I am not a visionary. I claim to be a practical idealist. The religion
of nonviolence is not meant merely for the rishis and saints. It is meant for
the common people as well. Nonviolence is the law of our species as violence is
the law of the brute. The spirit lies dormant in the brute and he knows no law
but that of physical might. The dignity of man requires obedience to a higher
law-to the strength of the spirit....
The rishis who discovered the law of nonviolence in the midst of violence were greater geniuses than Newton. They were themselves known the use of arms, they realized their uselessness, and taught a weary world that its salvation lay not through violence but through nonviolence.
My Ahimsa
I know only one way-the way of ahimsa. The way of himsa goes against
my grain. I do not want to cultivate the power to inculcate himsa...The faith
sustains me that He is the help of the helpless, that He comes to one's succour
only when one throws himself on His mercy. It is because of that faith that I
cherish the hope that God will one day show me a path which I may confidently
commend to the people.
I have been a 'gambler' all my life. In my passion for finding truth
and in relentlessly following out my faith in nonviolence, I have counted no
stake too great. In doing so I have erred, if at all, in the company of the
most distinguished scientist of any age and any clime.
I learnt the lesson of nonviolence from my wife, when I tried to bend
her to my will. Her determined resistance to my will, on the one hand, and her
quiet submission to the suffering my stupidity involved, on the other,
ultimately made me ashamed of myself and cured me of my stupidity in thinking
that I was born to rule over her and, in the end, she became my teacher in
nonviolence.
The doctrine that has guided my life is not one of inaction but of the
highest action.
I must not...flatter myself with the belief--nor allow friends...to
entertain the belief that I have exhibited any heroic and demonstrable
nonviolence in myself. All I can claim is that I am sailing in that direction
without a moment's stop.
Character of Nonviolence
Nonviolence is the law of the human race and is infinitely greater
than and superior to brute force.
In the last resort it does not avail to those who do not possess a
living faith in the God of Love.
Nonviolence affords the fullest protection to one's self-respect and
sense of honour, but not always to possession of land or movable property,
though its habitual practice does prove a better bulwark than the possession of
armed men to defend them. Nonviolence, in the very nature of things, is of no
assistance in the defence of ill-gotten gains and immoral acts.
Individuals or nations who would practice nonviolence must be prepared
to sacrifice (nations to last man) their all except honour. It is, therefore,
inconsistent with the possession of other people's countries, i.e., modern
imperialism, which is frankly based on force for its defence.
Nonviolence is a power which can be wielded equally by all--children,
young men and women or grown-up people, provided they have a living faith in
the God of Love and have therefore equal love for all mankind. When nonviolence
is accepted as the law of life, it must pervade the whole being and not be
applied to isolated acts.
It is a profound error to suppose that, whilst the law is good enough
for individuals, it is not for masses of mankind.
For the way of nonviolence and truth is sharp as the razor's edge. Its
practice is more than our daily food. Rightly taken, food sustains the body;
rightly practised nonviolence sustains the soul. The body food we can only take
in measured quantities and at stated intervals; nonviolence, which is the
spiritual food, we have to take in continually. There is no such thing as
satiation. I have to be conscious every moment that I am pursuing the goal and
have to examine myself in terms of that goal.
Changeless Creed
The very first step in nonviolence is that we cultivate in our daily
life, as between ourselves, truthfulness, humility, tolerance, loving kindness.
Honesty, they say in English, is the best policy. But, in terms of nonviolence,
it is not mere policy. Policies may and do change. Nonviolence is an
unchangeable creed. It has to be pursued in face of violence raging around you.
Nonviolence with a nonviolent man is no merit. In fact it becomes difficult to
say whether it is nonviolence at all. But when it is pitted against violence,
then one realizes the difference between the two. This we cannot do unless we
are ever wakeful, ever vigilant, ever striving.
The only thing lawful is nonviolence. Violence can never be lawful in
the sense meant here, i.e., not according to man-made law but according to the
law made by Nature for man.
Faith in God
[A living faith in nonviolence] is impossible without a living faith
in God. A nonviolent man can do nothing save by the power and grace of God.
Without it he won't have the courage to die without anger, without fear and
without retaliation. Such courage comes from the belief that God sits in the
hearts of all and that there should be no fear in the presence of God. The
knowledge of the omnipresence of God also means respect for the lives even of
those who may be called opponents....
Nonviolence is an active force of the highest order. It is soul force
or the power of Godhead within us. Imperfect man cannot grasp the whole of that
Essence-he would not be able to bear its full blaze, but even an infinitesimal
fraction of it, when it becomes active within us, can work wonders.
The sun in the heavens fills the whole universe with its life-giving
warmth. But if one went too near it, it would consume him to ashes. Even so it
is with God-head. We become Godlike to the extent we realize nonviolence; but
we can never become wholly God.
The fact is that nonviolence does not work in the same way as
violence. It works in the opposite way. An armed man naturally relies upon his
arms. A man who is intentionally unarmed relies upon the Unseen Force called
God by poets, but called the Unknown by scientists. But that which is unknown
is not necessarily non-existent. God is the Force among all forces known and
unknown. Nonviolence without reliance upon that Force is poor stuff to be
thrown in the dust.
Consciousness of the living presence of God within one is undoubtedly
the first requisite.
Religious Basis
My claim to Hinduism has been rejected by some, because I believe and
advocate nonviolence in its extreme form. They say that I am a Christian in
disguise. I have been even seriously told that I am distorting the meaning of
the Gita, when I ascribe to that great poem the teaching of unadulterated
nonviolence. Some of my Hindu friends tell me that killing is a duty enjoined
by the Gita under certain circumstances. A very learned shastri only the other
day scornfully rejected my interpretation of the Gita and said that there was
no warrant for the opinion held by some commentators that the Gita represented
the eternal duel between forces of evil and good, and inculcated the duty of
eradicating evil within us without hesitation, without tenderness.
I state these opinions against nonviolence in detail, because it is
necessary to understand them, if we would understand the solution I have to
offer....
I must be dismissed out of considerations. My religion is a matter
solely between my Maker and myself. If I am a Hindu, I cannot cease to be one
even though I may be disowned by the whole of the Hindu population. I do
however suggest that nonviolence is the end of all religions.
The lesson of nonviolence is present in every religion, but I fondly
believe that, perhaps, it is here in India that its practice has been reduced
to a science. Innumerable saints have laid down their lives in tapashcharya
until poets had felt that the Himalayas became purified in their snowy
whiteness by means of their sacrifice. But all this practice of nonviolence is
nearly dead today. It is necessary to revive the eternal law of answering anger
by love and of violence by nonviolence; and where can this be more readily done
than in this land of Kind Janaka and Ramachandra?
Hinduism's Unique Contribution
Nonviolence is common to all religions, but it has found the highest
expression and application in Hinduism. (I do not regard Jainism or Buddhism as
separate from Hinduism).
Hinduism believes in the oneness not of merely all human life but in
the oneness of all that lives. Its worship of the cow is, in my opinion, its
unique contribution to the evolution of humanitarianism. It is a practical
application of the belief in the oneness and, therefore, sacredness of all
life. The great belief in transmigration is a direct consequence of that
belief. Finally, the discovery of the law of Varnashrama is a magnificent
result of the ceaseless search for truth.
I have also been asked wherefrom in Hinduism I have unearthed ahimsa.
Ahimsa is in Hinduism, it is in Christianity as well as in Islam. Whether you
agree with me or not, it is my bounden duty to preach what I believe to be the
truth as I see it. I am also sure that ahimsa has never made anyone a coward.
The Koran and Non-violence
[Barisaheb] assured me that there was warrant enough for Satyagraha in
the Holy Koran. He agreed with the interpretation of the Koran to the effect
that, whilst violence under certain well-defined circumstances is permissible,
self-restraint is dearer to God than violence, and that is the law of love.
That is Satyagraha. Violence is concession to human weakness, Satyagraha is an
obligation. Even from the practical standpoint it is easy enough to see that violence
can do no good and only do infinite harm.
Some Muslim friends tell me that Muslims will never subscribe to
unadulterated nonviolence. With them, they say, violence is as lawful and
necessary as nonviolence. The use of either depends upon circumstances. It does
not need Koranic authority to justify the lawfulness of both. That is the
well-known path the world has traversed through the ages. There is no such
thing as unadulterated violence in the world. But I have heard it from many
Muslim friends that the Koran teaches the use of nonviolence. It regards
forbearance as superior to vengeance. The very word Islam means peace, which is
nonviolence. Badshahkhan, a staunch Muslim who never misses his namaz and
Ramzan, has accepted out and out nonviolence as his creed. It would be no
answer to say that he does not live up to his creed, even as I know to my shame
that I do not one of kind, it is of degree. But, argument about nonviolence in
the Holy Koran is an interpolation, not necessary for my thesis.
No Matter of Diet
Ahimsa is not a mere matter of dietetics, it transcends it. What a man
eats or drinks matters little; it is the self-denial, the self-restraint behind
it that matters. By all means practice as much restraint in the choice of the
articles of your diet as you like. The restraint is commendable, even
necessary, but it touches only the fringe of ahimsa. A man may allow himself a
wide latitude in the matter of diet and yet may be a personification of ahimsa
and compel our homage, if his heart overflows with love and melts at another's
woe, and has been purged of all passions. On the other hand a man always
over-scrupulous in diet is an utter stranger to ahimsa and pitiful wretch, if
he is a slave to selfishness and passions and is hard of heart.
Road to Truth
My love for nonviolence is superior to every other thing mundane or
supramundane. It is equaled only by my love for Truth, which is to me
synonymous with nonviolence through which and which alone I can see and reach
Truth.
....Without ahimsa it is not possible to seek and find Truth. Ahimsa
and Truth are so intertwined that it is practically impossible to disentangle
and separate them. They are like the two sides of a coin, or rather of a
smooth, unstamped, metallic disc. Who can say which is the obverse, and which
is the reverse? Nevertheless ahimsa is the means; Truth is the end. Means to be
means must always be within our reach, and so ahimsa is our supreme duty. If we
take care of the means, we are bound to reach the end sooner of latter. When
once we have grasped this point, final victory is beyond question.
Ahimsa is not the goal. Truth is the goal. But we have no means of
realizing truth in human relationships except through the practice of ahimsa. A
steadfast pursuit of ahimsa is inevitably bound to truth not so violence. That
is why I swear by ahimsa. Truth came naturally to me. Ahimsa I acquired after a
struggle.
But ahimsa being the means, we are naturally more concerned with it in
our everyday life. It is ahimsa, therefore, that our masses have to be educated
in. Education in truth follows from it as a natural end.
No Cover for Cowardice
My nonviolence does not admit of running away from danger and leaving
dear ones unprotected. Between violence and cowardly flight, I can only prefer
violence to cowardice. I can no more preach nonviolence to a coward than I can
tempt a blind man to enjoy healthy scenes. Nonviolence is the summit of
bravery. And in my own experience, I have had no difficulty in demonstrating to
men trained in the school of violence the superiority of nonviolence. As a
coward, which I was for years, I harboured violence. I began to prize
nonviolence only when I began to shed cowardice. Those Hindus who ran away from
the post of duty when it was attended with danger did so not because they were
nonviolent, or because they were afraid to strike, but because they were
unwilling to die or even suffer an injury. A rabbit that runs away from the
bull terrier is not particularly nonviolent. The poor thing trembles at the
sight of the terrier and runs for very life.
Nonviolence is not a cover for cowardice, but it is the supreme virtue
of the brave. Exercise of nonviolence requires far greater bravery than that of
swordsmanship. Cowardice is wholly inconsistent with nonviolence. Translation
from swordsmanship to nonviolence is possible and, at times, even an easy
stage. Nonviolence, therefore, presupposes ability to strike. It is a conscious
deliberate restraint put upon one's desire for vengeance. But vengeance is any
day superior to passive, effeminate and helpless submission. Forgiveness is
higher still. Vengeance too is weakness. The desire for vengeance comes out of
fear of harm, imaginary or real. A dog barks and bites when he fears. A man who
fears no one on earth would consider it too troublesome even to summon up anger
against one who is vainly trying to injure him. The sun does not wreak
vengeance upon little children who throw dust at him. They only harm themselves
in the act.
The path of true nonviolence requires much more courage than violence.
The minimum that is required of a person wishing to cultivate the
ahimsa of the brave is first to clear one's thought of cowardice and, in the
light of the clearance, regulate his conduct in every activity, great or small.
Thus the votary must refuse to be cowed down by his superior, without being
angry. He must, however, be ready to sacrifice his post, however remunerative
it may be. Whilst sacrificing his all, if the votary has no sense of irritation
against his employer, he has ahimsa of the brave in him.
Assume that a fellow-passenger threatens my son with assault and I
reason with the would-be-assailant who then turns upon me. If then I take his
blow with grace and dignity, without harbouring any ill-will against him, I
exhibit the ahimsa of the brave. Such instances are of every day occurrence and
can be easily multiplied. If I succeed in curbing my temper every time and,
though able to give blow for blow, I refrain, I shall develop the ahimsa of the
brave which will never fail me and which will compel recognition from the most
confirmed adversaries.
Inculcation of cowardice is against my nature. Ever since my return
from South Africa, where a few thousand had stood up not unsuccessfully against
heavy odds, I have made it my mission to preach true bravery which ahimsameans.
Humility Essential
If one has...pride and egoism, there is no nonviolence. Nonviolence is
impossible without humility. My own experience is that, whenever I have acted
nonviolently, I have been led to it and sustained in it by the higher
promptings of an unseen power. Through my own will I should have miserably
failed. When I first went to jail, I quailed at the prospect. I had heard
terrible things about jail life. But I had faith in God's protection. Our
experience was that those who went to jail in a prayerful spirit came out
victorious, those who had gone in their own strength failed. There is no room
for self-pitying in it either when you say God is giving you the strength.
Self-pity comes when you do a thing for which you expect recognition from
others. But there is no question of recognition.
It was only when I had learnt to reduce myself to zero that I was able
to evolve the power of Satyagraha in South Africa.