by Richard Greiner
I had the singular honor of attending an early private screening of 'Gandhi' with an audience of invited guests from
the National Council of Churches. At the end of the three-hour movie there was
hardly, as they say, a dry eye in the house. When the lights came up I fell
into conversation with a young woman who observed, reverently, that Gandhi’s
last words were “Oh, God,” causing me to remark regretfully that the real
Gandhi had not spoken in English, but had cried, Hai Rama! (“Oh, Rama”). Well, Rama was just Indian
for God, she replied, at which I felt compelled to explain that, alas, Rama,
collectively with his three half-brothers, represented the seventh
reincarnation of Vishnu. The young woman, who seemed to have been under the
impression that Hinduism was Christianity under another name, sensed somehow
that she had fallen on an uncongenial spirit, and the conversation ended.
At a dinner party shortly afterward, a friend of mine, who had visited
India many times and even gone to the trouble of learning Hindi, objected
strenuously that the picture of Gandhi that emerges in the movie is grossly
inaccurate, omitting, as one of many examples, that when Gandhi’s wife lay
dying of pneumonia and British doctors insisted that a shot of penicillin would
save her, Gandhi refused to have this alien medicine injected in her body and
simply let her die. (It must be noted that when Gandhi contracted malaria
shortly afterward he accepted for himself the alien medicine quinine, and that
when he had appendicitis he allowed British doctors to perform on him the alien
outrage of an appendectomy.) All of this produced a wistful mooing from an editor
of a major newspaper and a recalcitrant, “But still. . . .” I would prefer to
explicate things more substantial than a wistful mooing, but there is little
doubt it meant the editor in question felt that even if the real Mohandas K.
Gandhi had been different from the Gandhi of the movie it would have been nice if he had been like the movie-Gandhi, and
that presenting him in this admittedly false manner was beautiful, stirring,
and perhaps socially beneficial.
An important step in the canonization of this movie-Gandhi was taken by the
New York Film Critics Circle, which not only awarded the picture its prize as
best film of 1982, but awarded Ben Kingsley, who played Gandhi (a remarkably
good performance), its prize as best actor of the year. But I cannot believe
for one second that these awards were made independently of the film’s
content—which, not to put too fine a point on it, is an all-out appeal for
pacifism—or in anything but the most shameful ignorance of the historical
Gandhi.
Now it does not bother me that Shakespeare omitted from his King John the signing of the Magna Charta—by far the most important event in John’s reign. All Shakespeare’s “histories” are strewn with errors and inventions. Shifting to the cinema and to more recent times, it is hard for me to work up much indignation over the fact that neither Eisenstein’s Battleship Potemkin nor his October recounts historical episodes in anything like the manner in which they actually occurred (the famous march of the White Guards down the steps at Odessa—artistically one of the greatest sequences in film history—simply did not take place). As we draw closer to the present, however, the problem becomes much more difficult. If the Soviet Union were to make an artistically wondrous film about the entry of Russian tanks into Prague in 1968 (an event I happened to witness), and show them being greeted with flowers by a grateful populace, the Czechs dancing in the streets with joy, I do not guarantee that I would maintain my serene aloofness. A great deal depends on whether the historical events represented in a movie are intended to be taken as substantially true, and also on whether—separated from us by some decades or occurring yesterday—they are seen as having a direct bearing on courses of action now open to us.
On my second viewing of Gandhi, this time at
a public showing at the end of the Christmas season, I happened to leave the
theater behind three teenage girls, apparently from one of Manhattan’s
fashionable private schools. “Gandhi was pretty much an FDR,” one opined,
astonishing me almost as much by her breezy use of initials to invoke a
President who died almost a quarter-century before her birth as by the
stupefying nature of the comparison. “But he was a religious figure, too,”
corrected one of her friends, adding somewhat smugly, “It’s not in our
historical tradition to honor spiritual leaders.” Since her schoolteachers had
clearly not led her to consider Jonathan Edwards and Roger Williams as
spiritual leaders, let alone Joseph Smith and William Jennings Bryan, the
intimation seemed to be that we are a society with poorer spiritual values
than, let’s say, India. There can be no question, in any event, that the girls
felt they had just been shown the historical Gandhi—an attitude shared by Ralph
Nader, who at last account had seen the film three times. Nader has conceived
the most extraordinary notion that Gandhi’s symbolic flouting of the British
salt tax was a “consumer issue” which he later expanded into the wider one of
Indian independence. A modern parallel to Gandhi’s program of home-spinning and
home-weaving, another “consumer issue” says Nader, might be the use of solar
energy to free us from the “giant multinational oil corporations.”
____________
As it happens, the government of India openly admits to having provided
one-third of the financing of Gandhi out of
state funds, straight out of the national treasury—and after close study of the
finished product I would not be a bit surprised to hear that it was 100
percent. If Pandit Nehru is portrayed flatteringly in the film, one must
remember that Nehru himself took part in the initial story conferences (he
originally wanted Gandhi to be played by Alec Guinness) and that his daughter
Indira Gandhi is, after all, Prime Minister of India (though no relation to
Mohandas Gandhi). The screenplay was checked and rechecked by Indian officials
at every stage, often by the Prime Minister herself, with close consultations
on plot and even casting. If the movie contains a particularly poisonous portrait
of Mohammed Ali Jinnah, the founder of Pakistan, the Indian reply, I suppose,
would be that if the Pakistanis want an attractive portrayal of Jinnah let them
pay for their own movie. A friend of mine, highly sophisticated in political
matters but innocent about film-making, declared that Gandhi should be preceded by the legend: The following film is a paid political advertisement by the
government of India.
Gandhi, then, is a large, pious,
historical morality tale centered on a saintly, sanitized Mahatma Gandhi
cleansed of anything too embarrassingly Hindu (the word “caste” is not
mentioned from one end of the film to the other) and, indeed, of most of the
rest of Gandhi’s life, much of which would drastically diminish his saintliness
in Western eyes. There is little to indicate that the India of today has
followed Gandhi’s precepts in almost nothing. There is little, in fact, to
indicate that India is even India. The spectator realizes the scene is the
Indian subcontinent because there are thousands of extras dressed in dhotis and
saris. The characters go about talking in these quaint Peter Sellers accents.
We have occasional shots of India’s holy poverty, holy hovels, some landscapes,
many of them photographed quite beautifully, for those who like travelogues. We
have a character called Lord Mountbatten (India’s last Viceroy); a composite
American journalist (assembled from Vincent Sheehan, William L. Shirer, Louis
Fischer, and straight fiction); a character called simply “Viceroy” (presumably
another composite); an assemblage of Gandhi’s Indian followers under the name
of one of them (Patel); and of course Nehru.
I sorely missed the fabulous Annie Besant, that English clergyman’s wife,
turned atheist, turned Theo-sophist, turned Indian nationalist, who actually
became president of the Indian National Congress and had a terrific falling out
with Gandhi, becoming his fierce opponent. And if the producers felt they had
to work in a cameo role for an American star to add to the film’s appeal in the
United States, it is positively embarrassing that they should have brought in
the photographer Margaret Bourke-White, a person of no importance whatever in
Gandhi’s life and a role Candice Bergen plays with a repellant unctuousness. If
the film-makers had been interested in drama and not hagiography, it is hard to
see how they could have resisted the awesome confrontation between Gandhi and,
yes, Margaret Sanger. For the two did meet. Now there was
a meeting of East and West, and may the better person win! (She
did. Margaret Sanger argued her views on birth control with such vigor that
Gandhi had a nervous breakdown.)
I cannot honestly say I had any reasonable expectation that the film would
show scenes of Gandhi’s pretty teenage girl followers fighting “hysterically”
(the word was used) for the honor of sleeping naked with the Mahatma and
cuddling the nude septuagenarian in their arms. (Gandhi was “testing” his vow
of chastity in order to gain moral strength for his mighty struggle with
Jinnah.) When told there was a man named Freud who said that, despite his
declared intention, Gandhi might actually be enjoying the
caresses of the naked girls, Gandhi continued, unperturbed. Nor, frankly, did I
expect to see Gandhi giving daily enemas to all the young girls in his ashrams
(his daily greeting was, “Have you had a good bowel movement this morning,
sisters?”), nor see the girls giving him his daily
enema. Although Gandhi seems to have written less about home rule for India
than he did about enemas, and excrement, and latrine cleaning (“The bathroom is
a temple. It should be so clean and inviting that anyone would enjoy eating
there”), I confess such scenes might pose problems for a Western director.
_____________
Gandhi, therefore, the film, this
paid political advertisement for the government of India, is organized around
three axes: (1) Anti-racism—all men are equal regardless of race, color, creed,
etc.; (2) anti-colonialism, which in present terms translates as support for
the Third World, including, most eminently, India; (3) nonviolence, presented
as an absolutist pacifism. There are other, secondary precepts and subheadings.
Gandhi is portrayed as the quintessence of tolerance (“I am a Hindu and a
Muslim and a Christian and a Jew”), of basic friendliness to Britain (“The British
have been with us for a long time and when they leave we want them to leave as
friends”), of devotion to his wife and family. His vow of chastity is
represented as something selfless and holy, rather like the celibacy of the
Catholic clergy. But, above all, Gandhi’s life and teachings are presented as
having great import for us today. We must learn from Gandhi.
I propose to demonstrate that the film grotesquely distorts both Gandhi’s
life and character to the point that it is nothing more than a pious fraud, and
a fraud of the most egregious kind. Hackneyed Indian falsehoods such as that
“the British keep trying to break India up” (as if Britain didn’t give India a
unity it had never enjoyed in history), or that the British created Indian poverty (a poverty which had not
only existed since time immemorial but had been considered holy), almost pass
unnoticed in the tide of adulation for our fictional saint. Gandhi, admittedly,
being a devout Hindu, was far more self-contradictory than most public men.
Sanskrit scholars tell me that flat self-contradiction is even considered an
element of “Sanskrit rhetoric.” Perhaps it is thought to show profundity.
__________
__________
Gandhi rose early, usually at three-thirty, and before his first bowel movement
(during which he received visitors, although possibly not Margaret
Bourke-White) he spent two hours in meditation, listening to his “inner voice.”
Now Gandhi was an extremely vocal individual, and in addition to spending an
hour each day in vigorous walking, another hour spinning at his primitive
spinning wheel, another hour at further prayers, another hour being massaged
nude by teenage girls, and many hours deciding such things as affairs of state,
he produced a quite unconscionable number of articles and speeches and wrote an
average of sixty letters a day. All considered, it is not really surprising
that his inner voice said different things to him at different times. Despising
consistency and never checking his earlier statements, and yet inhumanly
obstinate about his position at any given moment, Gandhi is thought by some
Indians today (according to V.S. Naipaul) to have been so erratic and
unpredictable that he may have delayed Indian independence for twenty-five
years.
For Gandhi was an extremely difficult man to work with. He had no partners,
only disciples. For members of his ashrams, he dictated every minute of their
days, and not only every morsel of food they should eat but when they should
eat it. Without ever having heard of a protein or a vitamin, he considered
himself an expert on diet, as on most things, and was constantly experimenting.
Once when he fell ill, he was found to have been living on a diet of ground-nut
butter and lemon juice; British doctors called it malnutrition. And Gandhi had
even greater confidence in his abilities as a “nature doctor,” prescribing
obligatory cures for his ashramites, such as dried cow-dung powder and various
concoctions containing cow dung (the cow, of course, being sacred to the
Hindu). And to those he really loved he gave enemas—but again, alas, not to
Margaret Bourke-White. Which is too bad, really. For admiring Candice Bergen’s
work as I do, I would have been most interested in seeing how she would have
experienced this beatitude. The scene might have lived in film history.
There are 400 biographies of Gandhi, and his writings run to 80 volumes,
and since he lived to be seventy-nine, and rarely fell silent, there are, as I
have indicated, quite a few inconsistencies. The authors of the present movie
even acknowledge in a little-noticed opening title that they have made a film
only true to Gandhi’s “spirit.” For my part, I do not intend to pick through
Gandhi’s writings to make him look like Attila the Hun (although the thought is
tempting), but to give a fair, weighted balance of his views, laying stress
above all on his actions, and on what he told other men to do when the time for
action had come.
_____________
Anti-racism: the reader
will have noticed that in the present-day community of nations South Africa is
a pariah. So it is an absolutely amazing piece of good fortune that Gandhi,
born the son of the Prime Minister of a tiny Indian principality and received
as an attorney at the bar of the Middle Temple in London, should have begun his
climb to greatness as a member of the small Indian community in, precisely,
South Africa. Natal, then a separate colony, wanted to limit Indian immigration
and, as part of the government program, ordered Indians to carry identity
papers (an action not without similarities to measures under consideration in
the U.S. today to control illegal immigration). The film’s lengthy opening
sequences are devoted to Gandhi’s leadership in the fight against Indians
carrying their identity papers (burning their registration cards), with for
good measure Gandhi being expelled from the first-class section of a railway
train, and Gandhi being asked by whites to step off the sidewalk. This inspired
young Indian leader calls, in the film, for interracial harmony, for people to
“live together.”
Now the time is 1893, and Gandhi is a “caste” Hindu, and from one of the
higher castes. Although, later, he was to call for improving the lot of India’s
Untouchables, he was not to have any serious misgivings about the fundamentals
of the caste system for about another thirty years, and even then his doubts,
to my way of thinking, were rather minor. In the India in which Gandhi grew up,
and had only recently left, some castes could enter the courtyards of certain
Hindu temples, while others could not. Some castes were forbidden to use the
village well. Others were compelled to live outside the village, still others
to leave the road at the approach of a person of higher caste and perpetually
to call out, giving warning, so that no one would be polluted by their
proximity. The endless intricacies of Hindu caste by-laws varied somewhat
region by region, but in Madras, where most South African Indians were from,
while a Nayar could pollute a man of higher caste only by touching him,
Kammalans polluted at a distance of 24 feet, toddy drawers at 36 feet, Pulayans
and Cherumans at 48 feet, and beef-eating Paraiyans at 64 feet. All castes and
the thousands of sub-castes were forbidden, needless to say, to marry, eat, or
engage in social activity with any but members of their own group. In Gandhi’s
native Gujarat a caste Hindu who had been polluted by touch had to perform
extensive ritual ablutions or purify himself by drinking a holy beverage
composed of milk, whey, and (what else?) cow dung.
Low-caste Hindus, in short, suffered humiliations in their native India
compared to which the carrying of identity cards in South Africa was almost
trivial. In fact, Gandhi, to his credit, was to campaign strenuously in his
later life for the reduction of caste barriers in India—a campaign almost
invisible in the movie, of course, conveyed in only two glancing references,
leaving the audience with the officially sponsored if historically astonishing
notion that racism was introduced into India by the British. To present the
Gandhi of 1893, a conventional caste Hindu, fresh from caste-ridden India where
a Paraiyan could pollute at 64 feet, as the champion of interracial
equalitariansim is one of the most brazen hypocrisies I have ever encountered
in a serious movie.
The film, moreover, does not give the slightest hint as to Gandhi’s
attitude toward blacks, and the viewers of Gandhiwould
naturally suppose that, since the future Great Soul opposed South African
discrimination against Indians, he would also oppose South African
discrimination against black people. But this is not so. While Gandhi, in South
Africa, fought furiously to have Indians recognized as loyal subjects of the
British empire, and to have them enjoy the full rights of Englishmen, he had no
concern for blacks whatever. In fact, during one of the “Kaffir Wars” he
volunteered to organize a brigade of Indians to put down a Zulu rising, and was
decorated himself for valor under fire.
For, yes, Gandhi (Sergeant-Major Gandhi) was awarded Victoria’s coveted War
Medal. Throughout most of his life Gandhi had the most inordinate admiration
for British soldiers, their sense of duty, their discipline and stoicism in
defeat (a trait he emulated himself). He marveled that they retreated with
heads high, like victors. There was even a time in his life when Gandhi, hardly
to be distinguished from Kipling’s Gunga Din, wanted nothing so much as to be a
Soldier of the Queen. Since this is not in keeping with the “spirit” of Gandhi,
as decided by Pandit Nehru and Indira Gandhi, it is naturally omitted from the
movie.
Anti-colonialism: as almost
always with historical films, even those more honest than Gandhi, the historical personage on which the movie is
based is not only more complex but more interesting than the character shown on
the screen. During his entire South African period, and for some time after,
until he was about fifty, Gandhi was nothing more or less than an imperial
loyalist, claiming for Indians the rights of Englishmen but unshakably loyal to
the crown. He supported the empire ardently in no fewer than three wars: the
Boer War, the “Kaffir War,” and, with the most extreme zeal, World War I. If
Gandhi’s mind were of the modern European sort, this would seem to suggest that
his later attitude toward Britain was the product of unrequited love: he had
wanted to be an Englishman; Britain had rejected him and his people; very well
then, they would have their own country. But this would imply a point of
“agonizing reappraisal,” a moment when Gandhi’s most fundamental political
beliefs were reexamined and, after the most bitter soul-searching, repudiated.
But I have studied the literature and cannot find this moment of bitter
soul-searching. Instead, listening to his “inner voice” (which in the case of
divines of all countries often speaks in the tones of holy opportunism), Gandhi
simply, tranquilly, without announcing any sharp break, set off in a new
direction.
It should be understood that it is unlikely Gandhi ever truly conceived of
“becoming” an Englishman, first, because he was a Hindu to the marrow of his
bones, and also, perhaps, because his democratic instincts were really quite
weak. He was a man of the most extreme, autocratic temperament, tyrannical,
unyielding even regarding things he knew nothing about, totally intolerant of
all opinions but his own. He was, furthermore, in the highest degree
reactionary, permitting in India no change in the relationship between the
feudal lord and his peasants or servants, the rich and the poor. In his The Life and Death of Mahatma Gandhi, the best and
least hagiographic of the full-length studies, Robert Payne, although admiring
Gandhi greatly, explains Gandhi’s “new direction” on his return to India from
South Africa as follows:
He spoke in generalities, but he was searching for a single cause, a single
hard-edged task to which he would devote the remaining years of his life. He
wanted to repeat his triumph in South Africa on Indian soil. He dreamed of
assembling a small army of dedicated men around him, issuing stern commands and
leading them to some almost unobtainable goal.
Gandhi, in short, was a leader looking for a cause. He found it, of course,
in home rule for India and, ultimately, in independence.
_____________
We are therefore presented with the seeming anomaly of a Gandhi who, in
Britain when war broke out in August 1914, instantly contacted the War Office,
swore that he would stand by England in its hour of need, and created the
Indian Volunteer Corps, which he might have commanded if he hadn’t fallen ill
with pleurisy. In 1915, back in India, he made a memorable speech in Madras in
which he proclaimed, “I discovered that the British empire had certain ideals
with which I have fallen in love. . . .” In early 1918, as the war in Europe
entered its final crisis, he wrote to the Viceroy of India, “I have an idea
that if I become your recruiting agent-in-chief, I might rain men upon you,”
and he proclaimed in a speech in Kheda that the British “love justice; they have
shielded men against oppression.” Again, he wrote to the Viceroy, “I would make
India offer all her able-bodied sons as a sacrifice to the empire at this
critical moment. . . .” To some of his pacifist friends, who were horrified,
Gandhi replied by appealing to the Bhagavad Gita and
to the endless wars recounted in the Hindu epics, the Ramayana and theMahabharata, adding
further to the pacifists’ horror by declaring that Indians “have always been
warlike, and the finest hymn composed by Tulsidas in praise of Rama gives the
first place to his ability to strike down the enemy.”
This was in contradiction to the interpretation of sacred Hindu scriptures
Gandhi had offered on earlier occasions (and would offer later), which was that
they did not recount military struggles but spiritual struggles; but, unusual
for him, he strove to find some kind of synthesis. “I do not say, ‘Let us go
and kill the Germans,’” Gandhi explained. “I say, ‘Let us go and die for the
sake of India and the empire.’” And yet within two years, the time having come
for swaraj (home rule), Gandhi’s inner voice spoke
again, and, the leader having found his cause, Gandhi proclaimed resoundingly:
“The British empire today represents Satanism, and they who love God can afford
to have no love for Satan.”
The idea of swaraj, originated by others, crept
into Gandhi’s mind gradually. With a fair amount of winding about, Gandhi,
roughly, passed through three phases. First, he was entirely pro-British, and
merely wanted for Indians the rights of Englishmen (as he understood them).
Second, he was still pro-British, but with the belief that, having proved their
loyalty to the empire, Indians would be granted some degree of swaraj. Third, as the home-rule movement gathered
momentum, it was the swaraj, the
whole swaraj, and nothing but the swaraj, and he turned relentlessly against the crown.
The movie to the contrary, he caused the British no end of trouble in their
struggles during World War II.
_____________
But it should not be thought for one second that Gandhi’s finally
full-blown desire to detach India from the British empire gave him the
slightest sympathy with other colonial peoples pursuing similar objectives.
Throughout his entire life Gandhi displayed the most spectacular inability to
understand or even really take in people unlike himself—a trait which V.S.
Naipaul considers specifically Hindu, and I am inclined to agree. Just as
Gandhi had been totally unconcerned with the situation of South Africa’s blacks
(he hardly noticed they were there until they rebelled), so now he was totally
unconcerned with other Asians or Africans. In fact, he was adamantly opposed to certain Arab movements within the
Ottoman empire for reasons of internal Indian politics.
At the close of World War I, the Muslims of India were deeply absorbed in
what they called the “Khilafat” movement—“Khilafat” being their corruption of
“Caliphate,” the Caliph in question being the Ottoman Sultan. In addition to
his temporal powers, the Sultan of the Ottoman empire held the spiritual
position of Caliph, supreme leader of the world’s Muslims and successor to the
Prophet Muhammad. At the defeat of the Central Powers (Germany, Austria,
Turkey), the Sultan was a prisoner in his palace in Constantinople, shorn of
his religious as well as his political authority, and the Muslims of India were
incensed. It so happened that the former subject peoples of the Ottoman empire,
principally Arabs, were perfectly happy to be rid of this Caliph, and even the
Turks were glad to be rid of him, but this made no impression at all on the
Muslims of India, for whom the issue was essentially a club with which to beat
the British. Until this odd historical moment, Indian Muslims had felt little
real allegiance to the Ottoman Sultan either, but now that he had fallen, the
British had done it! The British had taken away their Khilafat! And one of the
most ardent supporters of this Indian Muslim movement was the new Hindu leader,
Gandhi.
No one questions that the formative period for Gandhi as a political leader
was his time in South Africa. Throughout history Indians, divided into 1,500
language and dialect groups (India today has 15 official languages), had little
sense of themselves as a nation. Muslim Indians and Hindu Indians felt about as
close as Christians and Moors during their 700 years of cohabitation in Spain.
In addition to which, the Hindus were divided into thousands of castes and
sub-castes, and there were also Parsees, Sikhs, Jains. But in South Africa
officials had thrown them all in together, and in the mind of Gandhi (another
one of those examples of nationalism being born in exile) grew the idea of
India as a nation, and Muslim-Hindu friendship became one of the few positions
on which he never really reversed himself. So Gandhi—ignoring Arabs and
Turks—became an adamant supporter of the Khilafat movement out of strident
Indian nationalism. He had become a national figure in India for having unified
13,000 Indians of all faiths in South Africa, and now he was determined to
reach new heights by unifying hundreds of millions of Indians of all faiths in
India itself. But this nationalism did not please everyone, particularly
Tolstoy, who in his last years carried on a curious correspondence with the new
Indian leader. For Tolstoy, Gandhi’s Indian nationalism “spoils everything.”
As for the “anti-colonialism” of the nationalist Indian state since
independence, Indira Gandhi, India’s present Prime Minister, hears an inner
voice of her own, it would appear, and this inner voice told her to justify the
Soviet invasion of Afghanistan as produced by provocative maneuvers on the part
of the U.S. and China, as well as to be the first country outside the Soviet
bloc to recognize the Hanoi puppet regime in Cambodia. So everything plainly
depends on who is colonizing whom, and Mrs. Gandhi’s voice perhaps tells her
that the subjection of Afghanistan and Cambodia to foreign rule is “defensive”
colonialism. And the movie’s message that Mahatma Gandhi, and by plain
implication India (the country for which he plays the role of Joan of Arc),
have taken a holy, unchanging stance against the colonization of nation by
nation is just another of its hypocrisies. For India, when it comes to
colonialism or anti-colonialism, it has been Realpolitik all
the way.
_____________
Nonviolence: but the
real center and raison d’être of Gandhi is ahimsa, nonviolence,
which principle when incorporated into vast campaigns of noncooperation with
British rule the Mahatma called by an odd name he made up himself, satyagraha, which means something like
“truth-striving.” During the key part of his life, Gandhi devoted a great deal
of time explaining the moral and philosophical meanings of both ahimsa and satyagraha. But much
as the film sanitizes Gandhi to the point where one would mistake him for a Christian
saint, and sanitizes India to the point where one would take it for Shangri-la,
it quite sweeps away Gandhi’s ethical and religious ponderings, his
complexities, his qualifications, and certainly his vacillations, which
simplifying process leaves us with our old European friend: pacifism. It is
true that Gandhi was much impressed by the Sermon on the Mount, his favorite
passage in the Bible, which he read over and over again. But for all the
Sermon’s inspirational value, and its service as an ideal in relations among
individual human beings, no Christian state which survived has ever based its
policies on the Sermon on the Mount since Constantine declared Christianity the
official religion of the Roman empire. And no modern Western state which survives
can ever base its policies on pacifism. And no Hindu state will ever base its
policies on ahimsa. Gandhi himself—although the
film dishonestly conceals this from us—many times conceded that in dire
circumstances “war may have to be resorted to as a necessary evil.”
It is something of an anomaly that Gandhi, held in popular myth to be a
pure pacifist (a myth which governments of India have always been at great
pains to sustain in the belief that it will reflect credit on India itself, and
to which the present movie adheres slavishly), was until fifty not ill-disposed
to war at all. As I have already noted, in three wars, no sooner had the bugles
sounded than Gandhi not only gave his support, but was clamoring for arms. To
form new regiments! To fight! To destroy the enemies of the empire I Regular
Indian army units fought in both the Boer War and World War I, but this was not
enough for Gandhi. He wanted to raise new troops, even, in the case of the Boer
and Kaffir Wars, from the tiny Indian colony in South Africa. British military
authorities thought it not really worth the trouble to train such a small body
of Indians as soldiers, and were even resistant to training them as an
auxiliary medical corps (“stretcher bearers”), but finally yielded to Gandhi’s relentless
importuning. As first instructed, the Indian Volunteer Corps was not supposed
actually to go into combat, but Gandhi, adamant, led his Indian volunteers into
the thick of battle. When the British commanding officer was mortally wounded
during an engagement in the Kaffir War, Gandhi—though his corps’ deputy
commander—carried the officer’s stretcher himself from the battlefield and for
miles over the sun-baked veldt. The British empire’s War Medal did not have its
name for nothing, and it was generally earned.
_____________
Anyone who wants to wade through Gandhi’s endless ruminations about himsa and ahimsa (violence
and nonviolence) is welcome to do so, but it is impossible for the skeptical
reader to avoid the conclusion—let us say in 1920, when swaraj (home rule) was all the rage and Gandhi’s
inner voice started telling him that ahimsa was the
thing—that this inner voice knew what it was talking about. By this I mean
that, though Gandhi talked with the tongue of Hindu gods and sacred scriptures,
his inner voice had a strong sense of expediency. Britain, if only
comparatively speaking, was a moral nation, and nonviolent civil disobedience
was plainly the best and most effective way of achieving Indian independence.
Skeptics might also not be surprised to learn that as independence approached,
Gandhi’s inner voice began to change its tune. It has been reported that Gandhi
“half-welcomed” the civil war that broke out in the last days. Even a
fratricidal “bloodbath” (Gandhi’s word) would be preferable to the British.
And suddenly Gandhi began endorsing violence left, right, and center.
During the fearsome rioting in Calcutta he gave his approval to men “using
violence in a moral cause.” How could he tell them that violence was wrong, he
asked, “unless I demonstrate that nonviolence is more effective?” He blessed
the Nawab of Maler Kotla when he gave orders to shoot ten Muslims for every
Hindu killed in his state. He sang the praises of Subhas Chandra Bose, who,
sponsored by first the Nazis and then the Japanese, organized in Singapore an
Indian National Army with which he hoped to conquer India with Japanese
support, establishing a totalitarian dictatorship. Meanwhile, after
independence in 1947, the armies of the India that Gandhi had created
immediately marched into battle, incorporating the state of Hyderabad by force
and making war in Kashmir on secessionist Pakistan. When Gandhi was
assassinated by a Hindu extremist in January 1948 he was honored by the new
state with a vast military funeral—in my view by no means inapposite.
_____________
But it is not widely realized (nor will this film tell you) how much
violence was associated with Gandhi’s so-called “nonviolent” movement from the
very beginning. India’s Nobel Prize-winning poet, Rabindranath Tagore, had
sensed a strong current of nihilism in Gandhi almost from his first days, and
as early as 1920 wrote of Gandhi’s “fierce joy of annihilation,” which Tagore
feared would lead India into hideous orgies of devastation—which ultimately
proved to be the case. Robert Payne has said that there was unquestionably an
“unhealthy atmosphere” among many of Gandhi’s fanatic followers, and that
Gandhi’s habit of going to the edge of violence and then suddenly retreating
was fraught with danger. “In matters of conscience I am uncompromising,”
proclaimed Gandhi proudly. “Nobody can make me yield.” The judgment of Tagore
was categorical. Much as he might revere Gandhi as a holy man, he quite
detested him as a politician and considered that his campaigns were almost always
so close to violence that it was utterly disingenuous to call them nonviolent.
For every satyagraha true believer,
moreover, sworn not to harm the adversary or even to lift a finger in his own
defense, there were sometimes thousands of incensed freebooters and skirmishers
bound by no such vow. Gandhi, to be fair, was aware of this, and nominally
deplored it—but with nothing like the consistency shown in the movie. The film
leads the audience to believe that Gandhi’s first “fast unto death,” for example,
was in protest against an act of barbarous violence, the slaughter by an Indian
crowd of a detachment of police constables. But in actual fact Gandhi reserved
this “ultimate weapon” of his to interdict a 1931 British proposal to grant
Untouchables a “separate electorate” in the Indian national legislature—in
effect a kind of affirmative-action program for Untouchables. For reasons I
have not been able to decrypt, Gandhi was dead set against the project, but I
confess it is another scene I would like to have seen in the movie: Gandhi
almost starving himself to death to block affirmative action for Untouchables.
From what I have been able to decipher, Gandhi’s main preoccupation in this
particular struggle was not even the British. Benefiting from the immense
publicity, he wanted to induce Hindus, overnight, ecstatically, and without any
of these British legalisms, to “open their hearts” to Untouchables. For a whole
week Hindu India was caught up in a joyous delirium. No more would the
Untouchables be scavengers and sweepers! No more would they be banned from
Hindu temples! No more would they pollute at 64 feet! It lasted just a week.
Then the temple doors swung shut again, and all was as before. Meanwhile, on
the passionate subject of swaraj, Gandhi was
crying, “I would not flinch from sacrificing a million lives for India’s
liberty!” The million Indian lives were indeed sacrificed, and in full. They
fell, however, not to the bullets of British soldiers but to the knives and
clubs of their fellow Indians in savage butcheries when the British finally
withdrew.
_____________
Although the movie sneers at this reasoning as being the flimsiest of
pretexts, I cannot imagine an impartial person studying the subject without
concluding that concern for Indian religious minorities was one of the
principal reasons Britain stayed in India as long as it did. When it finally
withdrew, blood-maddened mobs surged through the streets from one end of India
to the other, the majority group in each area, Hindu or Muslim, slaughtering
the defenseless minority without mercy in one of the most hideous periods of
carnage of modern history.
A comparison is in order. At the famous Amritsar massacre of 1919, shot in
elaborate and loving detail in the present movie and treated by post-independence
Indian historians as if it were Auschwitz, Ghurka troops under the command of a
British officer, General Dyer, fired into an unarmed crowd of Indians defying a
ban and demonstrating for Indian independence. The crowd contained women and
children; 379 persons died; it was all quite horrible. Dyer was court-martialed
and cashiered, but the incident lay heavily on British consciences for the next
three decades, producing a severe inhibiting effect. Never again would the
British empire commit another Amritsar, anywhere.
As soon as the oppressive British were gone, however, the Indians—gentle,
tolerant people that they are—gave themselves over to an orgy of bloodletting.
Trained troops did not pick off targets at a distance with Enfield rifles.
Blood-crazed Hindus, or Muslims, ran through the streets with knives, beheading
babies, stabbing women, old people. Interestingly, our movie shows none of this
on camera (the oldest way of stacking the deck in Hollywood). All we see is the
aged Gandhi, grieving, and of course fasting, at these terrible reports of
riots. And, naturally, the film doesn’t whisper a clue as to the total number
of dead, which might spoil the mood somehow. The fact is that we will never
know how many Indians were murdered by other Indians during the country’s
Independence Massacres, but almost all serious studies place the figure over a
million, and some, such as Payne’s sources, go to 4 million. So, for those who like round numbers, the
British killed some 400 seditious colonials at Amritsar and the name Amritsar
lives in infamy, while Indians may have killed some 4 million of their own
countrymen for no other reason than that they were of a different religious
faith and people think their great leader would make an inspirational subject for
a movie. Ahimsa, as can be seen, then, had an absolutely
tremendous moral effect when used against Britain, but not only would it not
have worked against Nazi Germany (the most obvious reproach, and of course
quite true), but, the crowning irony, it had virtually no effect whatever when
Gandhi tried to bring it into play against violent Indians.
Despite this at best patchy record, the film-makers have gone to great
lengths to imply that this same prinicple of ahimsa—presented in
the movie as the purest form of pacifism—is universally effective, yesterday,
today, here, there, everywhere. We hear no talk from Gandhi of war sometimes
being a “necessary evil,” but only him announcing—and more than once—“An eye
for an eye makes the whole world blind.” In a scene very near the end of the
movie, we hear Gandhi say, as if after deep reflection: “Tyrants and murderers
can seem invincible at the time, but in the end they always fall. Think of it.
Always.” During the last scene of the movie, following the assassination,
Margaret Bourke-White is keening over the death of the Great Soul with an
English admiral’s daughter named Madeleine Slade, in whose bowel movements
Gandhi took the deepest interest (see their correspondence), and Miss Slade
remarks incredulously that Gandhi felt that he had failed. They are then both
incredulous for a moment, after which Miss Slade observes mournfully, “When we
most needed it [presumably meaning during World War II], he offered the world a
way out of madness. But the world didn’t see it.” Then we hear once again the
assassin’s shots, Gandhi’s “Oh, God,” and last, in case we missed them the
first time, Gandhi’s words (over the shimmering waters of the Ganges?):
“Tyrants and murderers can seem invincible at the time, but in the end they always
fall. Think of it. Always.” This is the end of the picture.
_____________
Now, as it happens, I have been thinking about tyrants and murderers for
some time. But the fact that in the end they always fall has never given me
much comfort, partly because, not being a Hindu and not expecting reincarnation
after reincarnation, I am simply not prepared to wait them out. It always
occurs to me that, while I am waiting around for them to fall, they might do
something mean to me, like fling me into a gas oven or send me off to a Gulag.
Unlike a Hindu and not worshipping stasis, I am also given to wondering who is
to bring these murderers and tyrants down, it being all too risky a process to
wait for them and the regimes they establish simply to die of old age. The fact
that a few reincarnations from now they will all have turned to dust somehow
does not seem to suggest a rational strategy for dealing with the problem.
Since the movie’s Madeleine Slade specifically invites us to revere the
“way out of madness” that Gandhi offered the world at the time of World War II,
I am under the embarrassing obligation of recording exactly what courses of
action the Great Soul recommended to the various parties involved in that
crisis. For Gandhi was never stinting in his advice. Indeed, the less he knew
about a subject, the less he stinted.
I am aware that for many not privileged to have visited the former British
Raj, the names Gujarat, Rajasthan, and Deccan are simply words. But other
names, such as Germany, Poland, Czechoslovakia, somehow have a harder profile.
The term “Jew,” also, has a reasonably hard profile, and I feel all Jews
sitting emotionally at the movie Gandhi should
be apprised of the advice that the Mahatma offered their coreligionists when
faced with the Nazi peril: they should commit collective suicide. If only the
Jews of Germany had the good sense to offer their throats willingly to the Nazi
butchers’ knives and throw themselves into the sea from cliffs they would
arouse world public opinion, Gandhi was convinced, and their moral triumph
would be remembered for “ages to come.” If they would only pray for Hitler (as
their throats were cut, presumably), they would leave a “rich heritage to
mankind.” Although Gandhi had known Jews from his earliest days in South Africa—where
his three staunchest white supporters were Jews, every one—he disapproved of
how rarely they loved their enemies. And he never repented of his
recommendation of collective suicide. Even after the war, when the full extent
of the Holocaust was revealed, Gandhi told Louis Fischer, one of his
biographers, that the Jews died anyway, didn’t they? They might as well have
died significantly.
Gandhi’s views on the European crisis were not entirely consistent. He
vigorously opposed Munich, distrusting Chamberlain. “Europe has sold her soul
for the sake of a seven days’ earthly existence,” he declared. “The peace that
Europe gained at Munich is a triumph of violence.” But when the Germans moved
into the Bohemian heartland, he was back to urging nonviolent resistance,
exhorting the Czechs to go forth, unarmed, against the Wehrmacht, perishing gloriously—collective suicide again. He had
Madeleine Slade draw up two letters to President Eduard Beneš of
Czechoslovakia, instructing him on the proper conduct of Czechoslovak satyagrahi when facing the Nazis.
When Hitler attacked Poland, however, Gandhi suddenly endorsed the Polish
army’s military resistance, calling it “almost nonviolent.” (If this sounds
like double-talk, I can only urge readers to read Gandhi.) He seemed at this
point to have a rather low opinion of Hitler, but when Germany’s panzer
divisions turned west, Allied armies collapsed under the ferocious onslaught,
and British ships were streaming across the Straits of Dover from Dunkirk, he
wrote furiously to the Viceroy of India: “This manslaughter must be stopped.
You are losing; if you persist, it will only result in greater bloodshed. Hitler
is not a bad man. . . .”
Gandhi also wrote an open letter to the British people, passionately urging
them to surrender and accept whatever fate Hitler had prepared for them. “Let
them take possession of your beautiful island with your many beautiful buildings.
You will give all these, but neither your souls, nor your minds.” Since none of
this had the intended effect, Gandhi, the following year, addressed an open
letter to the prince of darkness himself, Adolf Hitler.
_____________
The scene must be pictured. In late December 1941, Hitler stood at the
pinnacle of his might. His armies, undefeated—anywhere—ruled Europe from the
English Channel to the Volga. Rommel had entered Egypt. The Japanese had
reached Singapore. The U.S. Pacific Fleet lay at the bottom of Pearl Harbor. At
this superbly chosen moment, Mahatma Gandhi attempted to convert Adolf Hitler
to the ways of nonviolence. “Dear Friend,” the letter begins, and proceeds to a
heartfelt appeal to the Führer to embrace all mankind “irrespective of race,
color, or creed.” Every admirer of the film Gandhishould be
compelled to read this letter. Surprisingly, it is not known to have had any
deep impact on Hitler. Gandhi was no doubt disappointed. He moped about, really
quite depressed, but still knew he was right. When the Japanese, having cut
their way through Burma, threatened India, Gandhi’s strategy was to let them
occupy as much of India as they liked and then to “make them feel unwanted.”
His way of helping his British “friends” was, at one of the worst points of the
war, to launch massive civil-disobedience campaigns against them, paralyzing
some of their efforts to defend India from the Japanese.
Here, then, is your leader, O followers of Gandhi: a man who thought
Hitler’s heart would be melted by an appeal to forget race, color, and creed,
and who was sure the feelings of the Japanese would be hurt if they sensed
themselves unwanted. As world-class statesmen go, it is not a very good record.
Madeleine Slade was right, I suppose. The world certainly didn’t listen to
Gandhi. Nor, for that matter, has the modern government of India listened to
Gandhi. Although all Indian politicians of all political parties claim to be
Gandhians, India has blithely fought three wars against Pakistan, one against
China, and even invaded and seized tiny, helpless Goa, and all without a
whisper of a shadow of a thought of ahimsa. And of
course India now has atomic weapons, a satyagrahatechnique
if ever there was one.
_____________
I am sure that almost everyone who sees the movie Gandhiis aware that, from a religious point of view,
the Mahatma was something called a “Hindu”—but I do not think one in a thousand
has the dimmest notion of the fundamental beliefs of the Hindu religion. The
simplest example is Gandhi’s use of the word “God,” which, for members of the
great Western religions—Christianity, Judaism, and Islam, all
interrelated—means a personal god, a godhead. But when Gandhi said “God” in
speaking English, he was merely translating from Gujarati or Hindi, and from
the Hindu culture. Gandhi, in fact, simply did not believe in a personal God,
and wrote in so many words, “God is not a person . . . but a force; the
undefinable mysterious Power that pervades everything; a living Power that is
Love. . . .” And Gandhi’s very favorite definition of God, repeated many
thousands of times, was, “God is Truth,” which reduces God to some kind of
abstract principle.
Like all Hindus, Gandhi also believed in the “Great Oneness,” according to which
everything is part of God, meaning not just you and me and everyone else, but
every living creature, every dead creature, every plant, the pitcher of milk,
the milk in the pitcher, the tumbler into which the milk is poured. . . . After
all of which, he could suddenly pop up with a declaration that God is “the
Maker, the Law-Giver, a jealous Lord,” phrases he had probably picked up in the
Bible and, with Hindu fluidity, felt he could throw in so as to embrace even
more of the Great Oneness. So when Gandhi said, “I am a Hindu and a Muslim and
a Christian and a Jew,” it was (from a Western standpoint) Hindu double-talk.
Hindu holy men, some of them reformers like Gandhi, have actually even
“converted” to Islam, then Christianity, or whatever, to worship different
“aspects” of the Great Oneness, before reconverting to Hinduism. Now for
Christians, fastidious in matters of doctrine, a man who converts to Islam is
an apostate (or vice versa), but a Hindu is a Hindu is a Hindu. The better to
experience the Great Oneness, many Hindu holy men feel they should be women as
well as men, and one quite famous one even claimed he could menstruate (I will
spare the reader the details).
_____________
In this ecumenical age, it is extremely hard to shake Westerners loose from
the notion that the devout of all religions, after all, worship “the one God.”
But Gandhi did not worship the one God. He did not worship the God of mercy. He
did not worship the God of forgiveness. And this for the simple reason that the
concepts of mercy and forgiveness are absent from Hinduism. In Hinduism, men do
not pray to God for forgiveness, and a man’s sins are never forgiven—indeed,
there is no one out there to do the forgiving. In your next life you may be
born someone higher up the caste scale, but in this life there is no hope. For
Gandhi, a true Hindu, did not believe in man’s immortal soul. He believed with
every ounce of his being in karma, a series,
perhaps a long series, of reincarnations, and at the end, with great good
fortune: mukti, liberation from suffering and the necessity of
rebirth, nothingness. Gandhi once wrote to Tolstoy (of all people) that
reincarnation explained “reasonably the many mysteries of life.” So if Hindus
today still treat an Untouchable as barely human, this is thought to be
perfectly right and fitting because of his actions in earlier lives. As can be
seen, Hinduism, by its very theology, with its sacred triad of karma, reincarnation, and caste (with caste an
absolutely indispensable part of the system) offers the most complacent
justification of inhumanity of any of the world’s great religious faiths.
Gandhi, needless to say, was a Hindu reformer, one of many. Until well into
his fifties, however, he accepted the caste system in toto as the “natural order of society,”
promoting control and discipline and sanctioned by his religion. Later, in
bursts of zeal, he favored moderating it in a number of ways. But he stuck by
the basic varna system (the four main
caste groupings plus the Untouchables) until the end of his days, insisting
that a man’s position and occupation should be determined essentially by birth.
Gandhi favored milder treatment of Untouchables, renaming them Harijans,
“children of God,” but a Harijan was still a Harijan. Perhaps because his
frenzies of compassion were so extreme (no, no,he would clean
the Harijan‘s latrine), Hindu reverence for him as a holy
man became immense, but his prescriptions were rarely followed.
Industrialization and modernization have introduced new occupations and sizable
social and political changes in India, but the caste system has dexterously
adapted and remains largely intact today. The Sudras still labor. The sweepers
still sweep. Max Weber, in his The Religion of India,
after quoting the last line of the Communist Manifesto,
suggests somewhat sardonically that low-caste Hindus, too, have “nothing to
lose but their chains,” that they, too, have “a world to win”—the only problem
being that they have to die first and get born again, higher, it is to be
hoped, in the immutable system of caste. Hinduism in general, wrote Weber, “is
characterized by a dread of the magical evil of innovation.” Its very essence
is to guarantee stasis.
In addition to its literally thousands of castes and sub-castes, Hinduism
has countless sects, with discordant rites and beliefs. It has no clear
ecclesiastical organization and no universal body of doctrine. What I have
described above is your standard, no-frills Hindu, of which in many ways Gandhi
was an excellent example. With the reader’s permission I will skip over the
Upanishads, Vedanta, Yoga, the Puranas, Tantra, Bhakti, the Bhagavad-Gita (which contains theistic elements),
Brahma, Vishnu, Shiva, and the terrible Kali or Durga, to concentrate on those
central beliefs that most motivated Gandhi’s behavior as a public figure.
_____________
It should be plain by now that there is much in the Hindu culture that is
distasteful to the Western mind, and consequently is largely unknown in the
West—not because Hindus do not go on and on about these subjects, but because a
Western squeamishness usually prevents these preoccupations from reaching print
(not to mention film). When Gandhi attended his first Indian National Congress
he was most distressed at seeing the Hindus—not laborers but high-caste Hindus,
civic leaders—defecating all over the place, as if to pay attention to where
the feces fell was somehow unclean. (For, as V.S. Naipaul puts it, in a twisted
Hindu way it is unclean to clean. It is unclean
even to notice. “It was the business of the sweepers to remove excrement, and
until the sweepers came, people were content to live in the midst of their own
excrement.”) Gandhi exhorted Indians endlessly on the subject, saying that
sanitation was the first need of India, but he retained an obvious obsession
with excreta, gleefully designing latrines and latrine drills for all hands at
the ashram, and, all in all, what with giving and taking enemas, and his public
bowel movements, and his deep concern with everyone else’s bowel movements
(much correspondence), and endless dietary experiments as a function of bowel movements, he devoted a
rather large share of his life to the matter. Despite his constant campaigning
for sanitation, it is hard to believe that Gandhi was not permanently marked by
what Arthur Koestler terms the Hindu “morbid infatuation with filth,” and what
V.S. Naipaul goes as far as to call the Indian “deification of filth.” (Decades
later, Krishna Menon, a Gandhian and one-time Indian Defense Minister, was
still fortifying his sanctity by drinking a daily glass of urine.)
But even more important, because it is dealt with in the movie directly—if
of course dishonestly—is Gandhi’s parallel obsession with brahmacharya, or sexual chastity. There is a scene late
in the film in which Margaret Bourke-White (again!) asks Gandhi’s wife if he
has ever broken his vow of chastity, taken, at that time, about forty years
before. Gandhi’s wife, by now a sweet old lady, answers wistfully, with a
pathetic little note of hope, “Not yet.” What lies behind this adorable scene
is the following: Gandhi held as one of his most profound beliefs (a
fundamental doctrine of Hindu medicine) that a man, as a matter of the utmost
importance, must conserve his bindu, or seminal
fluid. Koestler (in The Lotus and the Robot)
gives a succinct account of this belief, widespread among orthodox Hindus: “A
man’s vital energy is concentrated in his seminal fluid, and this is stored in
a cavity in the skull. It is the most precious substance in the body . . . an
elixir of life both in the physical and mystical sense, distilled from the
blood. . . . A large store of bindu of pure
quality guarantees health, longevity, and supernatural powers. . . .
Conversely, every loss of it is a physical and spiritual impoverishment.”
Gandhi himself said in so many words, “A man who is unchaste loses stamina,
becomes emasculated and cowardly, while in the chaste man secretions [semen]
are sublimated into a vital force pervading his whole being.” And again, still
Gandhi: “Ability to retain and assimilate the vital liquid is a matter of long
training. When properly conserved it is transmuted into matchless energy and
strength.” Most male Hindus go ahead and have sexual relations anyway, of
course, but the belief in the value of bindu leaves
the whole culture in what many observers have called a permanent state of
“semen anxiety.” When Gandhi once had a nocturnal emission he almost had a
nervous breakdown.
Gandhi was a truly fanatical opponent of sex for pleasure, and worked it
out carefully that a married couple should be allowed to have sex three or four
times in a lifetime, merely to have children, and favored
embodying this restriction in the law of the land. The sexual-gratification
wing of the present-day feminist movement would find little to attract them in
Gandhi’s doctrine, since in all his seventy-nine years it never crossed his
mind once that there could be anything enjoyable in sex for women, and he was
constantly enjoining Indian women to deny themselves to men, to refuse to let
their husbands “abuse” them. Gandhi had been married at thirteen, and when he
took his vow of chastity, after twenty-four years of sexual activity, he
ordered his two oldest sons, both young men, to be totally chaste as well.
_____________
But Gandhi’s monstrous behavior to his own family is notorious. He denied
his sons education—to which he was bitterly hostile. His wife remained
illiterate. Once when she was very sick, hemorrhaging badly, and seemed to be
dying, he wrote to her from jail icily: “My struggle is not merely political.
It is religious and therefore quite pure. It does not matter much whether one
dies in it or lives. I hope and expect that you will also think likewise and
not be unhappy.” To die, that is. On another occasion he wrote, speaking about
her: “I simply cannot bear to look at Ba’s face. The expression is often like
that on the face of a meek cow and gives one the feeling, as a cow occasionally
does, that in her own dumb manner she is saying something. I see, too, that
there is selfishness in this suffering of hers. . . .” And in the end he let
her die, as I have said, rather than allow British doctors to give her a shot
of penicillin (while his inner voice told him that it would be all right for
him to take quinine). He disowned his oldest son, Harilal, for wishing to
marry. He banished his second son for giving his struggling older brother a
small sum of money. Harilal grew quite wild with rage against his father,
attacked him in print, converted to Islam, took to women, drink, and died an
alcoholic in 1948. The Mahatma attacked him right back in his pious way,
proclaiming modestly in an open letter in Young India, “Men
may be good, not necessarily their children.”
_____________
If the reader thinks I have delivered unduly harsh judgments on India and Hindu
civilization, I can refer him to An Area of Darkness and India: A Wounded Civilization, two quite brilliant
books on India by V.S. Naipaul, a Hindu, and a Brahmin, born in Trinidad. In
the second, the more discursive, Naipaul writes that India “has little to offer
the world except its Gandhi an concept of holy poverty and the recurring
crooked comedy of its holy men, and . . . is now dependent in every practical
way on other, imperfectly understood civilizations.”
Hinduism, Naipaul writes, “has given men no idea of a contract with other
men, no idea of the state. It has enslaved one quarter of the population [the
Untouchables] and always has left the whole fragmented and vulnerable. Its
philosophy of withdrawal has diminished men intellectually and not equipped
them to respond to challenge; it has stifled growth. So that again and again in
India history has repeated itself: vulnerability, defeat, withdrawal.” Indians,
Naipaul says, have no historical notion of the past. “Through centuries of
conquest the civilization declined into an apparatus for survival, turning away
from the mind . . . and creativity . . . stripping itself down, like all
decaying civilizations, to its magical practices and imprisoning social forms.”
He adds later, “No government can survive on Gandhian fantasy; and the
spirituality, the solace of a conquered people, which Gandhi turned into a form
of national assertion, has soured more obviously into the nihilism that it
always was.” Naipaul condemns India again and again for its “intellectual
parasitism,” its “intellectual vacuum,” its “emptiness,” the “blankness of its
decayed civilization.” “Indian poverty is more dehumanizing than any machine;
and, more than in any machine civilization, men in India are units, locked up
in the straitest obedence by their idea of their dharma. . . . The blight of caste is not only
untouchability and the consequent deification in India of filth; the blight, in
an India that tries to grow, is also the overall obedience it imposes, . . .
the diminishing of adventurousness, the pushing away from men of individuality
and the possibility of excellence.”
Although Naipaul blames Gandhi as well as India itself for the country’s
failure to develop an “ideology” adequate for the modern world, he grants him
one or two magnificent moments—always, it should be noted, when responding to
“other civilizations.” For Gandhi, Naipaul remarks pointedly, had matured in
alien societies: Britain and South Africa. With age, back in India, he seemed
from his autobiography to be headed for “lunacy,” says Naipaul, and was only
rescued by external events, his reactions to which were determined in part by “his experience of the democratic ways of South Africa”
[my emphasis]. For it is one of the enduring ironies of Gandhi’s story that it
was in South Africa—South Africa—a country in which he
became far more deeply involved than he had been in Britain, that Gandhi caught
a warped glimmer of that strange institution of which he would never have seen
even a reflection within Hindu society: democracy.
_____________
Another of Gandhi’s most powerful obsessions (to which the movie alludes in
such a syrupy and misleading manner that it would be quite impossible for the
audience to understand it) was his visceral hatred of the modern, industrial
world. He even said, more than once, that he actually wouldn’t mind if the
British remained in India, to police it, conduct foreign policy, and such
trivia, if it would only take away its factories and railways. And Gandhi
hated, not just factories and railways, but also the telegraph, the telephone,
the radio, the airplane. He happened to be in England when Louis Blériot, the
great French aviation pioneer, first flew the English Channel—an event which at
the time stirred as much excitement as Lindbergh’s later flight across the
Atlantic—and Gandhi was in a positive fury that giant crowds were acclaiming
such an insignificant event. He used the telegraph extensively himself, of
course, and later would broadcast daily over All-India Radio during his highly
publicized fasts, but consistency was never Gandhi’s strong suit.
Gandhi’s view of the good society, about which he wrote ad nauseam, was an Arcadian vision set far in India’s
past. It was the pristine Indian village, where, with all diabolical machinery and
technology abolished—and with them all unhappiness—contented villagers would
hand-spin their own yarn, hand-weave their own cloth, serenely follow their
bullocks in the fields, tranquilly prodding them in the anus in the
time-hallowed Hindu way. This was why Gandhi taught himself to spin, and why
all the devout Gandhians, like monkeys, spun also. This was Gandhi’s program.
Since he said it several thousand times, we have no choice but to believe that
he sincerely desired the destruction of modern technology and industry and the
return of India to the way of life of an idyllic (and quite likely nonexistent)
past. And yet this same Mahatma Gandhi hand-picked as the first Prime Minister
of an independent India Pandit Nehru, who was committed to a policy of industrialization
and for whom the last word in the politico-economic organization of the state
was (and remained) Beatrice Webb.
_____________
What are we to make of this Gandhi? We are dealing with two strangenesses
here, Indians and Gandhi himself. The plain fact is that both Indian leaders
and the Indian people ignored Gandhi’s precepts almost as thoroughly as did
Hitler. They ignored him on sexual abstinence. They ignored his modifications
of the caste system. They ignored him on the evils of modern industry, the
radio, the telephone. They ignored him on education. They ignored his appeals
for national union, the former British Raj splitting into a Muslim Pakistan and
a Hindu India. No one sought a return to the Arcadian Indian village of
antiquity. They ignored him, above all, on ahimsa, nonviolence.
There was always a small number of exalted satyagrahi who,
martyrs, would march into the constables’ truncheons, but one of the things
that alarmed the British—as Tagore indicated—was the explosions of violence
that accompanied all this alleged nonviolence. Naipaul writes that with
independence India discovered again that it was “cruel and horribly violent.”
Jaya Prakash Narayan, the late opposition leader, once admitted, “We often
behave like animals. . . . We are more likely than not to become aggressive,
wild, violent. We kill and burn and loot. . . .”
Why, then, did the Hindu masses so honor this Mahatma, almost all of whose
most cherished beliefs they so pointedly ignored, even during his lifetime? For
Hindus, the question is not really so puzzling. Gandhi, for them, after all,
was a Mahatma, a holy man. He was a symbol of sanctity, not a guide to conduct.
Hinduism has a long history of holy men who, traditionally, do not offer
themselves up to the public as models of general behavior but withdraw from the
world, often into an ashram, to pursue their sanctity in private, a practice
which all Hindus honor, if few emulate. The true oddity is that Gandhi, this
holy man, having drawn from British sources his notions of nationalism and
democracy, also absorbed from the British his model of virtue in public life.
He was a historical original, a Hindu holy man that a British model of public
service and dazzling advances in mass communications thrust out into the world,
to become a great moral leader and the “father of his country.”
_____________
Some Indians feel that after the early 1930′s, Gandhi, although by now
world-famous, was in fact in sharp decline. Did he at least “get the British
out of India”? Some say no. India, in the last days of the British Raj, was
already largely governed by Indians (a fact one would never suspect from this
movie), and it is a common view that without this irrational, wildly erratic
holy man the transition to full independence might have gone both more smoothly
and more swiftly. There is much evidence that in his last years Gandhi was in a
kind of spiritual retreat and, with all his endless praying and fasting, was no
longer pursuing (the very words seem strange in a Hindu context) “the public
good.” What he was pursuing, in a strict reversion to Hindu tradition, was his
personal holiness. In earlier days he had scoffed at the title accorded him,
Mahatma (literally “great soul”). But toward the end, during the hideous
paroxysms that accompanied independence, with some of the most unspeakable
massacres taking place in Calcutta, he declared, “And if . . . the whole of
Calcutta swims in blood, it will not dismay me. For it will be a willing
offering of innocent blood.” And in his last days, after there had already been
one attempt on his life, he was heard to say, “I am a true Mahatma.”
We can only wonder, furthermore, at a public figure who lectures half his
life about the necessity of abolishing modern industry and returning India to
its ancient primitiveness, and then picks a Fabian socialist, already drawing
up Five-Year Plans, as the country’s first Prime Minister. Audacious as it may
seem to contest the views of such heavy thinkers as Margaret Bourke-White,
Ralph Nader, and J.K. Galbraith (who found the film’s Gandhi “true to the
original” and endorsed the movie wholeheartedly), we have a right to
reservations about such a figure as a public man.
I should not be surprised if Gandhi’s greatest real humanitarian
achievement was an improvement in the treatment of Untouchables—an area where
his efforts were not only assiduous, but actually bore fruit. In this, of
course, he ranks well behind the British, who abolished suttee—over ferocious Hindu opposition—in 1829. The
ritual immolation by fire of widows on their husbands’ funeral pyres, suttee had the full sanction of the Hindu religion,
although it might perhaps be wrong to overrate its importance. Scholars remind
us that it was never universal, only “usual.” And there was, after all, a
rather extensive range of choice. In southern India the widow was flung into
her husband’s fire-pit. In the valley of the Ganges she was placed on the pyre
when it was already aflame. In western India, she supported the head of the
corpse with her right hand, while, torch in her left, she was allowed the honor
of setting the whole thing on fire herself. In the north, where perhaps women
were more impious, the widow’s body was constrained on the burning pyre by long
poles pressed down by her relatives, just in case, screaming in terror and
choking and burning to death, she might forget her dharma. So, yes, ladies, members of the National
Council of Churches, believers in the one God, mourners for that holy India
before it was despoiled by those brutish British, remember suttee, that interesting, exotic practice in which
Hindus, over the centuries, burned to death countless millions of helpless
women in a spirit of pious devotion, crying for all I know, Hai Rama! Hai Rama!
_____________
I would like to conclude with some observations on two Englishmen,
Madeleine Slade, the daughter of a British admiral, and Sir Richard
Attenborough, the producer, director, and spiritual godfather of the
film, Gandhi. Miss Slade was a jewel in Gandhi’s crown—a
member of the British ruling class, as she was, turned fervent disciple of this
Indian Mahatma. She is played in the film by Geraldine James with nobility,
dignity, and a beatific manner quite up to the level of Candice Bergen, and
perhaps even the Virgin Mary. I learn from Ved Mehta’s Mahatma Gandhi and his Apostles, however, that Miss
Slade had another master before Gandhi. In about 1917, when she was fifteen,
she made contact with the spirit of Beethoven by listening to his sonatas on a
player piano. “I threw myself down on my knees in the seclusion of my room,”
she wrote in her autobiography, “and prayed, really prayed to
God for the first time in my life: ‘Why have I been born over a century too
late? Why hast Thou given me realization of him and yet put all these years in
between?’”
After World War I, still seeking how best to serve Beethoven, Miss Slade
felt an “infinite longing” when she visited his birthplace and grave, and,
finally, at the age of thirty-two, caught up with Romain Rolland, who had
partly based his renowned Jean Christophe on
the composer. But Rolland had written a new book now, about a man called Gandhi,
“another Christ,” and before long Miss Slade was quite literally falling on her
knees before the Mahatma in India, “conscious of nothing but a sense of light.”
Although one would never guess this from the film, she soon (to quote Mehta’s
impression) began “to get on Gandhi’s nerves,” and he took every pretext to
keep her away from him, in other ashrams, and working in schools and villages
in other parts of India. She complained to Gandhi in letters about
discrimination against her by orthodox Hindus, who expected her to live in rags
and vile quarters during menstruation, considering her unclean and virtually
untouchable. Gandhi wrote back, agreeing that women should not be treated like
that, but adding that she should accept it all with grace and cheerfulness,
“without thinking that the orthodox party is in any way unreasonable.” (This is
as good an example as any of Gandhi’s coherence, even in his prime. Women
should not be treated like that, but the people who treated them that way were
in no way unreasonable.)
Some years after Gandhi’s death, Miss Slade rediscovered Beethoven,
becoming conscious again “of the realization of my true self. For a while I
remained lost in the world of the spirit. . . .” She soon returned to Europe
and serving Beethoven, her “true calling.” When Mehta finally found her in
Vienna, she told him, “Please don’t ask me any more about Bapu [Gandhi]. I now
belong to van Beethoven. In matters of the spirit, there is always a call.” A
polite description of Madeleine Slade is that she was an extreme eccentric. In
the vernacular, she was slightly cracked.
Sir Richard Attenborough, however, isn’t cracked at all. The only puzzle is
how he suddenly got to be a pacifist, a fact which his press releases now
proclaim to the world. Attenborough trained as a pilot in the RAF in World War
II, and was released briefly to the cinema, where he had already begun his
career in Noël Coward’s super-patriotic In Which We Serve.
He then returned to active service, flying combat missions with the RAF. Richard
Attenborough, in short—when Gandhi was pleading with the British to surrender
to the Nazis, assuring them that “Hitler is not a bad man”—was fighting for his
country. The Viceroy of India warned Gandhi grimly that “We are engaged in a
struggle,” and Attenborough played his part in that great struggle, and
proudly, too, as far as I can tell. To my knowledge he has never had a crise de conscience on the matter, or announced
that he was carried away by the war fever and that Britain really should have
capitulated to the Nazis—which Gandhi would have had it do.
_____________
Although the present film is handsomely done in its way, no one has ever
accused Attenborough of being excessively endowed with either acting or
directing talent. In the 50′s he was a popular young British entertainer, but
his most singular gift appeared to be his entrepreneurial talent as a
businessman, using his movie fees to launch successful London restaurants (at
one time four), and other business ventures. At the present moment he is
Chairman of the Board of Capital Radio (Britain’s most successful commercial
station), Gold-crest Films, the British Film Institute, and Deputy Chairman of
the BBC’s new Channel 4 television network. Like most members of the nouveaux riches on the rise, he has also reached
out for symbols of respectability and public service, and has assembled quite a
collection. He is a Trustee of the Tate Gallery, Pro-Chancellor of Sussex
University, President of Britain’s Muscular Dystrophy Group, Chairman of the
Actors’ Charitable Trust and, of course, Chairman of the Royal Academy of
Dramatic Art. There may be even more, but this is a fair sampling. In 1976,
quite fittingly, he was knighted, by a Labor government, but his friends say he
still insists on being called “Dickie.”
It is quite general today for members of the professional classes, even
when not artistic types, to despise commerce and feel that the state, the
economy, and almost everything else would be better and more idealistically run
by themselves rather than these loutish businessmen. Sir Dickie, however, being
a highly successful businessman himself, would hardly entertain such an
antipathy. But as he scrambled his way to the heights perhaps he found himself
among high-minded idealists, utopians, equalitarians, and lovers of the
oppressed. Now there are those who think Sir Dickie converted to pacifism when
Indira Gandhi handed him a check for several million dollars. But I do not
believe this. I think Sir Dickie converted to pacifism out of idealism.
_____________
His pacifism, I confess, has been more than usually muddled. In 1968, after
twenty-six years in the profession, he made his directorial debut with Oh! What a Lovely War, with its superb parody of
Britain’s jingoistic music-hall songs of the “Great War,” World War I. Since I
had the good fortune to see Joan Littlewood’s original London stage production,
which gave the work its entire style, I cannot think that Sir Dickie’s
contribution was unduly large. Like most commercially successful parodies—from
Sandy Wilson’s The Boy Friend to
Broadway’s Superman, Dracula, and The Crucifier of Blood—Oh! What a Lovely War depended
on the audience’s (if not Miss Littlewood’s) retaining a substantial affection
for the subject being parodied: in this case, a swaggering hyper-patriotism,
which recalled days when the empire was great. In any event, since Miss
Littlewood identified herself as a Communist and since Communists, as far as I
know, are never pacifists, Sir Dickie’s case for the production’s “pacifism”
seems stymied from the other angle as well.
Sir Dickie’s next blow for pacifism was Young Winston(1973),
which, the new publicity manual says, “explored how Churchill’s childhood
traumas and lack of parental affection became the spurs which goaded him to . .
. a position of great power.” One would think that a man who once flew combat
missions under the orders of the great war leader—and who seemingly wanted his
country to win—would thank God for childhood traumas and lack of parental
affection if such were needed to provide a Churchill in the hour of peril. But
on pressed Sir Dickie, in the year of his knighthood, with A Bridge Too Far, the story of the futile World War II
assault on Arnhem, described by Sir Dickie—now, at least—as “a further plea for
pacifism.”
But does Sir Richard Attenborough seriously think that, rather than go
through what we did at Arnhem, we should have given in, let the Nazis be, and
even—true pacifists-let them occupy Britain, Canada, the United States,
contenting ourselves only with “making them feel unwanted”? At the level of
idiocy to which discussions of war and peace have sunk in the West, every
harebrained idealist who discovers that war is not a day at the beach seems to
think he has found an irresistible argument for pacifism. Is Pearl Harbor an
argument for pacifism? Bataan? Dunkirk? Dieppe? The Ardennes? Roland fell at
Roncesvalles. Is the Song of Roland a pacifist
epic? If so, why did William the Conqueror have it chanted to his men as they
marched into battle at Hastings? Men prove their valor in defeat as well as in
victory. Even Sergeant-Major Gandhi knew that. Up in the moral never-never land
which Sir Dickie now inhabits, perhaps they think the Alamo led to a great wave
of pacifism in Texas.
In a feat of sheer imbecility, Attenborough has dedicated Gandhi to Lord Mountbatten, who commanded the
Southeast Asian Theater during World War II. Mountbatten, you might object, was
hardly a pacifist—but then again he was murdered by Irish terrorists, which
proves how frightful all that sort of thing is, Sir Dickie says, and how we
must end it all by imitating Gandhi. Not the Gandhi who called for seas of
innocent blood, you understand, but the movie-Gandhi, the nice one.
_____________
The historical Gandhi’s favorite mantra, strange to tell, was Do or Die (he called it literally that, a
“mantra”). I think Sir Dickie should reflect on this, because it means, dixit Gandhi, that a man must be prepared to die
for what he believes in, for, himsa or ahimsa, death is always there, and in an ultimate test
men who are not prepared to face it lose. Gandhi was erratic, irrational,
tyrannical, obstinate. He sometimes verged on lunacy. He believed in a religion
whose ideas I find somewhat repugnant. He worshipped cows. But I still say
this: he was brave. He feared no one.
On a lower level of being, I have consequently given some thought to the
proper mantra for spectators of the movie Gandhi. After much
reflection, in homage to Ralph Nader, I have decided on Caveat Emptor, “buyer beware.” Repeated many thousand
times in a seat in the cinema it might with luck lead to Om, the Hindu dream of nothingness, the Ultimate Void.
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