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From: H-Net Staff via H-REVIEW <h-rev...@lists.h-net.org>
Date: Mon, Apr 6, 2020 at 4:42 PM
Subject: H-Net Review [H-Socialisms]: Satyogi on Ahmed, 'Mohandas Gandhi:
Experiments in Civil Disobedience'
To: <h-rev...@lists.h-net.org>
Cc: H-Net Staff <revh...@mail.h-net.org>


Talat Ahmed.  Mohandas Gandhi: Experiments in Civil Disobedience.
London  Pluto Press, 2019.  xiii + 193 pp.  $105.00 (cloth), ISBN
978-0-7453-3429-5.

Reviewed by Pooja Satyogi (Ambedkar University Delhi)
Published on H-Socialisms (April, 2020)
Commissioned by Gary Roth

Gandhi and Civil Disobedience

Talat Ahmed's political biography of Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi's
life is a welcome addition to the existing literature attempting to
theorize his principles of nonviolence and civil disobedience.
Offering a chronological account, as all biographies do, but
differing from them in taking a political position on how Gandhi's
individuated philosophical inclinations routinely undermined mass
movements, Ahmed's book offers readers more than just an exaltation
of Gandhi's life and politics. The book is divided into six chapters
and ends with ruminations about why both "liberal imperialists" (p.
155) like Barack Obama and David Cameron, on the one hand, and
right-wing leaders like the Indian prime minister Narendra Modi, on
the other, find it appealing to invoke Gandhi in their respective
brands of politics. This is important because the assumption in
Ahmed's work is not that Gandhian principles are amenable to easy
appropriation; rather, she hints that Gandhi's politics itself was
checkered and contradictory and leaders who invoke Gandhi, perhaps,
do so with some awareness of their own mottled politics.

Early on Ahmed shows how membership in the Vegetarian Society in
London in 1891 introduced Gandhi to the writings of Henry David
Thoreau on civil disobedience as well as the general beliefs of the
Society about contamination of the body by consumption of meat. The
second only cemented his already existing cultural and caste beliefs
about vegetarianism. The other group that was important for Gandhi
during this early period of formation of beliefs was the Theosophical
Society, which was founded in New York by Madame Helena Petrovna
Blavatsky in 1875. Ahmed tells us that the Society advocated a
"modernised reformed form of Hinduism fused with elements of
Christianity ... a sort of scientific spirituality" (p. 27). The
Society opened up a space for Gandhi to think about religion
politically. Until this moment in his life, his only imagination of
Hinduism was of a religion steeped in superstitious traditions. He
eventually used religion for wider political purposes, but without
letting go of a philosophy of "personal salvation" that religiosity
offered (p. 28). For Ahmed, this early phase allows us to gauge
Gandhi's developing capability for contemplating and critiquing the
self. This is interesting because Gandhi later comes across as
somewhat incapable both of self-reflection and critique, a point duly
noted by Ahmed herself.

Gandhi's political campaigns in South Africa, although not
necessarily successful in their outcomes, have often been hailed as
precursors to the more radical form they would eventually take in
India. With respect to the Franchise Amendment Bill of 1894 that
limited the number of Indians who could vote, we see Gandhi using
constitutional methods of arranging petitions, organizing meetings
with politicians, and writing letters to newspapers to gather support
for Indians. The second campaign, in 1906 in Transvaal, was about the
Boer government's introduction of the Asiatic Law Amendment Ordinance
and the Asiatic Registration Act, which intended to restrict Indian
immigration and allow for deportation. In early attempts of state
surveillance that required compulsory registration and fingerprinting
of all Indians and Chinese above the age of eight, we see Gandhi's
first attempt, Ahmed argues, of seeking mass participation in
disobeying the provisions of the laws. Ahmed further contends that
Gandhi's radical stand was inspired by the Russian Revolution of
1905. And, yet, Gandhi later routinely distanced himself from any
politics of the Left, as Ahmed shows. With respect to the
registration act, which later became the Transvaal Registration Act
of 1907, Gandhi, along with two other colleagues, eventually agreed
to a compromise that stipulated that Indians would register
voluntarily, following which the government would repeal compulsory
registration. The government did not repeal the act, but more
importantly, Gandhi's compromise, Ahmed argues, undermined the unity
achieved by Indians who were divided by class. The undermining of
unity among disparate groups is developed by Ahmed in later chapters.

In a third campaign, in 1913-14, directed against the South African
Supreme Court's ruling rendering Hindu, Muslim, and Parsi marriages
invalid, Gandhi called for strikes and passive resistance against the
continuing monetary tax of three pounds as part of the lapsed
Transvaal Registration Act of 1907. With workers' strikes paralyzing
local economies in Natal, Durban, and Pietermaritzburg, the
government negotiated with Gandhi, which culminated in the passage of
the Indian Relief Bill of 1914. The more problematic aspect of this
campaign, as Ahmed points out, was Gandhi's outright rejection of
interracial unity amongst Indian and black workers. Ahmed is at pains
to demonstrate how the writings of Thoreau, Leo Tolstoy, and John
Ruskin influenced Gandhi in his political campaigns in South Africa,
yet it is not clear why Gandhi would be "mesmerized" by Thoreau but
be opposed to any political association with the blacks in South
Africa (p. 44). Ahmed could have developed the position that Gandhi
takes, rather than rendering it as reflective of his identification
with "urban professional middle classes" (p. 53). The problem with
temporally linear biography is that it does not build on Gandhi's
position against organizing with black workers even though he later
attempts to propel a movement against casteism. Ahmed might have also
pursued these questions: Does Gandhi rethink his position on the
"kaffirs" (p. 52) in his later years, did he see connections between
racism and casteism, and did he write about the financial and
political support he continued to get from the business community in
India?

In the third chapter, which discusses Gandhi's initial political
campaigns in India--Champaran, Kheda, and Ahmedabad--Ahmed again
focuses on contradictions in Gandhian methods. In Ahmedabad, for
instance, which witnessed an effective political movement by urban
textile workers, Gandhi took a position against "militant picketing"
(p. 62) and instead began his first political fast, with arbitration
leading to workers being awarded a 35-percent wage increase. Ahmed
explains that the "complex class dynamics of Gandhi's social
base--revealed by the strike at the textile factory in Ahmedabad--are
worth examining in further detail," but does not offer us any such
examination (p. 63). Although Ahmed takes a stand on Gandhi's
paternalism and states that "Gandhism often acted as a brake on
popular initiative and militancy from below," one waits for the
biography to make a much more forceful argument about the dissonance
in the financial and political bases he endeavored to represent (p.
64).

A more political biography emerges with chapter 4 of the book, where
Gandhi occupies center stage in the Indian nationalist movement by
the end of 1920. Especially interesting are the passages covering the
launch of the Non-Cooperation Movement (NCM) in June 1920, the
Khilafat Movement, and the Mappila Rebellion. Ahmed tells us that the
NCM achieved a noticeable level of "political unity" among Hindus and
Muslims and "saw a process of politicization begin to take place
among many Muslims as a result of their being part of a mass
nationalist movement on a national scale" (p. 86). Gandhi's support
for the Khilafat Movement, however, is not delineated, even though it
was crucial to the building of political unity. The Mapilla Rebellion
of 1921, when the peasants rebelled against British authority, was
met with a six-month period of state repression and resulted in a
massive loss of lives. The British blamed Gandhi and the NCM for the
violence. Ahmed tells us that Gandhi interpreted the rebellion
through a "religious lens" that was indifferent to colonial rulers
(p. 89). What is important here is that Gandhi also spoke of the
Muslims of Malabar as being too mercurial "due to their Arab
heritage" (p. 89). The conclusion Ahmed draws is that Gandhi, in
rendering Hinduism as nonviolent, indicated that "the theory of
Hinduism was inherently superior to any other creed, despite his
general opposition to traditional brahmanical doctrines" (p. 89). One
wonders why Ahmed does not say that Gandhi had his own racist
inclinations. In the same chapter, Ahmed calls Gandhi parochial,
elitist, paternalist, arrogant, dictatorial, benevolent, and
authoritarian, but not racist. It might be worth asking what would
change about our understanding of Gandhi if we considered his
thoughts that invoked race as an important signifier of otherness.

The last chapters of the book are the most interesting in the
material they offer about Gandhian politics. Interestingly, Ahmed
says that Gandhi's visit to fascist Italy "does illustrate how Gandhi
was never anchored in political tradition, except perhaps a kind of
Victorian liberalism. He did not appreciate, let alone fully
understand, the politics of the twentieth-century fascist right and
the Marxist left" (p. 113). The fifth chapter discusses how the
period between 1929 and 1939 catapulted Gandhi into a "Global Icon"
(p. 97). This is the period of high symbolism (_Dandi_ march, _khadi
_spinning, praying), mass civil disobedience, and anticolonial
struggle that we most understand Gandhi through. Although the
Gandhi-Irwin Pact did not end the salt tax, Gandhi's mobilization of
the masses, only to settle for a compromise, is interpreted by Ahmed
as a continuing tactic that Gandhi excelled at. She contends,
"compromise was the hallmark of Gandhi's tactics, even though to
reach such a compromise he had to both mobilise the masses and ensure
that their actions did not lead to the overthrow of the authorities"
(p. 107). Perhaps, in other words, Gandhi needed a successful mass
movement to bring legitimacy upon his particular politics of
negotiation and conciliation. This might be the reason why workers
active in labor movements were routinely scolded by Gandhi for being
too confrontational with employers. With respect to Gandhi's contrary
position on the candidature of Subhas Chandra Bose as the
presidential candidate for the Congress, it would have been
interesting to know if Gandhi wrote about Bose more extensively.

The last chapter focuses on the period of the Second World War
leading up to Gandhi's assassination in 1948. Two discussions stand
out. The first of these addresses the growing importance of the
Muslim League by the mid-1940s. In the post-Quit India Movement
period, Ahmed argues, the Muslim League was consumed by class
tensions, which might have been addressed had Gandhi not taken a
strong position against the articulation of class divisions within
the Congress. The Congress might have built an alliance with the
League, but Gandhi's constant invocation of Hindu symbols seems to
have made Muhammad Ali Jinnah more amenable to a two-nations theory
for Hindus and Muslims. This is an important contention, but it takes
the form of speculation, whereas Ahmed's burden should have been to
draw on more material to strengthen this conjecture. The second
discussion in the chapter focuses on the Indian National Army (INA)
trials and the Royal Indian Navy Mutiny of 1946. The mutiny, Ahmed
contends, was "a tremendous and inspirational action that united
Hindu and Muslim sailors" and was followed by general strikes in
support of the mutiny across Bombay and Karachi (p. 142). Gandhi,
Ahmed tells us, condemned the mutiny and the strikers; the leaders of
the Congress and the Muslim League sent their representative to make
an agreement between the mutineers and the government. Ahmed argues
that Gandhi's politics of "religiosity of individuals" was completely
inadequate at a juncture such as this because the need of the hour
was to collaborate with and redirect the "magnificent intercommunal
unity" that the mutiny had displayed (p. 144). Stretching this
further, it might have been possible at this moment to avert the
partition and the violence following it.

Ahmed ends by discussing Gandhi's role in transforming the elitism of
the Congress party and making the nationalist struggle mass-based. At
each step of the way--South Africa, Mappila, the Quit India Movement,
and the Naval mutinies--Gandhi "lectured ordinary people for not
having understood his _satyagraha_ strategy" while absolving the
colonial power of its responsibility in inflicting violence and
brutality (p. 157). In the final analysis, Gandhi's "intentions were
not to overthrow the system but make it kinder" (p. 158). For Ahmed,
Gandhi was unable to rethink his politics of nonviolence in the face
of a violent imperial order. This should not be interpreted as a call
for violence, argues Ahmed, but a reason to think ahead politically
in a context where an imperial power does not cede power and where
movements cannot be started from scratch every single time.

A discussion on the source materials available to the author and
reasons behind her selections would have made this biography less
textbook-ish. The longest quote in the book is from a journalist,
Webb Miller, who wrote about police violence during the Salt March.
Similarly lengthy selections from Gandhi's own writings, particularly
in chapters 5 and 6, would have enriched the book even further.
Nonetheless, _Mohandas Gandhi_ is a good addition for understanding
Gandhian politics.

_This review was revised on April 6, 2020. The original version
misidentified the author's gender as male. We regret the error.
--Ed._

Citation: Pooja Satyogi. Review of Ahmed, Talat, _Mohandas Gandhi:
Experiments in Civil Disobedience_. H-Socialisms, H-Net Reviews.
April, 2020.
URL: https://www.h-net.org/reviews/showrev.php?id=54036

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons
Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 3.0 United States
License.




-- 
Best regards,

Andrew Stewart
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