[The huge attention that the silly canards against him manage to grab only
goes to show the immense importance that the subject commands even after
more than six decades since his assassination by a "Hindu" fanatic.]

http://in.news.yahoo.com/book-on-gandhi-kicks-up--boyfriend--row.html

<http://in.news.yahoo.com/book-on-gandhi-kicks-up--boyfriend--row.html>Book
on Gandhi kicks up 'boyfriend' rowBy Sourish Bhattacharyya | Mail Today – Tue,
Mar 29, 2011 12:54 PM IST
JOSEPH LELYVELD’S hypothesis (in his just released book *Great Soul:
Mahatma Gandhi and His Struggle with India*) that Mahatma Gandhi left
Kasturba to spend two years with his architect associate Hermann Kallenbach
to further an alleged homosexual relationship, exposes a complete disregard
for facts.

The Mahatma, according to Australian Gandhian scholar Thomas Weber, shared
Kallenbach’s house, six miles from Johannesburg, at the height of his
agitation against the racist Transvaal Asiatic Registration Act, which was
enacted to get rid of Indians from South Africa. To concentrate on his
campaign, Gandhi cut back on his hugely successful law practice, which
partly funded the movement, and abandoned his Johannesburg home in a
fashionable neighbourhood to keep his expenses down.

Like all decisions Gandhi took in his public life, it was driven by
pragmatism. And Kasturba, as South African historian Kalpana Hiralal of the
University of Kwazulu-Natal has shown, took charge of the Phoenix Settlement
near Durban because her husband had no time for it.

When the Transvaal government incarcerated Gandhi for two months in January
1908, Kasturba, “in solidarity with her hus- band, lived on a diet of
unsalted, unsweetened, unflavoured cornmeal mush or ‘mealie pap’.”

When he heard Kasturba’s health had deteriorated, Gandhi wrote from jail: “A
great pain nibbles my heart. I am full of sorrow yet I cannot come and serve
you.” These are not the words of a man who had deserted his wife to be with
his “male lover”.

A wealthy architect who had developed upscale townships around Johannesburg,
and financed the 1,100-acre Tolstoy Farm as a community for satyagraha
volunteers and their families, Kallenbach met Gandhi in 1903. The man who
brought them together was a barrister and co-secretary of the Natal Indian
Congress, R.K. Khan. Gandhi made Kallenbach, a lifelong bachelor who called
Kasturba ‘Mother’ and doted on the Mahatma’s four sons (his friend banned
him from giving his children expensive toys!), give up his expensive ways as
well as turn his back on alcohol and tobacco.

Writing in 1929 about their time together, Gandhi recounted how, under his
influence, Kallenbach “reduced himself to such simplicity” that his monthly
expenses on himself came down from 1,200 dollars, “over and above house
rent”, to 120.

In The Story of My Experiments with Truth, Gandhi says Kallenbach was
convinced he “must carry out in his life the changes I was making in mine”.
Referring to their time together in his other book, Satyagraha in South
Africa, he writes: “He would be hurt if I offered to pay him my share of the
household expenses, and would plead that I was responsible for considerable
savings in his domestic economy.”

Had the hyper-confessional Gandhi nurtured any feelings for Kallenbach other
than bonhomie, he would have devoted reams on the subject. Instead, he just
presents a loving account of their friendship that lasted much after he had
left South Africa.

-- 
Peace Is Doable

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