Six days after launching the 'Quit India' agitation, Mahatma Gandhi sent the following letter to the Viceroy.
14-8-1942
DEAR LORD LINLITHGOW,
The Government of India were wrong in precipitating the crisis.
Congress had precipitated it. The Japanese had conquered the whole of Burma 3 months earlier. Perhaps they would sweep into India and send the Brits packing. The British army chief in India- Archibald Wavell, the next Viceroy- had only three divisions of inferior quality to defend India with. Seven crack divisions were in North Africa. Fortunately, you don't have to be a good soldier to machine gun civilians.
The Government resolution justifying the step is full of distortions and misrepresentations.
Gandhi is referring to the Governor-General in Council's Resolution of August 8th which may be found here.
That you have the approval of your Indian 'colleagues' can have no significance, except this that in India you can always command such services.
The Viceroy commanded the services of millions of civil servants and soldiers. Sadly, some of those soldiers were trying to defend the country from the Japanese. Gandhi was bitterly opposed to this. It turned out that the services of the people Gandhi commanded were utterly useless. The Viceroy continued to rule at the Federal level.
That co-operation is an additional justification for the demand of withdrawal irrespective of what people and parties may say.
Indians should not cooperate. They should welcome invaders provided they are cruel and rapacious.
The Government of India should have waited at least till the time I inaugurated mass action.
Which he had done on the 8th of August.
I have publicly stated that I fully contemplated sending you a letter before taking concrete action.
But no such letter was sent. Gandhi wrote this six days after he launched 'Quit India'. That was a concrete action.
It was to be an appeal to you for an impartial examination of the Congress case.
But it wasn't made. Why is Gandhi mentioning an imaginary letter?
As you know the Congress has readily filled in every omission that has been discovered in the conception of its demand.
No. Congress had not explained how it proposed to defend India. Japanese air-raids were already occurring. The Resolution said ' The Committee resolves, therefore to sanction, for the vindication of India’s inalienable right to freedom and independence, the starting of a mass struggle on non-violent lines and n the widest possible scale so that the country might utilize all the non-violent struggle it has gathered during the last twenty-two years of peaceful struggle Such a struggle must inevitably be under the leadership of Gandhiji, and the Committee requests him to take the lead and guide the nation in the steps to be taken” Gandhi clarified that this meant the British must pack their bags and leave. He demanded “a complete and immediate withdrawal of the British from India at least in reality and properly from all non-European possessions”. He understood that this would mean that India would not be able to resist the Japanese. His hoped that they would pass through India to join up with the Germans who planned to take control of the Middle East and then gain control of Iranian petroleum.
So would I have dealt with every deficiency if you had given me the opportunity.
This was impossible. India simply didn't have a navy or an air-force and it would run out of munitions within a week or two of a shooting war with the Japanese.
The precipitate action of the Government
caused Gandhi and his followers to wake-up from their day-dreams. Once again, they would have to sulk in jail while the British dictated the pace and scale of reform.
leads one to think that they were afraid that the extreme caution and gradualness with which the Congress was moving towards direct action, might make world opinion ever round to the Congress as it had already begun doing, and expose the hollowness of the grounds for the Government's rejection of the Congress demand.
World opinion was that Indians were good soldiers under British commanders. But they had no Navy or Air-force of their own. If the Brits left, much of India would be occupied by the Japanese. This would make them stronger and thus prolong the war in the Pacific.
They should surely have waited for an authentic report of my speeches on Friday and on Saturday night after the passing of the resolution by the All-India Congress Committee.
Also, Britain should have waited till Hitler conquered their country before taking any precipitate action against him.
You would have found in them that I would not hastily begin action.
What the Brits found in Gandhi's speeches and letters was stupidity. As for the action he counselled- viz. 'do or die'- the fact is, his acolytes did nothing, they sulked in jail, while others died fighting the Japanese.
You would have taken advantage of the interval foreshadowed in them and explored every possibility of satisfying the Congress demand.
Which was that the Brits fuck the fuck off immediately thus leaving India defenceless against the Japanese.
The resolution says, "The Government of India have waited patiently in the hope that wiser counsels might prevail. They have been disappointed in that hope."
The resolution says that Congress was weakening India at a time when the country was under attack. It was stoutly resisted by large sections of the population.
I suppose 'wiser counsels' here means abandonment of its demand by the Congress.
Which Congress did abandon. India needed Britishers- like Lord Mountbatten whom Nehru asked to stay on as the first Governor General of independent India. Incidentally, the Indian Navy had a British Admiral till 1958.
Why should the abandonment of a demand legitimate at all times be hoped for by a Government pledged to guarantee independence to India?
The answer was obvious. The Japs were at the gate. They were already bombing Indian cities. Gandhi was saying 'we don't mind being conquered by the Japanese.'
Is it a challenge that could only be met by immediate repression instead of patient reasoning with the demanding party?
Cripps had come and gone. 'Patient reasoning' hadn't worked.
I venture to suggest that it is a long draft upon the credulity of mankind to say that the acceptance of the demand "would plunge India into confusion".
It would have meant the conquest of Assam and Bengal by the Japanese. They would have requisitioned all the rice and fish to make Sushi for themselves.
Any way the summary rejection of the demand has plunged the nation and the Government into confusion.
Quit India did pose a considerable threat. But the air-force could be used to machine gun agitators. Many were killed and about 90 lakhs was gained through fines inflicted on Hindus. The total cost of damages caused by the rebels was officially estimated at 30 lakhs. Violence succeeded. Non-violence failed.
The Congress was making every effort to identify India with the Allied cause.
Then it decided that being conquered by the Japanese was preferable.
The Government resolution says: "The Governor- General in Council has been aware, too, for some time past, of dangerous preparations by the Congress party for unlawful and in some cases violent activities, directed among other things to the interruption of communications and public utility services, the organization of strikes, tampering with the loyalty of Government servants and interference with defence measures including recruitment."
This was perfectly true. Congress contained a lot of very radical elements.
This is a gross distortion of the reality. Violence was never contemplated at any stage.
Yet, it occurred.
A definition of what could be included in non-violent action has been interpreted in a sinister and subtle manner as if the Congress was preparing for violent action.
Some of its members were involved in such preparations.
Everything was openly discussed among Congress circles, for nothing was to be done secretly.
This may have been true of Gandhi's own circle. But it wasn't the only circle within Congress.
And why is it tampering with your loyalty if I ask you to give up a job that is harming the British people?
Because that is part and parcel of 'tampering with loyalty'. Gandhi thought surrendering to Hitler was the best thing for the British people. Sadly, Churchill refused to surrender India to Japan. He was a big fat meanie.
Instead of publishing behind the backs of principal Congressmen the misleading paragraph,
British should slit their own throats after surrendering to Hitler and Tojo. After that, they may kindly slit their own throats so as to avoid putting their conquerors to any trouble.
the Government of India, immediately they came to know of the 'preparations', should have brought to book the parties concerned with the preparations.
They killed many of them though some were merely jailed.
That would have been the appropriate course. By their unsupported allegations in the resolution, they have laid themselves open to the charge of unfair dealing.
There was a war on. Nobody gave a shit about fair or unfair dealing. What mattered was killing lots of the enemy.
The whole Congress movement was intended to evoke in the people the measure of sacrifice sufficient to compel attention.
The attention they received involved incarceration.
It was intended to demonstrate what measure of popular support it had. Was it wise at this time of the day to seek to suppress a popular Government avowedly non-violent?
Congress had already resigned from office. It wasn't in Government anywhere.
The Government resolution further says: "The Congress is not India's mouthpiece. Yet in the interest of securing their own dominance and in pursuit of their own totalitarian policy its leaders have consistently impeded the efforts made to bring India to full nationhood."
That was a clever touch. The Resolution says that Congress had prevented India from becoming self-governing. What it didn't say was that India would have remained dependent on the British Navy and Army for a considerable period.
It is a gross libel thus to accuse the oldest national organization of India.
No. It was 'fair comment'. Gandhi himself indulged in worse.
This language lies ill in the mouth of a Government which has, as can be proved from public records, consistently thwarted every national effort for attaining freedom, and sought to suppress the Congress by hook or by crook.
This was false. The Government had not banned Congress. It seems Gandhi had got it into his head that there was a 'Gandhi-Irwin pact' which permitted Civil Disobedience. Linlithgow, in a subsequent letter, denied this was the case. 'I have read with surprise your statement that the principle of civil disobedience is implicitly conceded in the Delhi Settlement of the 5th March 1931 which you refer to as the “Gandhi-Irwin Pact”. I have again looked at the document. Its basis was that civil disobedience would be “effectively discontinued” and that certain “reciprocal action” would be taken by Government. It was inherent in such a document that it should take notice of the existence of civil disobedience. But I can find nothing in it to suggest that civil disobedience was recognized as being in any circumstances legitimate. And I cannot make it too plain that it is not so regarded by my Government.'
The Government of India have not condescended to consider the Congress offer that if simultaneously with the declaration of Independence of India, they could not trust the Congress to form a stable provisional Government, they should ask the Muslim League to do so and that any National Government formed by the League would be loyally accepted by the Congress.
The GoI was right not to consider this wholly hypocritical 'offer'.
Such an offer is hardly consistent with the charge of totalitarianism against the Congress.
What was consistent with the charge was Govind Vallabh Pant, Premier of U.P, saying 'Germany has its Fuhrer. Italy has its Il Duce. India has Mahatma Gandhi.'
Let me examine the Government offer. "It is that, as soon as hostilities cease, India shall devise for herself, with full freedom of decision and on a basis embracing all and not only a single party, the form of Government which she regards as most suited to her conditions."
The Brits thought that Japan had to be defeated before India could be independent. Gandhi thought that conquest by Japan was preferable to the British waging war on Indian soil.
Has this offer any reality about it? All parties have not agreed now.
In which case, GoI was right to crack down on one party which wanted the British to depart immediately so the Japanese could take over.
Will it be any more possible after the war?
Yes, though this entailed Partition.
And if the parties have to act before Independence is in their hands ? Parties grow up like mushrooms, for without proving their representative character, the Government will welcome them as they have done in the past, if the parties oppose the Congress and its activities, though they may do lip-homage to Independence, frustration is inherent in the Government offer.
Gandhi was saying he neither trusted the British nor political parties which 'mushroom'. He was a totalitarian.
Hence the logical cry of withdrawal first.
Followed by Japanese occupation. That's very logical.
Only after the end of British power and fundamental change in the political status of India from bondage to freedom, will the formation of a truly representative government, whether provisional or permanent, be possible.
In which case, the British could not grant independence to India. They should simply leave and let the Japanese take over.
The living burial of the authors of the demand has not resolved the deadlock.
Killing and incarcerating agitators resolved it.
It has aggravated.
Killing and incarceration. As for those who sulked in jail, their aggravation did not matter in the slightest.
Then the resolution proceeds: "The suggestion put forward by the Congress party that the millions of India, uncertain as to the future are ready, despite the sad lessons of so many martyr countries, to throw themselves into the arms of the invaders is one that the Government of India cannot accept as a true representation of the feeling of the people of this great country."
This was the obvious fallacy in Gandhi's thinking. It is one thing to advise foreigners to surrender to invaders. Your own people, however, aren't going to want to be enslaved by foreigners.
I do not know about the millions. But I can give my own evidence in support of the Congress statement. It is open to the Government not to believe the Congress evidence. No imperial power likes to be told that it is in peril.
Britain didn't need to be told. It was fighting for its life. But, it was also fighting for India and Burma and Malaya and the other countries conquered by the Japanese.
It is because the Congress is anxious for Great Britain to avoid the fate that has overtaken other imperial powers that it asks her to shed imperialism voluntarily by declaring India independent.
Gandhi had also advised the British to surrender to Hitler. But so had Bertrand Russell.
The Congress has not approached the movement with any but the friendliest motive.
With friends like these, who needs enemies?
The Congress seeks to kill imperialism as much for the sake of the British people and humanity as for India.
Japanese Imperialism was fine. A former president of Congress, Subhas Chandra Bose, was cuddling with Hitler and Tojo.
Notwithstanding assertions to the contrary, I maintain that the Congress has no interests of its own apart from that of the whole of India and the world.
Why stop there? Why not say 'Congress members do not have arseholes. They never fart or shit.'
The following passage from the peroration in the resolution is interesting. "But on them (the Government) there lies the task of defending India, of maintaining India's capacity to wage war, of safeguarding India's interests, of holding the balance between the different sections of her people without fear or favour."
The Viceroys succeeded in doing all that. The last Viceroy was asked to stay on as Governor General of independent India.
All I can say is that it is a mockery of truth after the experience in Malaya, Singapore and Burma.
The Japs did try to invade India. Sadly, evil Britishers defeated them at Imphal.
It is sad to find the Government of India claiming to hold the 'balance' between the parties for whose creation and existence it is itself demonstrably responsible.
Congress was set up by an ICS man. That is true enough.
One thing more. The declared cause is common between the Government of India and us. To put it in the most concrete terms, it is the protection of the freedom of China and Russia.
The Allied war-effort in India was directly beneficial to China. The Russians too wanted Indian Communists to support the war-effort.
The Government of India think that freedom of India is not necessary for winning the cause.
Because it wasn't necessary. Gandhi had tried to recruit Indian soldiers during the Great War, which Britain won.
I think exactly the opposite.
Because you have shit for brains.
I have taken Jawaharlal Nehru as my measuring rod. His personal contacts make him feel much more the misery of the impending ruin of China and Russia than I can, and may I say than even you can. In that misery he tried to forget his old quarrel with Imperialism. He dreads much more than I do the success of Fascism and Nazism. I argued with him for days together. He fought against my position with a passion which I have no words to describe. But the logic of facts overwhelmed him.
The fact that overwhelmed him was that Congress was useless. It could not aid the war-effort. What it could do was sit sulking in jail for the duration of hostilities.
He yielded when he saw clearly that without the freedom of India that of the other two was in great jeopardy.
Stalin was trembling in his boots because India had a White Viceroy.
Surely you are wrong in having imprisoned such a powerful friend and ally.
Sadly, Nehru was useless. What could he do against the Chinese in 1962? Nothing at all.
If not withstanding the common cause, the Government's answer to the Congress demand is hasty repression, they will not wonder if I draw the inference that it was not so much the Allied cause that weighed with the British Government, as the unexpressed determination to cling to the possession of India as an indispensable part of imperial policy.
Gandhi should have mentioned Churchill and sought to drive a wedge between the Viceroy and Whitehall. The problem was that Churchill had sent Cripps to India.
The determination led to the rejection of the Congress demand and precipitated repression.
What 'precipitated repression' was the belief that Congress could be crushed. It was touch and go in some parts of India, but Congress was indeed crushed.
The present mutual slaughter on a scale never before known to history is suffocating enough. But the slaughter of truth accompanying the butchery and enforced by the falsity of which the resolution is reeking adds strength to the Congress position.
Congress's position got weaker. Resigning office in 1939 was a mistake. They had nothing to bargain with.
It causes me deep pain to have to send you this long letter. But however much I dislike your action, I remain the same friend you have known me.
By 'friend', Gandhi meant 'nuisance'.
I would still plead for reconsideration of the Government of India's whole policy. Do not disregard the pleading of one who claims to be a sincere friend of the British people. Heaven guide you!
Two years previously, this 'sincere friend' of the British people admonished them thus- 'You will invite Herr Hitler and Signor Mussolini to take what they want of the countries you call your possessions. 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. If these gentlemen choose to occupy your homes, you will vacate them. If they do not give you free passage out, you will allow yourself man, woman and child, to be slaughtered, but you will refuse to owe allegiance to them.'
Lord Linlithgow's replies to Gandhi's letters are courteous and well written. But the Viceroy commanded great resources. Gandhi was not writing in his mother tongue and had little knowledge of English jurisprudence. He wrote- 'You have condemned men
and women before trying them and hearing their defence,
the Executive is welcome to take such action as it deems in the public interest. There may be avenues of judicial redress but some of these would have been curtailed under the Defence of India Act of 1939.
surely
there was nothing wrong in my asking you to show me the
evidence on which you hold them guilty.
The Executive may be required by a Court of Law to provide such evidence. However, during war-time, considerable latitude was granted to the Executive. Gandhi had no legal standing to ask the Viceroy for anything at all.
What you say in your
letter carries no conviction. Proof should correspond to the
canons of English jurisprudence.
Only if the matter was justiciable. Why did Gandhi & Co not bring a test case? The answer is obvious. DORA laws greatly extended Executive privilege.
If the wife of a member of the Working Committee
Aruna Asaf Ali
is
actively engaged in “planning the bomb outrages and other acts
of terrorism” she should be tried before a court of law and
punished if found guilty.
An arrest warrant for her was issued. She remained underground till it was withdrawn.
The lady you refer to could only have
done the things attributed to her after the wholesale arrests of
9th August last which I have dared to describe as leonine
violence.
It was legal, not leonine. We now know that Aruna Asaf Ali and other revolutionaries had done a lot of planning prior to the wave of arrests.
You say that the time is not yet ripe to publish the charges
against the Congress.
Because some Congress members were informants.
Have you ever thought of the possibility
of their being found baseless when they are put before an
impartial tribunal, or that some of the condemned persons might
have died in the meanwhile, or that some of the evidence that
the living can produce might become unavailable?
After Independence, the revolutionaries were greatly honoured for their daring plots during that period.
I reiterate the statement that the principle of civil disobedience is implicitly conceded in the settlement of 5th March,
1931, arrived at between the then Viceroy on behalf of the
Government of India and myself on behalf of the Congress.
Such was not the case. Gandhi was arrested in January 1932. The Congress Party was banned till 1934. In any case the Defence of India Act of 1939 had completely altered the picture.
I
hope you know that the principal Congressmen were discharged
before that settlement was even thought of.
They were rearrested soon enough.
Certain reparations
were made to Congressmen under that settlement. Civil disobedience was discontinued only on conditions being fulfilled
by the Government.
Nehru says it was discontinued after the Government started seizing the property of the agitators. The Tories dictated the pace and scope of reform.
That by itself was, in my opinion, an
acknowledgement of its legitimacy, of course under given
circumstances.
If failed. Perhaps if the Tories hadn't come to power, it might have been seen as a qualified success.
It therefore seems somewhat strange to find you
maintain that civil disobedience “cannot be recognized as being
in any circumstances legitimate by your Government”.
More particularly, because the enemy was at the gate. Gandhi had failed to grasp the nature of the threat which the nation faced.
You
ignore the practice of the British Government which has recognized its legitimacy under the name of “passive resistance”.
Gandhi was thinking of the passive resistance movement launched in 1902 by John Clifford, a Baptist pastor, who opposed the new Education act's provisions for using public funds to support religious education in sectarian schools. Politically, it was a success in that it contributed to the Liberal victory of 1906. But no British Government 'recognized its legitimacy'. A lot of people were fined and about 80 were sent to prison for not paying those fines.
Lastly you read into my letters a meaning which is wholly
inconsistent with my declaration, in one of them, of adherence
to unadulterated non-violence. For, you say in your letter under
reply, that “acceptance of my point of view would be to concede
that the authorized Government of the country on which lies
the responsibility for maintaining peace and good order, should
allow movements to take place that would admit preparations
for violence, interruptions of communications, for attacks on
innocent persons, for murders of police officers and others, to
proceed unchecked”.
In law, an innocent person or group of persons may provide a shield for people who are not innocent. Laws can be passed which prohibit even those innocent people from engaging in activities which those with criminal intentions can use a shield. In 1914, the Defence of the Realm Act greatly widened the powers of the Government in this respect. In 1915, India adopted a similar law. Gandhi knew little of the law. To be fair, unlike the Viceroy, he did not have highly qualified people to help him draft his letters.
I must be a strange friend of yours whom
you believe to be capable of asking for recognition of such things
as lawful.
Gandhi was strange. But he wasn't a friend. He was a nuisance. It may be argued that Linlithgow should have outlined the legal position to Gandhi. But, Linlithgow represented the Executive. He was not a lawyer. Gandhi had been a lawyer. It was up to him to get proper legal advise.
In a subsequent letter, Gandhi repeats his foolish claims-
Objection may be raised to that clause of the resolution which
contemplated civil disobedience.
It was per se illegal by reason of the DoI act of 1939.
But that by itself cannot constitute
an objection since the principle of civil disobedience is impliedly conceded in what is known as the ‘Gandhi-Irwin Pact’.
It wasn't. Gandhi was re-arrested soon enough. Congress was banned.
Even that civil disobedience was not to be started before knowing the result of the
meeting for which I was to seek from you an appointment.
So, a plan was made to start it under a particular contingency. That was per se illegal.
Then, take the unproved and in my opinion unprovable charges
hurled against the Congress and me by so responsible a Minister as the
Secretary of State for India.
Why did Gandhi not seek to challenge it in Court? The answer was that the law was on the side of Leo Amery.
Surely I can say with safety that it is for the Government to
justify their action by solid evidence, not by mere ipse dixit.
No. What you can say with safety is that the actions of the Executive- including any ipse dixit assertion it makes- may or may not be justiciable. Because of the DoI act, justiciability was gravely limited. Gandhi was treated the same way that Oswald Moseley, in England, was treated.
But you throw in my face the facts of murders by persons reputed
to be Congressmen. I see the fact of the murders as clearly, I hope,
as you do. My answer is that the Government goaded the people to the
point of madness.
And then killed or incarcerated them. Gandhi may not have been aware that homicidal maniacs are dealt with in this fashion even if they have been 'goaded' by their pussy-cat.
They started leonine violence in the shape of the
arrests already referred to.
They were machine gunning mobs from the air.
That violence is not any the less so, because
it is organized on a scale so gigantic that it displaces the Mosaic law of
tooth for tooth by that of ten thousand for one—not to mention the
corollary of the Mosaic law, i.e., of non-resistance as enunciated by
Jesus Christ.
Gandhi was ignoring the violence the Japanese were inflicting on India. The doctrine of non-resistance is not a 'corollary', it is diametrically opposed to Mosaic- or Islamic- law.
I cannot interpret in any other manner the repressive
measures of the all-powerful Government of India.
Gandhi couldn't interpret shit.
Add to this tale of woe the privations of the poor millions due to
India-wide scarcity which I cannot help thinking might have been
largely mitigated, if not altogether prevented, had there been a
bona fide national government responsible to a popularly elected
assembly.
Bengal was ruled by a bona fide provincial government with a popularly elected assembly. That's why a food availability deficit led to such high excess mortality. But the same thing happened in Bangladesh in 1974.
Linlithgow was the longest serving Viceroy in Indian history. Few thought he was anything more than a 'safe pair of hands'. Yet, that, by itself, was quite an achievement. Gandhi, however, felt he had been outfoxed by a wily opponent. He had set much stock on his going on a fast. Linlithgow arranged for him to be released for its duration so, if Gandhi died, less blame would fall on the Government. The problem was that Gandhi had no intention of dying. He had bluffed and he had bluffed and each time his bluff was called. This explains his last letter to the Viceroy-
Detention Camp,
27-9-1943
Dear Lord Linlithgow,
On the eve of your departure from India I would like to
send you a word.
Of all the high functionaries I have had the honour of
knowing none has been the cause of such deep sorrow to me
as you have been.
In other words, no other Viceroy had been as successful in out manoeuvring Gandhi. Willingdon had been more minatory- but that was in peace time. Linlithgow's genius was to throw the blame on Congress for preventing a Federal Government being formed at the centre.
It has cut me to the quick to have to think
of you as having countenanced untruth,
i.e. had refused to believe Gandhi's fraudulent claims
and that regarding one
whom you at one time considered as your friend.
Gandhi's other great friend was Adolf Hitler.
I hope and
pray that God will some day put it into your heart to realize
that you, a representative of a great nation, had been led into
a grievous error.
With good wishes,
I still remain,
Your friend,
M. K. Gandhi
Linlithgow was a pious Presbyterian. Gandhi's mistake was to think he, a Hindu, could lecture a Scotsman on Christianity.
Personal Viceroy’s Camp, India,
(Simla), 7th October, 1943
Dear Mr. Gandhi,
I have received your letter of 27th September. I am indeed
sorry that your feelings about any deeds or words of mine
should be as you describe. But I must be allowed, as gently
as I may, to make plain to you that I am quite unable to accept
your interpretation of the events in question.
As for the corrective virtues of time and reflection evidently
they are ubiquitous in their operation, and wisely to be rejected
by no man.
I am sincerely, Linlithgow.
Gandhi had said in an interview that 'Quit India' might turn into a military conflict. “Q. Does the resolution mean peace or war? There is an interpretation particularly among the foreign journalists, that it means
declaration of war and that the last three paragraphs of the resolution
are the really operative part. Is the emphasis on the first part or the
last part of the resolution?
“A. The emphasis in any non-violent struggle, projected or in
operation, is always on peace. War, when it becomes an absolute
necessity'
Gandhi also spoke of a 'general strike'. In law this was enough for Congress to be proscribed and its members to be arrested under the DoI act. Did Gandhi know that he was lying when he accused Linlithgow of 'untruth'? Perhaps not. He had convinced himself that there was some mythical 'Gandhi-Irwin pact' by which anything at all that he did was legal and anything at all the Government did for the defence of the nation was illegal.
Did Gandhi have a guilty conscience? There is an element of 'manic protestation' in this letter of his to Sir Reginald Maxwell- an ICS officer.
Detention Camp,
21st May, 1943
Dear Sir Reginald Maxwell,
It was only on the 10th instant, that I read your speech
delivered in the Legislative Assembly on the 15th February
last on the adjournment motion about my fast. I saw at once
that it demanded a reply. I wish I had read it earlier.
I observe that you are angry, or at least were at the time
you delivered your speech. I cannot in any other way account
for your palpable inaccuracies.
Why would a man working for the defence of India be angry with a nutter who didn't want India to be defended?
This letter is an endeavour to
show them. It is written to you, not as an official, but as man
to man. The first thought that came to me was that your speech
was a deliberate distortion of facts. But I quickly revised it.
So long as there was a favourable construction possible to put
upon your language, the unfavourable had to be rejected.
Gandhi is lying. He has put the most unfavourable construction possible on Maxwell's speech. He even pretends to know whether Maxwell was calm or whether he was angry when he made the speech.
I
must assume therefore that what appeared to me to be distortions were not deliberate.
You have said that “the correspondence that led to the fast
is there for anyone to interpret as he chooses”; yet you have
straightway told your audience that “it can perhaps be read in
the light of the following facts.” Did you leave them the choice?
Yes. Maxwell said 'people are free to interpret what they read in their own way. One way such and such correspondence could be read is as follows.' Maxwell did not say- as a Judge might instruct a jury- that the thing could only be read in one particular way.
I now take your “facts” seriatim: —
1. “When the Congress Party passed their resolution of August
8th, a Japanese attack on this country was thought to be likely.”
This was true. Japan had begun bombing India at the end of 1942. However, their push into Imphal occurred in 1944.
You seem to have conveyed the meaning that the thought
was that of the Congress and that it was gratuitous.
This is not the case. Everybody thought Japan would attack India after it had swallowed Burma.
The fact
is that the Government gave currency to the thought and
emphasized it by action which even seemed ludicrous.
Gandhi was wrong. The Japanese did plan to invade India and would do so in the very next year.
2. “By demanding the withdrawal of British power from India
and by placing the Congress in open opposition to it the Congress
Party might be thought to have hoped for some advantage to themselves if the Japanese attack succeeded.”
We might think anything we like. As a matter of fact, a previous president of Congress had gone over to Hitler and Tojo.
Now this is not a fact but your opinion wholly contrary
to facts.
This is Gandhi's opinion. It is not a fact.
Congressmen never hoped for, nor desired, any advantage from Japanese success: on the contrary, they dreaded
it and that dread inspired the desire for the immediate end of
British rule.
Which would have been swiftly followed by a Japanese invasion.
All this is crystal clear from the resolution of the
58
All India Congress Committee (8th August, 1942) and my
writings.
No. What is crystal clear is that Congress was as stupid as shit. It had nothing to bargain with. It could merely queue up in an orderly fashion to go sulk in jail.
3. “Today, six months after, the Japanese danger has, at any
rate for the time being, receded and there is little immediate hope
from that quarter.”
This again is your opinion; mine is that the Japanese danger
has not receded.
In which case, India needed the Brits to stick around. India had no navy or air-force to speak off.
It still stares India in the face. Your fling that
“there is little immediate hope from that quarter,” should be
withdrawn unless you think and prove that the resolution and
my writings adverted to in the previous paragraph did not mean
what they said.
Why should Maxwell withdraw anything? What he said was 'fair comment'. Moreover, Bose had joined the Japanese in February 1943- i.e. around the time Maxwell made this speech.
4. “The movement initiated by the Congress has been decisively
defeated.”
That was true. The only hope Congress had was that Japan defeat the British and conquer the country. Hopefully, they would impose a puppet Congress government.
I must combat this statement. Satyagraha knows no defeat.
It flourishes on blows the hardest imaginable.
It flourishes on stupidity.
But I need not
go to that bower for comfort. I learnt in schools established
by the British Government in India that “Freedom’s battle once
begun is bequeathed from bleeding sire to son.”
The line is from Byron who fought with the Greeks against their Islamic conquerors. Gandhi's people hadn't fought anybody. Only after Pax Britannica was established could they rise to become Diwans. This was because their cunning Bania brains were only good for making money, not fighting wars.
It is of little
moment when the goal is reached so long as effort is not relaxed.
The dawn came with the establishment of the Congress sixty
years ago.
It was established by a White ICS officer- just like Maxwell.
Sixth of April, 1919, on which All India Satyagraha began, saw a spontaneous awakening from one end of
India to the other. You can certainly derive comfort, if you
like, from the fact that the immediate objective of the movement was not gained as some Congressmen had expected. But
that is no criterion of ‘decisive’ or any ‘defeat’. It ill-becomes
one belonging to a race which owns no defeat to deduce defeat
of a popular movement from the suppression of popular
exuberance, may be not always wise, by a frightful exhibition
of power.
It ill becomes a nutter from a conquered race from deducing anything from such shite as he has filled his brains with.
“Now therefore it is the object of the Congress Party to
rehabilitate themselves and regain if they can the credit they have
lost.”
Congress was sulking in jail because they were useless.
Surely, your own experience should correct this opinion.
You know, as well as I do, that every attempt at suppression
of the Congress has given it greater prestige and popularity.
Money from Indian merchants had given it that.
This the latest attempt at suppression is not likely to lead to a
contrary result. Hence the questions of ‘lost credit’ and
‘rehabilitation’ simply do not arise.
What arose was the question whether Congress had any nuisance value. It didn't. It could be safely ignored.
“Thus they are now concerned to disclaim responsibility for
the consequences that followed their decision. The point is taken up
by Mr. Gandhi in his correspondence with the Viceroy. The awkward
facts are now disowned as unproved.”
Gandhi had spoken of open war or a general strike. He had said he and his fellows would 'do or die'. But they didn't do anything and stubbornly clung to life.
‘They’ here can only mean ‘me’. For throughout your
speech I was the target. ‘Now’ means at the time of my fast.
I remind you that I disclaimed responsibility on 14th August
last when I wrote to H. E. the Viceroy. In that same letter I
laid it on the Government who by their wholesale arrests of
9th August provoked the people to the point of madness.
Mad people may turn homicidal. Congress did the goading but sought to blame the Government. They failed.
“The
awkward facts” are not awkward for me when the responsibility rests on the Government and what you put forward as
‘facts’ are only one-sided allegations awaiting proof.
As are Gandhi's assertions. The plain fact is Congress did nothing and refused to die.
. "Mr. Gandhi takes up his stand; ‘Surely I can say with safety
that it is for the Government to justify their action by solid evidence.’
To whom are they to justify themselves?
A law court or else to Westminster to which the Viceroy and the Secretary of State were responsible. But the DoI Act had removed this necessity.
Sardar Sant Singh: Before an impartial enquiry committee.”
Was not Sardar Sant Singh’s answer a proper answer?
No. Only Westminster was empowered to order any such thing. The Indians had failed to set up a Federal Government and thus the Viceroy was answerable to London, not Delhi.
How
nice it would have been if you had not put in the interjection.
For, have not the Government of India been obliged before now
to justify their acts by appointing inquiry committees, as for
instance, after the Jallianwala Bagh Massacre?
The Hunter Committee was appointed by GoI on instructions from the Secretary of State not Sardar Santa or Banta Singh.
But you proceed, "Elsewhere in his letters Mr. Gandhi makes this clear. He
says, ‘Convince me that I was wrong and I will make ample amends.’
In the alternative he asks, ‘If you want me to make any proposal on
behalf of the Congress, you should put me among the Working Committee members.’ So far as can be seen, these were the demands,
when he conceived his fast. There is no other solid demand made.”
Here there is a double wrong done to me. You have ignored
the fact that my letters were written to one whom I considered
to be a friend.
This is irrelevant. Gandhi had said that even letters he had marked 'personal' could be published. Moreover, Gandhi had no reason to believe that the Viceroy was a pal of his.
You have further ignored the fact that the
Viceroy in his letter had asked me to make clear proposals.
But Gandhi made no clear proposals. It appears he thought his fast would have some magical effect. But it had no effect whatsoever.
If
you had borne these two facts in mind, you would not have
wronged me as you have done.
Maxwell hadn't wronged Gandhi. He had expressed his view and because there was logic behind it, it carried weight. Gandhi's protestations were disingenuous.
But let me come to the ninth
count of your indictment and it will be clear to you what I
mean.
9. "But now, fresh light emerges. Government without granting
any of his demands informed Mr. Gandhi that they would release
him for the purpose and for the duration of the fast in order to
make it clear they disclaimed responsibility for the consequences.
Such, indeed, was their intention.
On that Mr. Gandhi replied that if he was released, he would at once
abandon the fast and that he had conceived the fast only as a prisoner.
Thus, if he were released, the objects for which he declared his fast,
although still unfulfilled, would recede into the background. As a free
man, he would neither demand these objects nor fast. Interpreted in
this way, his fast would seem to amount to little more than a demand
for release.”
It would be fair to say that Gandhi wanted the release of all political prisoners.
Together with the letter containing the offer of release, a
copy of the draft communique that was to be issued by the
Government was delivered to me. It did not say that the offer
was made in order “to make it clear that the Government disclaimed responsibility for the consequences.”
but this was a reasonable inference to make.
If I had seen that
offending sentence I would have sent a simple refusal. In my
innocence, I put a fair meaning on the offer and in my reply
I argued why I could not accept it. And, according to my wont,
in order that the Government may not be misled in any shape
or form, I told them how the fast was conceived and why it
could not be taken by me as a free man. I went out of my way
even to postpone, for the convenience of the Government, the
commencement of the fast by a day. Mr. Irwin who had brought
the offer and the draft communique appreciated the courtesy.
Why was this reply of mine withheld from the public at the
time the revised communique was issued, and why was an
unwarranted interpretation given instead? Was not my letter a
material document?
No. It was nonsense. Gandhi and other Congress leaders were jailed because they had engaged in actions which imperilled the defence of the realm. Because the DoI act was in effect, the Executive had wide latitude.
Now for the second wrong. You say that if I were released
my objects for which I had declared the fast would recede into
the background, and even gratuitously suggest that as a free
man I would neither demand these objects nor fast. As a free
man I could and would have carried on an agitation for an
impartial public inquiry into the charges brought against Congressmen and me,
But such agitation imperilled the defence of the realm. The Viceroy was right to keep these agitators in custody.
I would also have asked for permission to see
the imprisoned Congressmen. Assume that my agitation had
failed to make any impression on the Government, I might
then have fasted. All this, if you were not labouring under
intense irritation, you could have plainly seen from my letter,
supported, as you would have been, by my past record. Instead,
you have deduced a meaning which, according to the simple
rules of construction, you had no right to deduce.
Everybody has the right to deduce anything they like. 'Simple rules of construction' are only applicable in law courts when dealing with legal documents. Gandhi does not seem to have understood that politicians and administrators are not officers of the court.
Again, as a
free man I would have had the opportunity of examining the
tales of destruction said to have been wrought by Congressmen
and even by non-Congressmen. And if I had found that they
had committed wanton acts of murder, then also I might have
fasted as I have done before now.
To no good effect.
You should thus see that the
demands made in my letter to H. E. the Viceroy would not have
receded into the background if I had been released, for they
could have been pressed otherwise than by the fast, and that
the fast had not the remotest connection with and desire for
release.
If we believe Gandhi. But we would also give up sex and eating nice food if we believed him.
Moreover, imprisonment is never irksome to a Satyagrahi. For him a prison is a gateway of Liberty.
In which case, it does not matter if they rot in jail.
“I could quote several resolutions of the Congress Working
Committee against him....Mr. Gandhi himself took up the subject
in the Harijan dated 19th August 1939. There he says, ‘Hunger-strike
has positively become a plague.’ ”
My views quoted by you have not undergone the slightest
change. If you had read the quotations' without passion, it
would have prevented you from putting upon my letter the
construction you have.
Also, you would have given up sex and taken to spinning cotton. More importantly, you would have surrendered to Hitler and slit your own throat to spare the Gestapo the trouble.
“On the ethics of hunger-striking, Mr. Gandhi had something
to say in the Harijan of 20th May, 1939, after his Rajkot fast: ‘I now
see that it was tainted by himsa.
The wily Diwan of Rajkot instrumentalized caste and religion to chase away the Mahatma. It must be said, it was Patel, not Gandhi, who snatched defeat from the jaws of victory by nominating only Brahmins and Banias for the new Council. The cunning Diwan then proposed representation for Muslims and Depressed classes thus outflanking Congress.
Further on he remarks, ‘this was
not the way of ahimsa or conversion.’ ”
I am sorry to have to say that you have wholly misread
my article. Fortunately I happen to have A. Hingorani’s colle tion of my writings “To the Princes and Their Peoples”. I quote
from the Harijan article referred to by you: “At the end of
my fast I had permitted myself to say that it had succeeded
as no previous fast had done.
Because it failed so spectacularly.
I now see that it was tainted with
himsa. In taking the fast I sought immediate intervention of
the Paramount Power so as to induce fulfilment of the promise
made by the Thakore Saheb.
Gandhi lied about some supposed malign influence exercised by a wholly innocent British official- Sir Patrick Cadell- who wanted to restrain the Prince's extravagance.
This was not the way of ahimsa
or conversion; it was the way of himsa or coercion. My fast
to be pure should have been addressed only to the Thakore
Saheb, and I should have been content to die, if I could not
have melted his heart....”
Sadly, Gandhi was not content to die.
I hope you realize that you misapplied the stray sentences taken from their setting. I described
my fast as ‘tainted’ not because it was bad ah initio but because
I sought the intervention of the Paramount Power.
The Viceroy represented that power. Gandhi sought his intervention to get political prisoners released. He also asked him to very kindly fuck the fuck off so the Japs could take over the country.
I have
given you the credit of being unaware of the article. I wish
you could read it. In any case, may I expect you to correct the
error?
Where is the error? Gandhi had said his fasts were coercive and thus tainted by himsa. The question was whether furious mobs would run amok if he died during one of his fasts. That was his trump card. Sadly, some nice Hindu shot him before he could destroy independent India completely.
For me the Rajkot episode is one of the happiest chapters
of my life, in that God gave me the courage to own my mistake
and purge it by renouncing the fruits of the award. I became
stronger for the purging.
The Viceroy had put in the Chief Justice as arbitrator. The Chief Justice sided with Congress. Then the Diwan, Virawala, mobilized the Muslims, Rajputs and Dalits to protest against Brahmin/Bania domination of the new council. Gandhi unilaterally surrendered and apologized to every body involved.
“I must confess that speaking for myself it is certainly repugnant to Western ideas of decency to exploit against an opponent his
feelings of humanity, chivalry or mercy or to trifle with such a sacred
trust as one’s own life in order to play on the feelings of the public
for the sake of some purely mundane object.”
You don't see Atlee threatening to chop his own head off if Churchill refuses to raise the wages of Coal Miners.
I must tread with extreme caution upon the ground with
which you are infinitely more familiar than I can be. Let me
however remind you of the historic fast of the late Mac Swiney.
He died in prison after fasting for 74 days. Gandhi didn't fast that long and refused to die.
I know that the British Government let him die in imprisonment. But he has been acclaimed by the Irish people as a hero and
a martyr. Edward Thompson in his “You have lived through
all this” says that the late Mr. Asquith called the British
Government’s action a “political blunder of the first magnitude”. The author adds: “He was allowed to die by inches,
while the world watched with a passion of admiration and
sympathy and innumerable British men and women begged
their Government not to be such a damned fool.”
He should have been forcibly fed- like the Suffragettes. Incidentally, his sister was imprisoned twice and went on hunger strike twice in Independent Ireland because of her pro-IRA, anti-Treaty, views.
And is it
repugnant to Western ideas of decency to exploit (if that expression must be retained) against the opponent his feelings
of humanity, chivalry or mercy?
Yes. The thing is counter-productive. Still, during a war, we have to do repugnant things.
Which is better, to take the
opponent’s life secretly or openly, or to credit him with finer
feelings and evoke them by fasting and the like?
Kill the enemy if you are at war. You may also have to kill or incarcerate those of your own people who side with the enemy.
Again, which
is better, to trifle with one’s own life by fasting or some other
way of self-immolation, or to trifle with it by engaging in an
attempt to compass the destruction of the opponent and his
dependants?
During a war, it is better to kill the enemy secretly or openly.
. ‘What he says in effect is this. You say, Government is right
and the Congress is wrong. I say the Congress is right and the
Government is wrong, I chose to put the burden of proof on you.
I am the only person to be convinced. You must either admit you
are wrong or submit your reasons to me and make me the sole arbiter
in the matter....It seems to me that Mr. Gandhi’s demand is rather
like asking the United Nations to appoint Hitler to adjudge the responsibility for the present war. It is not usual in this country to put
the accused person on the bench to judge his own case.”
We are welcome to judge our own actions in any manner we please. But others are welcome to reject such judgments. What matters is if a particular case is justiciable. The problem was the DoI law which granted much latitude to the Executive.
This is an unbecoming caricature of my letters to the
Viceroy. What I said in effect was this: “You have allowed me
to consider myself as your friend.
No permission is required in such cases.
I do not want to stand on
my rights and demand a trial.
Why not? The answer is that the DoI Act had greatly diluted such rights.
You accuse me of being in the
wrong. I contend that your Government is in the wrong. Since
you would not admit your Government’s error you owe it to
me to let me know wherein I have erred.
No such obligation arises. In any case, the Government had clarified that Gandhi and Congress 'erred' by creating obstacles to the proper defence of the realm. Their actions were per se illegal and warranted their detention without trial.
For, I am in the
dark as to how I have erred. If you convince me of my guilt,
I will make ample amends.”
What amends could Gandhi make? He was a nuisance merely. It wasn't as though he could do anything for the war effort.
My simple request you have
turned against me and compared me to an imaginary Hitler
appointed to adjudge his own case.
Govind Vallabh Pant, a very senior Congress man, had compared Gandhi to Hitler. But everybody must judge their own case in foro conscientiae.
If you do not accept my
interpretation of my own letters, can I not say, let an impartial
judge examine the rival interpretations?
You can say what you like.
Will it be an offensive
comparison if I recall the fable of the wolf who was always
in the right and the lamb who was always in the wrong?
It was a comparison Churchill might have used. Congress was the party of the Brahmins & Banias who wanted to tyrannize over the Muslims, Dalits and OBCs.
. “Mr. Gandhi is the leader of an open rebellion... .He forfeits
that right (the right of being heard) so long as he remains an open rebel. He cannot claim to function except through the success of
his own method. He cannot take part in public life under the protection of the law that he denies. He cannot be a citizen and yet not a
subject.”
You are right in describing me as the leader of an open
rebellion except for a fundamental omission namely, strictly
non-violent.
Some members of a rebellion may be non-violent- more particularly if they are as weak as fuck. But the law may permit their incarceration if that was conducive to public safety.
This omission is on a par with the omission of
‘nots’ from the Commandments and quoting them in support
of killing, stealing, etc. ..
No. It is immaterial. Rebellion may be punishable by law even if it is non-violent. Sedition is a different offence from 'waging war on the King Emperor'. Gandhi had pleaded guilty to sedition previously.
You may dismiss the phrase or
explain it away in any manner you like. But when you quote
a person you may not omit anything from his language,
especially an omission which changes the whole aspect of things.
There is no such rule. The question is whether the omission is material and made in bad faith.
I have declared myself an open rebel on many occasions, even
during my visit to London on the occasion of the second Round
Table Conference. But the anathema that you have pronounced
against me has not been pronounced before.
Because the DoI Act was not in operation.
You will perhaps
recall the time when the late Lord Reading was willing to hold
a Round Table Conference in which I was to be present,
The 'moderates' (e.g. Sapru) floated the suggestion. Reading did not commit himself.
although I was leading a mass civil disobedience movement. It
was not called because I had insisted that the Ali Brothers, who
were then in prison, should be released.
Gandhi surrendered unilaterally. The Ali Brothers turned against him.
British history which
I was taught as a lad had it that Wat Tyler and John Hampden
who had rebelled were heroes.
The English weren't at war at that time. Neither of them had endangered the defence of the realm.
In very recent times the British
Government treated with Irish rebels whilst their hands were
still red with blood. Why should I become an outcast although
my rebellion is innocent and I have had nothing to do with
violence?
Because you are harming the defence of the realm at a time when the enemy is at the gate.
In spite of the validity of my claim that you have enunciated a novel doctrine, I admit that you made a perfect statement when you said, “He cannot claim to function except
through the success of his own method.”
He can tell lies about how it is actually succeeding when the truth is that it failed utterly.
My method, being
based on truth and non-violence, ever succeeds to the extent
it is applied.
In which case it was never applied.
Therefore I function always and only through the
success of my method and to the extent that I correctly represent, in my own person, its fundamentals.
Which consist of telling stupid lies and pretending everybody else is very evil whereas you consider them your very dear friends.
The moment I became a Satyagrahi from that moment I
ceased to be a subject,
Gandhi was born a British protected subject. He died as a British subject. He was not the citizen of any country.
but never ceased to be a citizen. A citizen
obeys laws voluntarily and never under compulsion or for fear
of the punishment prescribed for their breach.
A citizen may or may not do so. But this is also true of a subject.
He breaks them
when he considers it necessary and welcomes the punishment.
That robs it of its edge or of the disgrace which it is supposed
to imply.
Yet Gandhi refers to himself as an outcast.
15. “In some of the published correspondence, Mr. Gandhi has
made much of his intention to seek an interview with the Viceroy.
But the Congress resolution still stood, together with Mr. Gandhi’s
own words ‘do or die’. The Government communique, on the subject
of his fast, has already reminded the public of Mr. Gandhi’s statement
made on 14th July that there was no room left in the proposal for
withdrawal or negotiation....I may again quote Mr. Gandhi’s own
words ‘Every one of you should, from this moment onwards, consider yourself a free man or woman and act as if you are free and
are no longer under the heel of this imperialism.’
In other words, you should feel yourself free to wage war on the King Emperor- just like Netaji Bose.
Now listen to this:
‘You may take it from me that I am not going to strike a bargain
with the Viceroy for ministries or the like. I am not going to be
satisfied with anything short of complete freedom.’ ‘We shall do or die.
We shall either free India or die in the attempt.’ ‘This is open
rebellion.’ ”
Let me first of all make a vital correction of the quotation
you have taken from my press statement made on the 14th July
and reported in the Harijan of 19th July. You have quoted me
as saying that “there was no room left in the proposal for withdrawal or negotiation.” The real quotation is “there is no room
left for negotiations in the proposal for withdrawal.” You will
admit that the difference is material.
There is no difference at all. Gandhi said the British must withdraw. They may 'negotiate' this with some people- he didn't know who those people might be. One thing was certain. They must fuck the fuck off.
But the point I
want to stress here is this that there is no room left for any negotiations in the
proposal for withdrawal. Either they recognize independence, or they do not.
The British did not. They prevailed.
The faulty quotation
apart, you have omitted from my statement, which occupies
nearly three columns of the Harijan, all the things which
amplify my meaning and show the caution with which I was
working. I take a few sentences from that statement. “ It is
possible that the British may negotiate a withdrawal. If they
do it will be a feather in their cap. Then it will cease to be a
case for withdrawal. If the British see, however late, the wis¬
dom of recognizing the freedom of India without reference to
the various parties, all things are possible. But the point I want
to stress is this.” Here follows the sentence misquoted by you.
The paragraph then proceeds: “Either they recognize independence or they don’t.
So, Gandhi was ruling out negotiations. Since the Brits had already tried that- by sending out Cripps- they could take a hard line with Gandhi without alienating the Americans. Linlithgow gave Gandhi just enough rope to hang himself.
After recognition many things can follow,
for by that single act, the British representatives will have
altered the face of the whole landscape and revived the hope
of the people which has been frustrated times without number.
Therefore, whenever that great act is performed on behalf of
the British people, it will be a red letter day in the history of
India and the world. And, as I have said, it can materially affect
the fortunes of the war.”
Gandhi was wrong on all counts.
From this fuller quotation, you will
see how everything that was being done was done in order to ensure victory and ward off Japanese aggression.
Linlithgow did what needed to be done. Gandhi did not.
You may not
appreciate my wisdom, but you may not impugn my good faith.
Why not? Gandhi was constantly impugning the good faith of all and sundry.
Though I have no verbatim report of my speeches before
the All India Congress Committee, I have fairly full notes. I
accept the correctness of your quotations. If you bear in mind
that all things were said with non-violence always as the background, the statements become free from any objection.
Not in times of war. Hampering the war effort for whatever reason can get you sent to jail.
“Do
or die” clearly means do your duty by carrying out instructions
So, Congress had issued instructions. Since those instructions were considered, by the competent authority, to be likely to hinder the war effort, Congress leaders were incarcerated.
and die in the attempt if necessary.
As to my exhortation to the people to consider themselves
free, I take the following from my notes. “The actual struggle
does not commence this very moment. You have merely placed
certain powers in my hands. My first act will be to wait upon
H. E. the Viceroy and plead with him for the acceptance of the
Congress demand. This may take two or three weeks.
Which is how long the Viceroy waited before jailing Gandhi & Co.
What
are you to do in the meanwhile? I will tell you. There is the
spinning wheel. I had to struggle with the Maulana Saheb before it dawned upon him that in a non-violent struggle it had
an abiding place.
Because non-violent struggles are useless. Muslims had conquered large swathes of India at a time when there were plenty of spinning wheels.
The fourteen-fold constructive programme is
all there for you to carry out. But there is something more you
have to do and it will give life to that programme. Every one
of you should, from this very moment, consider yourself a free
man or woman and even act as if you are free and no longer
under the heel of this Imperialism. This is no make-believe.
You have to cultivate the spirit of freedom before it comes
physically.
This is best done in a prison cell.
The chains of a slave are broken the moment he
considers himself a free man. He will then tell his master:
‘I have been your slave all these days but I am no longer that
now. You may kill me, but if you do not and if you release me
from the bondage, I will ask for nothing more from you. For
henceforth instead of depending upon you I shall depend upon
God for food and clothing. God has given me the urge for freedom and therefore I deem myself to be a free man.’
God has given me the urge to live forever. This is why I deem myself immortal.
” Apart
from your resentment of the ‘Quit India’ cry, ask yourself
whether the quotation as found in its own setting is in any
way offensive?
Gandhi was lying. He pretended Indians were slaves. But the Brits had abolished slavery. This type of lie was highly offensive to British people serving in India.
Should not a man, longing to be free, first of all
cultivate the spirit of freedom and act accordingly irrespective
of consequences?
No. A slave should try to escape or else to purchase his freedom. Cultivating the spirit of freedom is like cultivating the spirit of immortality. It changes nothing. It is a waste of time.
“It is not the method of peaceful persuasion to go to the
person whom you wish to convince armed with a resolution declaring
mass rebellion.
Which is what 'Quit India' was.
The essence of negotiation is that both parties should
be uncommitted and that neither should exert the pressure of force
on the other.
No. That is the essence of chatting with a pal about something which doesn't matter in the slightest to either of you.
That is true in any circumstances.
It is completely false.
But as between a subject and the State which rules him the position is still more
emphatic. It is not for the subject to deal with the State on equal
terms, still less to approach it with an open threat.”
Some subjects may be so powerful that they can threaten the State and bend it to their will. We may not like it, but it happens.
At the outset let me make one correction. The resolution
did not “declare” mass rebellion.
It demanded British withdrawal and called for a mass rebellion. True, the pious hope was expressed that the rebellion be non-violent. But that was because the penalty for waging war on the King Emperor was very harsh.
It merely sanctioned the
“starting of a mass struggle on non-violent lines on the widest
possible scale so that the country might utilize all the non violent strength it has gathered during the last twenty-two
years of peaceful struggle.”
In other words, it was a useless and stupid stunt.
I was to “guide the nation in the
steps to be taken.” The paragraph sanctioning the mass struggle
also “appeals to Britain and the United Nations in the interest
of freedom.”
The essence of negotiation should undoubtedly be that the
parties are uncommitted and that neither “exerts the pressure
of force on the other.” In the case under consideration the actual
position is that one party has overwhelming force at its disposal
and the other has none.
Had Congress not resigned office, it would have had a bargaining chip. Gandhi could say to FDR- my guys are running some of the biggest provinces in India. If I tell them to resign, the war effort will be greatly impeded. Tell your pal Churchill to stop being so fucking stupid.
About non-committal too the Congress
has no commitments except the immediate attainment of freedom.
Sadly, that 'commitment' involved sulking in jail till the Japanese threat ended.
Subject to that there is the widest latitude for negotiation.
Your proposition about the subject and the State is I know
a reply to the cry of “Quit India”. Only the cry is intrinsically
just and the subject and the State formula is too antediluvian
to have any real meaning.
States exist. They are part of the real world. Satyagraha is a fantasy.
It is because the Congress has felt
the subjection of India as an insufferable reproach that it has
risen against it.
The Muslim League felt Congress was insufferable. It rose against it and managed to remove it entirely from Muslim majority areas.
A well ordered State is subject to the people.
A badly ordered State may be so. But there are plenty of well ordered States where the people have little say in things.
It does not descend upon the people from above but the people
make and unmake it.
Gandhi couldn't even make or unmake the state of Rajkot where his daddy had been Divan.
The resolution of 8th August did not contain any threat
open or veiled.
Sadly, it contained nothing at all. Gandhi & Co were asserting the power of the Ahimsa fairy. The Viceroy very kindly arranged for their incarceration so they didn't hurt themselves.
‘It prescribed the limitations under which the
negotiations could be carried on and its sanction was free of all
“force”, i.e., violence. It consisted of self-suffering.
And whining incessantly about this particularly stupid type of 'self-suffering'.
Instead of
appreciating the fact that the Congress laid all its cards on the
table, you have given a sinister meaning to the whole movement by drawing unwarranted inferences.
There was a war on. The question was whether locking up Gandhi & Co. would hinder or help the War effort. On balance, it helped.
In so far as there
was any violence after the 8th of August last on the part of
any Congressman, it was wholly unauthorized as is quite clear
from the resolution itself.
Free people are not subject to any authority- even that of the Ahimsa fairy.
The Government in their wisdom
left me no time whatsoever for issuing instructions.
Because the Government was wise. Gandhi had been given enough rope and had, very obligingly, hanged himself.
The All
India Congress Committee finished after midnight on the
8th August. Well before sunrise on the 9th I was carried away
by the Police Commissioner without being told what crime I
had committed.
This was preventive detention under the DoI rules. Gandhi was considered to be endangering national security.
And so were the members of the Working Committee and the principal Congressmen who happened to be in
67
Bombay. Is it too much when I say that the Government invited violence and did not want the movement to proceed on
peaceful lines?
Yes. It jailed the non-violent and tried to kill the violent.
Now let me remind you of an occasion of an open rebellion
when you played an important part. I refer to the famous
Bardoli Satyagraha under Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel.
It was a rent-strike, not a rebellion. Moreover, it occurred during a period of peace. The Mutiny was a rebellion.
He was
conducting a campaign of civil disobedience. It had evidently
reached a stage when the then Governor of Bombay felt that
there should be a peaceful end to the struggle. You will remember that the result of an interview between H. E. the then
Governor and the Sardar was the appointment of a committee
of which you were a distinguished member. And the committee’s findings were for the most part in favour of the civil
resisters. Of course you may say, if you wish, that the Governor
made a mistake in negotiating with the rebel, and so did you
in accepting the appointment.
Patel was not a rebel. That is why he wasn't charged with waging war against the King Emperor. To be fair, Gandhi & Co were ranters not rebels. Preventive detention was all that required. By contrast Pir Pagaro led the rebellion of the Hurs. He was hanged in 1943.
Consider the reverse position,
what would have happened, if instead of appointing a committee the Governor had attempted heavy repression. Would not
the Government have been held responsible for an outbreak
of violence if the people had lost self-control?
Maybe. The question was whether the 22 percent tax hike was justified. It wasn't.
“Government does hold Mr. Gandhi responsible for the recent
happenings that have so disturbed the peace of India, caused so much
loss of life and property of innocent persons and brought the country
to the brink of a terrible danger. I do not say he had any personal
complicity in acts of violence,.. .but it was he that put the match
to the train carefully laid beforehand by himself and his colleagues.
That he was forced to do so prematurely was not his fault but our
fortune. This was the method by which they hoped to gain their
ends. They may seek to repudiate it, now that it has proved unsuccessful, but the responsibility is theirs none-the-less_If
Mr. Gandhi wished to dissociate himself from them, he could have
spoken for himself without consulting the members of the Working
Committee. Can he then, without cancelling the Congress rebellion,
without reparation, without even assurances for the future, claim at
any moment to step back as though nothing had happened into the
public life of the country and be received by Government and society
as a good citizen?”
Not for the moment. After the Japanese threat receded, he might prove useful. After all, the one thing he was good at was surrendering unilaterally.
I can accept no responsibility for the unfortunate happenings described by you.
Which is why he remained in jail.
I have no doubt whatsoever that history
will record that the responsibility for the happenings was
wholly that of the Government.
What history records is that Churchill saved India from the Japanese. Gandhi's policies were stupid.
In the nature of things I could
not put a match to a train which for one thing was never laid.
Because Congress was useless.
And if the train was never laid, the question of prematureness does not arise.
But the question of stupidity does. Americans had to admit that Gandhi was crazy.
The deprivation of the people of their leaders
you may consider “our fortune”. I consider it a misfortune of
the first magnitude for all concerned.
But a Japanese invasion wasn't a misfortune at all.
I wish to repudiate nothing of what I have done or intended. I have no sense of
repentance, for I have no sense of having done any wrong to
any person. I have stated times without number that I detest
violence in any shape or form. But I can give no opinion about
things of which I have no first-hand knowledge. I never asked
for permission to consult the Congress Working Committee to
enable me to dissociate myself from violence. I asked for permission to see them, if I was expected to make any proposals
on behalf of the Committee. I cannot cancel the Congress
rebellion which is of a purely non-violent character.
It was useless. The war effort was not greatly hindered.
I am
proud of it. I have no reparation to make, for I have no consciousness of guilt.
Nor any consciousness of reality.
And there can be no question of assurances
for the future, when I hold myself guiltless. The question of
re-entering the public life of the country or being received by
Government and society as a good citizen does not arise. I am
quite content to remain a prisoner. I have never thrust myself
on the public life of the country or on the Government. I am
but a humble servant of India. The only certificate I need is a
certificate from the inner voice. I hope you realize that you
gave your audience not facts but your opinions framed in anger.
The man was an experienced Civil Servant. His opinions carried weight because of his great experience of the country. Some foreigners thought that Gandhi & Co could help the war effort. They were wrong. Congress was useless. After the Brits left, the country became less capable of feeding or defending itself.
To conclude, why have I written this letter?
Why indeed? The answer, I suppose, was that Gandhi knew he had told lies. He suspected that the wily Viceroy had given him just enough rope to hang himself. He had tried to be cautious and to avoid repeating past mistakes. But he could not help himself.
Not to answer
your anger with anger. I have written it in the hope that you
may read the sincerity behind my own words.
Gandhi sincerely believed he was smart. But he wasn't smart. He was a self-deluded crackpot.
I never despair
of converting any person even an official of the hardest type.
General Smuts was converted or say reconciled as he declared
in his speech introducing the bill giving relief in terms of the
settlement arrived at between him and me in 1914.
Smuts could not deport the Indians as he had deported the Chinese because the Indians were British subjects. But he ensured that his own people would be the masters of South Africa.
That he
has not fulfilled my hope or that of the Indian settlers which
the settlement had inspired is a sad story, but it is irrelevant
to the present purpose.
It is highly relevant. Gandhi snatched defeat from the jaws of victory in South Africa. He did the same thing in India on three different occasions- 1922, 1932 and 1942.
I can multiply such recollections. I claim
no credit for these conversions or reconciliations. They were
wholly due to the working of truth and non-violence expressing
themselves through me.
Smuts denounced apartheid. He married a Zulu lady. This was thanks to Gandhi.
I subscribe to the belief or the philosophy that all life in its essence is one,
and fits into the same pair of underpants
and that the humans
are working consciously or unconsciously towards the realiztion of that identity. This belief requires a living faith in a
living God who is the ultimate arbiter of our fate. Without Him
not a blade of grass moves. My belief requires me not to
despair even of converting you though your speech warrants no
such hope. If God has willed it He may put power in some word of mine which will touch your heart. Mine is but to make the
effort. The result is in God’s hands.
M. K. Gandhi
God's hands did not touch Maxwell's heart. The good news is that they also refrained from touching his penis or his bum. We should be thankful for small mercies.
The Hon’ble Sir Reginald Maxwell,
Home Member,
Government of India, New Delhi
52
Personal
New Delhi, the 17th June, 1943
Dear Mr. Gandhi,
I have your letter of the 21st May and have read with
interest your comments on my Assembly speech of the 15th
February. I see you still maintain the position which you took
up in your letters to His Excellency the Viceroy regarding the
Congress resolution of the 8th August and responsibility for the
disturbances that followed it. As you know, Government have
never accepted the construction which you sought to put upon
those events. So long as this fundamental difference exists, I
must regretfully conclude that there is not sufficient common
ground for profitable discussion of the other points raised in
your letter.
Yours sincerely,
R. Maxwell
In the course of his laborious defence of his own position, Gandhi would summarize his views as follows
1. I believe that non-violence alone is capable of defending India, not only against Japan but the whole world.
If Gandhi kept this belief of his to himself, the defence of the realm was not endangered. But Gandhi had not kept it to himself. He had launched the 'Quit India' campaign to get rid of the British who were defending the country.
2. I do hold that Britain is incapable of defending India.
Gandhi was wrong. Britain succeeded in defending India.
She is not defending India today; she is defending herself and
her interests in India and elsewhere. These are often contrary
to India’s.
This explains why Gandhi was against the Government of India. If he kept this view to himself, there would be no reason to arrest him. But he did not keep it to himself. He launched an agitation which he himself termed an 'open rebellion' with the aim of overturning the existing administration.
3. ‘Quit India’ move was intended to result in the withdrawal of British power if possible with simultaneous formation of a provisional Government, consisting of members
representing all the principal parties, if the withdrawal took
place by the willing consent of the British Government. If, however, the withdrawal took place willy-nilly there might be
a period of anarchy.
There was no withdrawal and no anarchy. Lawlessness was suppressed with a heavy hand. Non-Violence tried to fight Violence and got smashed to pieces.
4. The Indian army would naturally be disbanded, being
British creation—unless it forms part of Allied troops, or it
transfers its allegiance to the Free India Government.
So, Gandhi admits his aim was to disband the army thus imperilling the defence of the realm.
5. The Allied troops would remain under terms agreed to
between the Allied powers and the Free India Government.
This supposes there would be a free India Government. What was to prevent a Japanese invasion? Gandhi said it was the Ahimsa fairy. But no such thing exists. The Government was right to lock up this nutter for the duration.
6. If India became free, the Free India Government would
tender cooperation by rendering such military aid as it could.
i.e. it would do nothing because it would be stupid and useless. At any rate that is what the world discovered in 1962.
I suppose, one could argue that Gandhi had taken a gamble which, after the fall of Singapore, seemed reasonable enough. The Brits might want an excuse to give up on India and fight the Japanese elsewhere. But Gandhi's gamble did not pay off. The Brits turned out to be made of sterner stuff than the hysterical maha-crackpot.
It must be said, Nehru understood that the Americans were interested in China and thus would want to protect the supply route from India 'over the hump' to the KMT. Thus he wanted India to continue to host Allied troops even if the Brits chose to cut and run. The problem was that the Brits were competent. Congress was incompetent. When it resigned office in 1939, the Provinces it had run did not fall apart. They did just as well under the rule of British Governors. Thus Nehru was bringing nothing to the table. He might as well sulk in jail as he had done every time the maha-crackpot launched one of his stupid agitations.
In the event, the eagerness of young Indians to join the armed forces, and the Indian industrialists' desire to make money from defence contracts overrode any other consideration. Communists and the Muslim League were making hay while the Sun didn't shine on incarcerated Congress leaders. The Mahasabha was gaining at the expense of Congress. The danger was that the Princes would ally with the 'Communal' parties and thus Congress would be left out in the cold. There was also the problem of Netaji Bose. The Bengalis firmly believe that Nehru wanted his rival out of the way. Perhaps, Stalin was holding Bose a prisoner in order to blackmail Nehru.
My point is that Congress had to make some big gesture in 1942. Resigning office had been a mistake. Perhaps the safest thing was to go back to jail and wait things out. While Linlithgow was Viceroy, the Brits seemed determined to stay for another 30 years. The shrewd Scotsman had said that the introduction of air-conditioning had made India more habitable for the White man. Plenty more would soon turn up to shore up the Raj. Thankfully, his successor, Wavell- an army man- saw that India could very easily become ungovernable. His defeatism changed the atmosphere in Whitehall. Once Churchill was out of office, Britain became anxious to conciliate Congress. This meant going around Gandhi and establishing a working relationship with Nehru and Patel. Back in 1931, Churchill had warned that Nehru was using Gandhi in the hope of supplanting him. This was unfair. Nehru had a plan for India. Gandhi was a crackpot. Once, it had rid itself of Muslim majority areas, India could become a proper Nation State as Nehru had envisaged. Sadly, it turned into an incompetent, dynastic, kleoptocracy. Clearly, this was the fault of Lady Mountbatten. If only she had raped Rajaji rather than Nehru, India might now be ruled by a nice Tambram.