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The
Sacred Warrior India
is Gandhi's country of birth; South Africa his country of adoption. He was
both an Indian and a South African citizen. Both countries contributed to
his intellectual and moral genius, and he shaped the liberatory movements
in both colonial theaters. He
is the archetypal anticolonial revolutionary. His strategy of
noncooperation, his assertion that we can be dominated only if we
cooperate with our dominators, and his nonviolent resistance inspired
anticolonial and antiracist movements internationally in our century. Both
Gandhi and I suffered colonial oppression, and both of us mobilized our
respective peoples against governments that violated our freedoms. The
Gandhian influence dominated freedom struggles on the African continent
right up to the 1960s because of the power it generated and the unity it
forged among the apparently powerless. Nonviolence was the official stance
of all major African coalitions, and the South African A.N.C. remained
implacably opposed to violence for most of its existence. Gandhi
remained committed to nonviolence; I followed the Gandhian strategy for as
long as I could, but then there came a point in our struggle when the
brute force of the oppressor could no longer be countered through passive
resistance alone. We founded Unkhonto we Sizwe and added a military
dimension to our struggle. Even then, we chose sabotage because it did not
involve the loss of life, and it offered the best hope for future race
relations. Militant action became part of the African agenda officially
supported by the Organization of African Unity (O.A.U.) following my
address to the Pan-African Freedom Movement of East and Central Africa (PAFMECA)
in 1962, in which I stated, "Force is the only language the
imperialists can hear, and no country became free without some sort of
violence." Gandhi
himself never ruled out violence absolutely and unreservedly. He conceded
the necessity of arms in certain situations. He said, "Where choice
is set between cowardice and violence, I would advise violence... I prefer
to use arms in defense of honor rather than remain the vile witness of
dishonor ..." Violence
and nonviolence are not mutually exclusive; it is the predominance of the
one or the other that labels a struggle. Gandhi
arrived in South Africa in 1893 at the age of 23. Within a week he
collided head on with racism. His immediate response was to flee the
country that so degraded people of color, but then his inner resilience
overpowered him with a sense of mission, and he stayed to redeem the
dignity of the racially exploited, to pave the way for the liberation of
the colonized the world over and to develop a blueprint for a new social
order. He
left 21 years later, a near maha atma (great soul). There is no doubt in
my mind that by the time he was violently removed from our world, he had
transited into that state. No
Ordinary Leader -- Divinely Inspired He
was no ordinary leader. There are those who believe he was divinely
inspired, and it is difficult not to believe with them. He dared to exhort
nonviolence in a time when the violence of Hiroshima and Nagasaki had
exploded on us; he exhorted morality when science, technology and the
capitalist order had made it redundant; he replaced self-interest with
group interest without minimizing the importance of self. In fact, the
interdependence of the social and the personal is at the heart of his
philosophy. He seeks the simultaneous and interactive development of the
moral person and the moral society. His
philosophy of Satyagraha is both a personal and a social struggle to
realize the Truth, which he identifies as God, the Absolute Morality. He
seeks this Truth, not in isolation, self-centeredly, but with the people.
He said, "I want to find God, and because I want to find God, I have
to find God along with other people. I don't believe I can find God alone.
If I did, I would be running to the Himalayas to find God in some cave
there. But since I believe that nobody can find God alone, I have to work
with people. I have to take them with me. Alone I can't come to Him."
He
sacerises his revolution, balancing the religious and the secular. Awakening
His
awakening came on the hilly terrain of the so-called Bambata Rebellion,
where as a passionate British patriot, he led his Indian stretcher-bearer
corps to serve the Empire, but British brutality against the Zulus roused
his soul against violence as nothing had done before. He determined, on
that battlefield, to wrest himself of all material attachments and devote
himself completely and totally to eliminating violence and serving
humanity. The sight of wounded and whipped Zulus, mercilessly abandoned by
their British persecutors, so appalled him that he turned full circle from
his admiration for all things British to celebrating the indigenous and
ethnic. He resuscitated the culture of the colonized and the fullness of
Indian resistance against the British; he revived Indian handicrafts and
made these into an economic weapon against the colonizer in his call for
swadeshi--the use of one's own and the boycott of the oppressor's
products, which deprive the people of their skills and their capital. A
great measure of world poverty today and African poverty in particular is
due to the continuing dependence on foreign markets for manufactured
goods, which undermines domestic production and dams up domestic skills,
apart from piling up unmanageable foreign debts. Gandhi's insistence on
self-sufficiency is a basic economic principle that, if followed today,
could contribute significantly to alleviating Third World poverty and
stimulating development. Gandhi
predated Frantz Fanon and the black-consciousness movements in South
Africa and the U.S. by more than a half-century and inspired the
resurgence of the indigenous intellect, spirit and industry. Gandhi
rejects the Adam Smith notion of human nature as motivated by
self-interest and brute needs and returns us to our spiritual dimension
with its impulses for nonviolence, justice and equality. He
exposes the fallacy of the claim that everyone can be rich and successful
provided they work hard. He points to the millions who work themselves to
the bone and still remain hungry. He preaches the gospel of leveling down,
of emulating the kisan (peasant), not the zamindar (landlord), for
"all can be kisans, but only a few zamindars." He
stepped down from his comfortable life to join the masses on their level
to seek equality with them. "I can't hope to bring about economic
equality... I have to reduce myself to the level of the poorest of the
poor." From
his understanding of wealth and poverty came his understanding of labor
and capital, which led him to the solution of trusteeship based on the
belief that there is no private ownership of capital; it is given in trust
for redistribution and equalization. Similarly, while recognizing
differential aptitudes and talents, he holds that these are gifts from God
to be used for the collective good. He
seeks an economic order, alternative to the capitalist and communist, and
finds this in sarvodaya based on nonviolence (AHIMSA). He
rejects Darwin's survival of the fittest, Adam Smith's laissez-faire and
Karl Marx's thesis of a natural antagonism between capital and labor, and
focuses on the interdependence between the two. He
believes in the human capacity to change and wages Satyagraha against the
oppressor, not to destroy him but to transform him, that he cease his
oppression and join the oppressed in the pursuit of Truth. We
in South Africa brought about our new democracy relatively peacefully on
the foundations of such thinking, regardless of whether we were directly
influenced by Gandhi or not. Gandhi
remains today the only complete critique of advanced industrial society.
Others have criticized its totalitarianism but not its productive
apparatus. He is not against science and technology, but he places
priority on the right to work and opposes mechanization to the extent that
it usurps this right. Large-scale machinery, he holds, concentrates wealth
in the hands of one man who tyrannizes the rest. He favors the small
machine; he seeks to keep the individual in control of his tools, to
maintain an interdependent love relation between the two, as a cricketer
with his bat or Krishna with his flute. Above all, he seeks to liberate
the individual from his alienation to the machine and restore morality to
the productive process. As
we find ourselves in jobless economies, societies in which small
minorities consume while the masses starve, we find ourselves forced to
rethink the rationale of our current globalization and to ponder the
Gandhian alternative. At
a time when Freud was liberating sex, Gandhi was reining it in; when Marx
was pitting worker against capitalist, Gandhi was reconciling them; when
the dominant European thought had dropped God and soul out of the social
reckoning, he was centralizing society in God and soul; at a time when the
colonized had ceased to think and control, he dared to think and control;
and when the ideologies of the colonized had virtually disappeared, he
revived them and empowered them with a potency that liberated and
redeemed. |