Commentary/Amberish K Diwanji
The Mauling of the Mahatma
It is one of the ironies of life that
Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi, revered in India and worldwide as
the Mahatma is criticised in India by many people
and politicians. In fact, the critics of Mahatma Gandhi have stretched
across the political spectrum -- Communists, right-wingers, and
even members of the parties representing the dalits. Each of them
have their pet grouse against Mahatma Gandhi, which they unhesitatingly
invoke.
At the outset, it is important to note
that the Mahatma was a politician, and like all politicians, he
made deals and compromises that many find hard to forgive. Once,
when someone told him that he was a saint in politics, the Mahatma
had replied: 'I am a politician trying to be a saint.'
There are many who find it hard to forgive the Mahatma's refusal
to decry the Partition plan on the fateful day in June 1947. In
fact, Mahatma Gandhi's acquiescence finally let Partition become
a reality, something for which the right-wing never forgave him.
The dalits have now stopped using the
name he gave them: Harijans, saying it was patronising. Perhaps.
But they forget that in the absolute casteist times of the earlier
part of the century, when dalits could not even draw water from
the public wells and sat separately in schools, such a word was
in itself a big step forward. Reforms are never achieved overnight,
and each step is significant.
And the left-wing has often considered
Mahatma Gandhi as a 'reactionary bourgeoisie' out to
protect the capitalist classes. Their greatest evidence: Mahatma
Gandhi calling off the 1931-32 agitation because the capitalist
classes were suffering major loses due to the ongoing strikes
and agitations.
Yet, not one of these accusations can
really stand the test of time, or reason. And the fact remains
that millions revere the Mahatma for his ideals and vision, which
years later, remain akin to gospel truth. So should one be surprised
at the accusations of someone as petty as Bal Thackeray. Even
to put them together in the same article seems sacrilegious, but
given the recent utterances of the latter, it seems pertinent
to do so.
Bal Thackeray is a demagogue, who has
often praised Hitler (maybe because doing so ensures immediate
response in the press), and is responsible for the massacre of
hundreds of people in the Hindu-Muslim riots of December 1992
and January 1993.
Thackeray is free to praise any leader,
or criticise anyone in his private capacity. He made two disparaging
remarks against the Mahatma: first, that he was a hypocrite who
spoke of celibacy while always walking with two young women next
to him; and second, that Thackeray does not consider him as the
Father of the Nation.
Regarding the first, Manu and Abha,
the two young girls on whose shoulders the Mahatma's hands would
rest, were his grand-nieces, about 40-odd years apart. It takes
a sick mind to think of anything non-platonic, which is saying
more than enough about Thackeray's views.
As for the second, Thackeray is welcome
to his own Father of the Nation. Thackeray says that he considers
Vallabhbhai Patel as his hero, forgetting that Patel in turn was
devoted to the Mahatma. Moreover, Patel, had he been alive, would
have brokered no nonsense from someone like Thackeray and his
ruffians in Bombay. But it is easy to praise, or criticise, dead
people because they cannot speak back.
The tragedy is that Thackeray
considers Patel, called the Iron Man of India, and Chhatrapati
Shivaji his idols. But they both possessed one aspect that Thackeray
sorely lacks: courage. Patel and Shivaji both faced their enemies
head-on, Thackeray sits in his house and lets Manohar Joshi do
all the dirty work because he is not capable of facing a hostile
Congress in the legislature.
It is the people of India who called
Gandhi Bapu, meaning father. And the title of Father of
the Nation was given to the Mahatma by a man who opposed the Mahatma,
who was forced to quit the Congress because of his differences
with Gandhi, a man who, though left-wing, is today the idol of
India's right-wing parties: Subhas Chandra Bose.
It was Bose
who appealed to the 'Father of the Nation' to give the
call to throw the British out, and which message the Mahatma heeded,
leading to the heady days of August 1942 and the Quit India Movement.
Bose made this appeal after having escaped from India.
Thackeray is a petty man. He opposed
naming a flyover after former prime minister Morarji Desai, simply
because as chief minister of the then Bombay state, Desai had
ordered policemen to stop the pro-Maharashtra state demonstrations.
In the melee, over 100 people died, and who have been honoured
by a huge memorial for them in the heart of Bombay city. There
is no doubt the death is tragic, but it was Desai's duty
to maintain law and order, even if it caused a few deaths. Not
controlling the agitations could have led to even more deaths,
and this, more than anyone else, Thackeray knows.
The tragedy is that few have stood up
to this paper tiger. His own chief minister has proven flexible
enough to survive, showing that for power, pride and character
matter little. Regarding the controversy about Abha and Manu,
Joshi had to pretend that he did not hear what Thackeray had said
despite sharing the dais with him!
Joshi enjoys being a puppet
on a chain, which is the sorrow of Maharashtrians whose history
is one of bravery in opposing the tyrannical Aurangzeb. But those
were the days of Shivaji, not Thackeray and Joshi. Unfortunately, Maharashtra (great nation)
is now a katputlirashtra (puppet nation).
An even greater tragedy is that Bharatiya Janata Party
General Secretary Pramod Mahajan was present at the press meet
where Thackeray denounced Gandhi as not being the Father of the
Nation. The BJP, which reveres Bose, later stated that this was
Mahajan's personal view. But the views of BJP members is beyond the
scope of this article.
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