http://www.asianage.com/columnists/music-humanity-475

The music of humanity
Jan 30, 2014


Dilip Simeon <http://www.asianage.com/dilip-simeon-474>

*As we live through January 30 once more, let us think why, far from
becoming irrelevant, Gandhi remains so real. It is because he drew meaning
from ordinary things.*

*The force of love is the same as the force of the soul or truth. We have
evidence of its working at every step *
*M.K. Gandhi*

One of the most famous anti-fascist films was Charles Chaplin's The Great
Dictator, which subjected Hitler's fantasies of global domination to
withering satire. Less well-known was his first post-war movie, Monsieur
Verdoux (1947), about a genial family man who makes a living by marrying
and murdering wealthy widows. Upon being caught, this anti-hero says,
"Clausewitz said that war is the logical extension of diplomacy; Monsieur
Verdoux feels that murder is the logical extension of business."
All distinctions notwithstanding, this is where the common trajectories of
modern history show themselves. A large segment of our official elites,
businessmen, opinion-makers and middle classes are accustomed to the view
that some amount of bloodletting is inevitable in politics, a few thousand
corpses and sundry riots and "encounters" are an acceptable cost in return
for the fantasy of progress, prosperity and stability. Market
fundamentalists decided long ago that untrammelled capitalism is good for
humanity. That it is a fantasy does not matter -- fantasies are meant to
deflect our minds from intolerable reality. State power is now infused in
criminality; with a brazenly partisan media playing drummer-boy, its
fascination with petty crime in contrast to its silence on crime in high
places. To cite Verdoux again, "It's all business. One murder makes a
villain. Millions, a hero. Numbers sanctify." Let's wait and see where our
demented arithmetical imagination takes us.
Many people believe that Gandhi needs a rest. He's irrelevant, except as an
icon. Is this true? I do not think so. Ahimsa remains crucial, especially
when a growing sense of injustice calls for democratic agitation on a
continental scale. It also relates to the ecological impact of militarism.
His assassin's accusation that Gandhi was emasculating Hinduism and
rendering it impotent points us beyond stereotypes on gender and
masculinity. As opposed to rampant consumerism, Gandhi's frugal ideals
remind us that fostering ceaseless growth with finite resources is like
celebrating cancer. His condemnation of the atom bomb and of the urge to
use science for destructive purposes resonates with contemporary concerns.
His insistence on shramdaan and constructive work are a compass for
activist energy. His talisman for public policy -- the suggestion that we
keep the humblest of individuals in mind -- is both ethical and pragmatic.
The warning delivered during his last months -- that failure to resolve
Hindu-Muslim conflict would result in the subcontinent being doomed to
condominium status under the great powers -- was prophetic. So was his
critique of communally defined nationalism, implicit in his opposition to
the transfer of population in 1947. His critical engagement with modernity
was surely a necessary debate.
Gandhi's mind worked in tandem with his heart and instinct. He had warned
that partitioning India would not solve communal problems and that it would
lead to catastrophic violence. He also warned that if the decision was
taken and the two parties did not act with goodwill and trust, it would
lead to a state of permanent animosity and conflict. In the last months of
his life he understood his isolation from the Congress as well as from a
large part of public sentiment. He said he felt as if he had been thrown
into a fire pit, that his heart burned. About those who combined communal
hatred with slogans of Akhand Hindustan, he remarked: "There is nothing in
common between me and those who want me to oppose Pakistan except that we
are both opposed to the division of the country. There is a fundamental
difference between their opposition and mine. How can love and enmity go
together?"
Gandhi derived his lessons from unremarkable things. Rather, he could see
extraordinary truths in small events. He was a philosopher of the
quotidian. Asked by his imaginary interlocutor (in Hind Swaraj) for
historical evidence on soul-force or truth-force, Gandhi replies that the
continued existence of human life despite incessant wars was proof enough.
It was war and violence that made news, not the everyday love and
cooperation that characterised the lives of millions. History did not
record everything that happened but, rather, "every interruption of the
even working of the force of love or of the soul... you cannot expect silver
ore in a tin mine." But he found his silver where he expected it. In 1947,
two refugee women came to see him in Delhi. The first, a Hindu, had lost
her son and daughter-in-law and was left with her grandchildren. The second
was a Muslim who had no family. They were devoted to each other and wanted
Gandhi's blessings for their plan to bring up the little ones as joint
grandchildren. The Mahatma was deeply moved and saw them as an embodiment
of his passion for Hindu- Muslim unity. And he gave an orange to each of
the children.
The one stable feature of communal ideology is pessimism. To insist that
people of different faiths, despite being neighbours for centuries are
incapable of co-existence, is surely the most pessimistic belief there is.
A year ago, the Pakistani writer Mobarak Haider wrote of Pakistan's polity:
"War is a tragedy but a society at war with itself and everything around,
with no objective and no remorse is more than a tragedy; it is a total
disaster." He went on to characterise it as being "in a state of
schizophrenia passing into paranoia". Whether this assessment fits all of
us is a matter for self-reflection.
In October 1947, All-India Radio arranged a special broadcast on Gandhi's
birthday, and requested him to listen. He declined, saying he preferred
rentio (the spinning wheel) to radio. The hum of the spinning-wheel was
sweeter. He heard in it the "still sad music of humanity". He also refused
to release his birthday messages from the world over -- it felt futile, when
the public seemed to have lost faith in non-violence and truth.
As we live through January 30 once more, as we replay the mindless rituals,
let us think why, far from becoming irrelevant, Gandhi remains so real. It
is because he drew meaning from ordinary things, especially those that
signified the persistence of friendship and love amidst hatred and
violence. That is why his life and message are so much a part of the "still
sad music of humanity". Today we can only hope that the sadness disperses
and the music remains. Goodbye once again Bapu. Let's hope we learn to
deserve you.

*The writer is a Delhi-based historian and author of Revolution Highway*

*https://www.facebook.com/photo.php <https://www.facebook.com/photo.php>?*
fbid=815233635160531&set=a.219892371361330.76727.100000217061274&type=1
[image: Rizvi Amir Abbas Syed's photo.]
<https://www.facebook.com/photo.php?fbid=10151864193596491&set=a.160567946490.129884.674366490&type=1>

Indian Express February 7th 1948, RSS leader presented Godse with revolver
that killed Mahatma Gandhi

http://www.truthofgujarat.com
[image: Indian Express February 7th 1948, RSS leader presented Godse with
revolver that killed Mahatma Gandhi http://www.truthofgujarat.com]
<https://www.facebook.com/photo.php?fbid=661837290547192&set=a.561088530622069.1073741829.548068281924094&type=1>

-- 
Peace Is Doable

-- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"Green Youth Movement" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to [email protected].
To post to this group, send an email to [email protected].
Visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/greenyouth.
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/groups/opt_out.

Reply via email to