>"There of course  were conflicts, contradictions and inconsistencies in his
life and positions. pointing this out have no significance in itself,
as
everybody's life is inconsistent"...
>."As an anarchist Gandhi didn't conceive a state. In the social world
 conceived by him, major moving principle and force of social
organisation is
 Satyagraha. Every individual has to resolve the problem.Whatever be
the other
 ( state, individual or community),
 we will never find a reification of any of those terms in Gandhi.All
others
 are subject to negotiations..."
Dr Nisar having stated these about Gandhi,
what is left there so much to discuss?
Go happy, please..
Please follow Gandhi with all those ill famous inconsistencies, albeit
with any semblance of critical intelligence in you totally
surrendered!
(Bolo Mahatma Gandhi ki...!!.)
Still, I wish to add a post script here,with apologies in advance, for
possibly offending you:
1.When an Indian Officer in the British Cops did not want to fire up
on unarmed sathyagrahis in disobedience to an order of a British
Superior to that effect while confronted with an unprecedented scene
in which they were not convinced of reasons for a call for immediate
suspension of the Non Co-operation Movement of the 1930s, Gandhi
publicly and outspokenly  criticized and used bombast on the
indiscipline showed by the Indian officer .
2. Furthermore, when two French reporters ( women) while on an
interview, referring to this incident raised a pointed question to
Gandhi,  they were replied that any person ought to perform  his duty
in the first place, and, this was but the basic principle of Karma.
3. Again, Gandhi continued to add to his discourse on Karma. He
reasoned somewhat  like this:
 If  we (the Congress) come to power tomorrow, how else could we keep
order?

Friends, this is being scribbled out of my memory of having read
"India and the Raj", written and published by Suneethi Kumar Ghosh
some time in the 1980s . The narration was backed with complete
references.
Another  interesting reading on Gandhi I wish to recommend  from
Subaltern Studies series,  (volume 3?etc.),"Ghandhi  Made  Mahatma" by
Shahid Amin (edited by Ranajith Guha et al)
This can also be  the kind of" Anarchism vis a vis the  State", and"
Liberalism" ,etc.etc, one can find  while   going through at least a
few of the critical readings of Ghandhi .Finally,not to speak about
Ambedkarite critiques of Mahatma  in "Annihilation of Caste", "What
Congress and Gandhi Had Done to the Untochables of India?" and such
'bad" readings and writings!!








>

On Oct 3, 9:50 am, "Dileep Raj" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Yesterday, a group of people came together under BookPort's intative to
> share thoughts on
> relevance of readings of Gandhi in the present.
>
> Dr.Nizar Ahmed:
>
> The notion of reading had an edifying nature in its modern sense. Reading
> was meant for self development and self enlightenment.
> In order to reach majority from minority, as Kant described it. Classical
> reading was different.there one read scripts reverently, repeating it
> without knowing meaning.Then reading only indicated that you belong to a
> tradition.Contemporary reading is different from both these
> traditions. It is neither ritualistic, nor edifying.Whether it be Gandhi,
> geeta or Bible, the reading now is not ritualistic.It has got a new
> dimention.In a technical sense, while reading a text there happens a one -
> to- one mapping.We actulally suck those things from text with which we can
> identify.
>
> Gandhi himself was constructed as modern subject through certain readings
> .He was partly formed through reading Ruskin.He was seeking confirmation for
> certain positions in Ruskin.Not that Ruskin showed him someting new.
>
> While we take Gandhi as a text, his actions are also included, drawing on
> paul Ricoeur's notion, "actions are text as well".
> His writings and interventins for four decades  were purposive, informed by
> and influenced by the struggles.The other who mattered over and above every
> others to him  was state.His view of state and approach toward the opponent
> in struggles demand close consideration.
> There ofcourse  were conflicts, contradictions and inconsistencies in his
> life and positions. pointing this out have no significance in itself, as
> everybody's life is inconsistent.
>
> One among the contradictions was his simultaneous upholding of communitarian
> and liberal standpoints. Against state he tried to protect community life.On
> another level he stood for individual rights confronting both community and
> state. Was he aware of the conflict between these two uncompromising
> positions?
>
> We may try to find out a solution to this problem through reading his texts.
> take his notion of Satyagraha.Its literal meaning is, clinging to one's
> position.Gandhian model of individualisation is mediated by the concept of
> satyagraha. Thus he was a cripto-communitarian and cripto-liberal.
>
> Why Gandhi is not a liberal?Its answer could be found in the lifeworld of
> that period. State was the arbitrator / umpire of public justifications
> then.As an anrchist Gandhi didn't conceive a state. In the social world
> conceived by him, major moving principle and force of social organisation is
> Satyagraha.Every individual has to resolve the problem.Whatever be the other
> ( state, individual or community),
> we will never find a reification of any of those terms in Gandhi.All others
> are subject to negotiations.
>
> the following are some problems we come across while reading gandhi today.
> 1.Is Satyagraha a solution when state undergoes radical transformations
> under neoliberal economic changes? Gandhi's specialisation was in struggles
> and he encountered state as the dominant adversary.Today people face
> corporates as well as state in struggles.
> 2.What will be gandhi's answers to questins on public debate today?Public
> justification of one's political programmes is the most important priciple
> in a world where liberal ddemocracy has become commonsense.Actually all
> debates are  interest--national, market , individual as well as
> communitarian-- based.
>
> S.Gopalakrishnan,T.V.Madhu and Damodar Prasad presented papers(Hope Prasad
> will summarise the points he presented.) . K K Baburaj,K P Sethunath, N P
> Johnson and Devarajan tokk part in discussions.
>
> Dileep R  I  thuravoor

On Oct 3, 9:50 am, "Dileep Raj" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Yesterday, a group of people came together under BookPort's intative to
> share thoughts on
> relevance of readings of Gandhi in the present.
>
> Dr.Nizar Ahmed:
>
> The notion of reading had an edifying nature in its modern sense. Reading
> was meant for self development and self enlightenment.
> In order to reach majority from minority, as Kant described it. Classical
> reading was different.there one read scripts reverently, repeating it
> without knowing meaning.Then reading only indicated that you belong to a
> tradition.Contemporary reading is different from both these
> traditions. It is neither ritualistic, nor edifying.Whether it be Gandhi,
> geeta or Bible, the reading now is not ritualistic.It has got a new
> dimention.In a technical sense, while reading a text there happens a one -
> to- one mapping.We actulally suck those things from text with which we can
> identify.
>
> Gandhi himself was constructed as modern subject through certain readings
> .He was partly formed through reading Ruskin.He was seeking confirmation for
> certain positions in Ruskin.Not that Ruskin showed him someting new.
>
> While we take Gandhi as a text, his actions are also included, drawing on
> paul Ricoeur's notion, "actions are text as well".
> His writings and interventins for four decades  were purposive, informed by
> and influenced by the struggles.The other who mattered over and above every
> others to him  was state.His view of state and approach toward the opponent
> in struggles demand close consideration.
> There ofcourse  were conflicts, contradictions and inconsistencies in his
> life and positions. pointing this out have no significance in itself, as
> everybody's life is inconsistent.
>
> One among the contradictions was his simultaneous upholding of communitarian
> and liberal standpoints. Against state he tried to protect community life.On
> another level he stood for individual rights confronting both community and
> state. Was he aware of the conflict between these two uncompromising
> positions?
>
> We may try to find out a solution to this problem through reading his texts.
> take his notion of Satyagraha.Its literal meaning is, clinging to one's
> position.Gandhian model of individualisation is mediated by the concept of
> satyagraha. Thus he was a cripto-communitarian and cripto-liberal.
>
> Why Gandhi is not a liberal?Its answer could be found in the lifeworld of
> that period. State was the arbitrator / umpire of public justifications
> then.As an anrchist Gandhi didn't conceive a state. In the social world
> conceived by him, major moving principle and force of social organisation is
> Satyagraha.Every individual has to resolve the problem.Whatever be the other
> ( state, individual or community),
> we will never find a reification of any of those terms in Gandhi.All others
> are subject to negotiations.
>
> the following are some problems we come across while reading gandhi today.
> 1.Is Satyagraha a solution when state undergoes radical transformations
> under neoliberal economic changes? Gandhi's specialisation was in struggles
> and he encountered state as the dominant adversary.Today people face
> corporates as well as state in struggles.
> 2.What will be gandhi's answers to questins on public debate today?Public
> justification of one's political programmes is the most important priciple
> in a world where liberal ddemocracy has become commonsense.Actually all
> debates are  interest--national, market , individual as well as
> communitarian-- based.
>
> S.Gopalakrishnan,T.V.Madhu and Damodar Prasad presented papers(Hope Prasad
> will summarise the points he presented.) . K K Baburaj,K P Sethunath, N P
> Johnson and Devarajan tokk part in discussions.
>
> Dileep R  I  thurav

On Oct 3, 9:50 am, "Dileep Raj" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Yesterday, a group of people came together under BookPort's intative to
> share thoughts on
> relevance of readings of Gandhi in the present.
>
> Dr.Nizar Ahmed:
>
> The notion of reading had an edifying nature in its modern sense. Reading
> was meant for self development and self enlightenment.
> In order to reach majority from minority, as Kant described it. Classical
> reading was different.there one read scripts reverently, repeating it
> without knowing meaning.Then reading only indicated that you belong to a
> tradition.Contemporary reading is different from both these
> traditions. It is neither ritualistic, nor edifying.Whether it be Gandhi,
> geeta or Bible, the reading now is not ritualistic.It has got a new
> dimention.In a technical sense, while reading a text there happens a one -
> to- one mapping.We actulally suck those things from text with which we can
> identify.
>
> Gandhi himself was constructed as modern subject through certain readings
> .He was partly formed through reading Ruskin.He was seeking confirmation for
> certain positions in Ruskin.Not that Ruskin showed him someting new.
>
> While we take Gandhi as a text, his actions are also included, drawing on
> paul Ricoeur's notion, "actions are text as well".
> His writings and interventins for four decades  were purposive, informed by
> and influenced by the struggles.The other who mattered over and above every
> others to him  was state.His view of state and approach toward the opponent
> in struggles demand close consideration.
> There ofcourse  were conflicts, contradictions and inconsistencies in his
> life and positions. pointing this out have no significance in itself, as
> everybody's life is inconsistent.
>
> One among the contradictions was his simultaneous upholding of communitarian
> and liberal standpoints. Against state he tried to protect community life.On
> another level he stood for individual rights confronting both community and
> state. Was he aware of the conflict between these two uncompromising
> positions?
>
> We may try to find out a solution to this problem through reading his texts.
> take his notion of Satyagraha.Its literal meaning is, clinging to one's
> position.Gandhian model of individualisation is mediated by the concept of
> satyagraha. Thus he was a cripto-communitarian and cripto-liberal.
>
> Why Gandhi is not a liberal?Its answer could be found in the lifeworld of
> that period. State was the arbitrator / umpire of public justifications
> then.As an anrchist Gandhi didn't conceive a state. In the social world
> conceived by him, major moving principle and force of social organisation is
> Satyagraha.Every individual has to resolve the problem.Whatever be the other
> ( state, individual or community),
> we will never find a reification of any of those terms in Gandhi.All others
> are subject to negotiations.
>
> the following are some problems we come across while reading gandhi today.
> 1.Is Satyagraha a solution when state undergoes radical transformations
> under neoliberal economic changes? Gandhi's specialisation was in struggles
> and he encountered state as the dominant adversary.Today people face
> corporates as well as state in struggles.
> 2.What will be gandhi's answers to questins on public debate today?Public
> justification of one's political programmes is the most important priciple
> in a world where liberal ddemocracy has become commonsense.Actually all
> debates are  interest--national, market , individual as well as
> communitarian-- based.
>
> S.Gopalakrishnan,T.V.Madhu and Damodar Prasad presented papers(Hope Prasad
> will summarise the points he presented.) . K K Baburaj,K P Sethunath, N P
> Johnson and Devarajan tokk part in discussions.
>
> Dileep R  I  thuravoor
--~--~---------~--~----~------------~-------~--~----~
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"Green Youth Movement" group.
 To post to this group, send email to [email protected]
 To unsubscribe from this group, send email to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 For more options, visit this group at 
http://groups.google.com/group/greenyouth?hl=en-GB
-~----------~----~----~----~------~----~------~--~---

Reply via email to