From: b sabha <[email protected]>

From: Fr. Cedric Prakash sj 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>>







MURDERING THE MAHATMA TODAY!

-          Fr Cedric Prakash sj*



January 30th 1948 will remain etched forever in the conscience of the nation. 
On that fateful day at evening prayer, Mahatma Gandhi fell to the bullets of 
his assassin Nathuram Godse, in Delhi. Godse represented the fascist, fanatic, 
fundamentalist and ‘feku’ forces, which abhorred the values for which Gandhi, 
espoused all his life and particularly the idea of an inclusive, pluralistic 
and secular India. These forces unfortunately are still very alive in India and 
in several parts of the world today!



There are certainly those who disagreed with Gandhi during his lifetime and 
there are many who disagree with his philosophy and his methodology even today. 
Nevertheless, few will be able to contest the fact that Gandhi was a man of 
principles who lived and died for a cause. His life was frugal and exemplary 
and unlike several politicians today, he did not care leave alone crave, for 
the privileges and the trappings of power.



In his lifetime, he internalized and propagated two cherished values TRUTH 
(Satyagraha) and NONVIOLENCE (Ahimsa). This twin doctrine is today more than 
ever needed, as sizeable sections of India and other parts of the world fall 
easy prey to falsehood and hate; to divisiveness and violence.  Gandhi believed 
in the spirituality of inclusiveness. For him, the Hindu Scriptures ‘the 
Bhagvad Gita’ and Jesus’ “Sermon on the Mount”(particularly the section on the 
‘Beatitudes’)had to be read and meditated upon simultaneously since he was 
convinced that they resonated with one another. He refers to this in his 
autobiography ‘My Experiment with Truth’

There was plenty of violence and bloodshed in the run –up to India’s 
independence. Gandhi truly desired an undivided India, in which Hindus and 
Muslims would live in peace and harmony. In October 1946, he spent weeks in 
Naokhali (today in Bangla Desh) literally bringing to a halt, in a non-violent 
way, massacres and mayhem between the two communities. On August 15 1947, as 
India celebrated her independence, there were no celebrations for Gandhi; he 
was back in Calcutta with his protégé Abdul Ghaffar Khan. He encouraged people 
to be non-violent and peaceful; he himself prayed, fasted and spun yarn. Those 
actions of his had a profound impact on the people- peace was restored. When C 
Rajagopalachari, the first Governor- General of Independent India, visited and 
congratulated Gandhi for restoring peace in the city, Gandhi said he would not 
be satisfied "until Hindus and Muslims felt safe in one another's company and 
returned to their own homes to life as before." He sincerely cared for those 
who were forcibly displaced.
On the day Gandhi was assassinated Pandit Nehru, India’s Prime Minister in an 
emotional address to the nation said, “the light has gone out of our lives and 
there is darkness everywhere! “He was just stating a fact. Darkness continues 
to envelop a good part of the world today; the very forces that murdered Gandhi 
continue to murder all that he epitomized. True there are some hypocritical 
gestures like usurping the place of Gandhi at the spinning wheel, for a picture 
on an official calendar. Gandhi never subscribed to showmanship nor was he 
arrogant. He fought against sectarianism and racism and would have left no 
stone unturned today to take sides with the refugees and other forcibly 
displaced people of the world.
Indian Catholics will observe a “Day of Peace” on January 30th. Significantly, 
in a message for the Fiftieth World Day of Peace (celebrated officially on 
January 1st 2017) entitled ‘Nonviolence: A Style of Politics for Peace’, Pope 
Francis emphatically states that, “violence is not the cure for our broken 
world.” He calls for a new style of politics built on peace and nonviolence, 
and at the same time for disarmament and the eradication of nuclear weapons. 
Both Mahatma Gandhi and Abdul Ghaffar Khan are referred to in this message as 
icons of nonviolence and peace. We certainly have much to learn from them.
The world today is in a turmoil as never before. In ways both subtle and 
direct; through discriminatory policies and executive orders; through 
manipulations and coercions, we witness the gradual break-up of our world, even 
as hasty and unwanted walls are built to keep people out. We need to do all we 
can to prevent the triumph of these forces who are inimical to the cherished 
ideals and values of Gandhi, the Apostle of Nonviolence. We must cry halt to 
their murderous march now!
30th January 2017

Fr. Cedric Prakash sj
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