that he would fast unto death. Gandhi’s Gurudev, Rabindranath Tagore, immediately said to his countrymen, having realised the gravity of Gandhi’s vow: “He has come after a thousand years. Shall we send him back empty-handed again?”
Tagore once remarked:
Prime Minister Nehru, during his speech to the Congress of the United States on October 13th, 1949, spoke about the Father of the Indian Nation:
Each individual has the right to have a God of his own. He is competent enough to define God according to his inner receptivity and outer capacity. Gandhi’s God is nothing other than Truth. He says: “There are innumerable definitions of God, because His manifestations are innumerable. They overwhelm me with wonder and awe, for a moment stun me. But I worship God as Truth only.”
Some of the world figures have called him the Saint Paul, Saint Thomas and Saint Francis of Assisi of the modern era. I call him the Pacific Ocean of Heart’s Love and Soul’s Compassion. Perhaps I am wrong. Perhaps I am right. But I am adamant in my assertion that Mahatma Gandhi is not the exclusive treasure of India, but a peerless pride of mankind and will remain so down the sweep of centuries.
OEH 78. University of the West Indies; Kingston, Jamaica, 1 April 1969. Sri Chinmoy was invited by Dr Varma on behalf of the Ministry of External Affairs of the Government of Jamaica, West Indies, to offer this address as part of Jamaica's Centenary celebrations of the birth of Mahatma Gandhi.↩