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Gandhi: A Memoir
Gandhi: A Memoir
Gandhi: A Memoir
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Gandhi: A Memoir

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Recalling his friendship and conversations with the late Indian leader, William Shirer presents a portrait of Gandhi that spotlights his frailties as well as his accomplishments.

As a young foreign correspondent, William Shirer reported briefly on Gandhi—but the year was 1931, when India's struggle for independence peaked and Gandhi scored perhaps his greatest political success. The year before, he had led a 200-mile march to the sea to pick up a lump of salt—a violation of the British salt tax; and this symbolic act (like—he reminds Shirer—the Boston Tea Party) had propelled the Indian masses into nonviolent civil disobedience on a large scale. To check its spread, Gandhi had been arbitrarily imprisoned. Now he was out of prison and negotiating with the British viceroy: if Gandhi would call off the civil-disobedience campaign and attend an upcoming London conference, the British would make concessions too.

These, however, were so limited and vague that many Indian nationalists regarded Gandhi's agreement as a sell-out; but Shirer underlines history's judgment of its wisdom with Gandhi's own words. More importantly, he notes, the British had finally been forced "to deal with an Indian leader as an equal." Along these lines, Shirer also witnessed British discomfiture at Gandhi's arrival—complete with loin cloth, spinning wheel, and goat’s milk; he saw the sensation Gandhi caused in London—and heard him address Lancashire millhands thrown out of work by the Indian boycott of British cotton. And he saw him at home, subsisting on four-hours' sleep and "frenzied acclaim." This book is sure to press upon readers the worldwide force of Gandhi's example.

Kirkus Reviews
LanguageEnglish
Release dateAug 21, 2012
ISBN9781451699944
Gandhi: A Memoir
Author

William L. Shirer

William L. Shirer was an American journalist and historian. He became known for his broadcasts on CBS from the German capital of Berlin through the first year of World War II. He was quoted and portrayed in the Netflix documentary Hitler and the Nazis: Evil on Trial.  

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  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Shirer was an American journalist in the world of the 1920s, 1930s and 1940s, who happened to be in the right place at the right time - first with Gandhi, then with Hitler and his murderous gang and then in San Francisco, where the UN was being born. After the devilish inspired Berlin Diary, Death of Berlin Diary and The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich - well, I can almost see Shirer thinking "what now?"

    A result was this book in the 1970s - documenting his journey to India and to Gandhi, some 50 years previously. As usual, Shirer is on form doing what he does best - telling what he saw and did with the great man and saying what Shirer thought, both in the 1920s and 1970s. Shirer's genius is the grounding of greatness of man in the particular mundane details. The image for me of Shirer's Gandhi? - a coughing old man, dressed in home-spun cloth, walking miles in Simla to meet the Viceroy - with the steely purpose of freeing India! Awe-inspiring.

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Gandhi - William L. Shirer

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To Mary

" . . . Which can say more

Than this rich praise, that you alone are you?"

Contents

Introduction

Chapter 1

Chapter 2

Chapter 3

Chapter 4

Chapter 5

Chapter 6

Chapter 7

Chapter 8

Chapter 9

Chapter 10

Chapter 11

Chapter 12

Chapter 13

Chapter 14

Chapter 15

Photographs

Index

Generations to come, it may be, will scarce believe that such a one as this ever in flesh and blood walked upon this earth.

—EINSTEIN on Gandhi.

Mahatma Gandhi will go down in history on a par with Buddha and Jesus Christ.

—VISCOUNT LOUIS MOUNTBATTEN, THE LAST BRITISH VICEROY OF INDIA.

We did not conquer India for the benefit of the Indians. We conquered India as the outlet for the goods of Great Britain. We conquered India by the sword, and by the sword we should hold it.

—LORD BRENTFORD, 1930.

Introduction

Generations to come, it may be, Einstein once wrote of Gandhi, in words which stand at the head of this book, will scarce believe that such a one as this ever in flesh and blood walked upon this earth.

I watched this man, a saintly, Christlike figure, walk upon this earth, in flesh and blood, at a moment when he had launched his great civil-disobedience movement that began to undermine the British hold on India and that, in the end, freed his country from two and a half centuries of British rule. It was one of the great accomplishments of history and for him a personal triumph such as our world has seldom seen.

But there were, in a deeper sense, even greater triumphs for this unique man who was unlike any great individual of our time, and perhaps of any time. He liberated India from a foreign yoke, but he also liberated the whole world from some of its encrusted prejudices and foolish ways of life. He was one of history’s great teachers, not only by the example of his life but by what he preached and practiced. As such, he was, as Viscount Louis Mountbatten, the last British Viceroy of India, said of him on his martyred death, akin to Buddha and to Christ.

In a harsh, cynical, violent and materialist world he taught and showed that love and truth and non-violence, ideas and ideals, could be of tremendous force—greater sometimes than guns and bombs and bayonets—in achieving a little justice, decency, peace and freedom for the vast masses of suffering, downtrodden men and women who eke out an existence on this inhospitable planet.

Albert Szent-Györgyi, a Nobel laureate in medicine, took note of this in a jolting book, The Crazy Ape:

Between the two world wars, at the heyday of Colonialism, force reigned supreme. It had a suggestive power, and it was natural for the weaker to lie down before the stronger.

Then came Gandhi, chasing out of his country, almost single-handed, the greatest military power on earth. He taught the world that there are higher things than force, higher even than life itself; he proved that force had lost its suggestive power.

Gandhi, being a human being, was far from perfect, and was the first to admit it, publicly. Like all the great achievers in history, he was a man of many paradoxes and contradictions. He had his fads, peculiarities and prejudices, and some of them, when I observed them or listened to him explain and defend them, struck me as outlandish. I have not hesitated in this memoir, despite my immense admiration for him that at times bordered on adoration, to point them out.

Like other men, he quarreled with his wife, whom he had married when both were thirteen, and he was for a time a trial to her—we have his own word for it. I saw quite a bit of her in my time in India and liked and admired her. She was illiterate, lost in the world her dynamic husband was shaking, but she had her strengths.

The Mahatma was genuinely the humblest of men (though he was not unaware of his greatness), but I have seen him behave stubbornly and dictatorially to his co-workers, making what I felt were outrageous demands on some of them, as when he insisted that even those who were married, and happily, observe the celibacy he had imposed on himself in his late thirties after many years of what he called a lustful relationship with his own wife. But even after that act of self-discipline he could be, as Jawaharlal Nehru, his chief disciple and his successor, observed with puzzlement, obsessed with sex. In the evening of his long life, at the very moment of his crowning political triumph, though a dark one in his personal life, Gandhi shocked and offended many by his inexplicable practices with beautiful young Hindu women, which seemed to those who knew and loved and worshipped him contrary to all he had stood for and preached.

But against these human frailties there stood out the man of infinite goodness, a seeker all his life of Truth, which he equated with God, a pilgrim who believed that love was the greatest gift of man and that love and understanding and tolerance and compassion and non-violence, if they were only practiced, would liberate mankind from much of the burden, oppression and evil of life.

This was not to be, in his own country or in any other, and probably, given the cussedness of the human race, it will never be. But Gandhi gave his life and his genius to try to make it so, or at least more so than it had ever been—he was too wise to have many illusions but his hope was boundless.

To observe at first hand that mighty effort, to rub up against, if ever so briefly, the towering greatness, the goodness, the high spirits and humor, the humility, the subtlety of mind, the integrity and purity of purpose, and that indefinable thing, the genius, of this man was the greatest stroke of fortune that ever befell me.

I have tried in these pages to give a feeling of what it was like, and to indicate its impact on me, an ignorant young American foreign correspondent at the time. The mark it left on me has lasted to this day, through the subsequent half century of my life and work, helping me to bear the ups and downs of existence, to survive the strains of all the brutal man-made upheavals and the barbarism and the hypocrisy we have lived through in our time, and providing a certain light that helped to guide me toward an understanding, however incomplete, of the meaning of our brief sojourn on this perplexing planet.

The Indian revolution, like its leader, also was unique, the first non-violent revolution, I believe, in history, or at least the first that succeeded. It was Gandhi’s genius that made it, led it, and saw it through, after incredible setbacks, to its moment of triumph. He never doubted its end nor, as he often insisted to me in some of the darkest moments, that it would come while he still lived. It was a difficult revolution to understand, even for Indians and especially for one like me who came to India loaded down with all the foolish prejudices and myths of the West, which had been dominated so long by force and violence. (So astute a statesman as Winston Churchill never faintly grasped it.) But I did my best to try to understand it, and perhaps a little light on it emerges from this memoir of the man who made it and won it, and who left so indelible an imprint on this world.

1

Mahatma Gandhi was out of jail again, and as soon as my ship docked at Bombay that February of 1931 I caught the Frontier Mail up to Delhi to see him.

There were reports that his negotiations with the Viceroy to call off the massive civil-disobedience movement in return for a British promise to begin serious talks about self-rule for India were breaking down. I was anxious to meet him before the British put him once more behind bars.

All through my first tour of duty in India during the hot, sultry summer, the autumn and early winter of 1930 the year before, Gandhi had been in Yeravda prison, held incommunicado, and I had been unable to see him. It had been a frustrating assignment. With his arrest and that of all the other leaders of the Indian National Congress, and of tens of thousands of his most active followers throughout the country, the momentum of his latest rebellion against British rule, which he had launched that spring, had slackened.

I had arrived in time to see some of it. Even with the prisons full to bursting there were still followers of his who gathered in the great cities to peacefully picket and demonstrate. I had watched them, men and women by the thousands, squatting on the pavement in Bombay, Calcutta, Delhi, Lahore and other places waiting for the inevitable lathi charge of British-led police or troops when they refused to disperse, and had seen them savagely beaten and then carted off to jail. It was a sickening sight, but I had marveled at their magnificent discipline of non-violence, which the genius of Gandhi had taught them. They had not struck back; they had not even defended themselves except to try to shield their faces and heads from the lathi blows.

At Peshawar, whose Moslems had not been converted to Gandhi’s non-violence, the resistance had been different. Guns had gone off—on both sides. At one point, shortly before my arrival there, the wild Afridi and Pathan tribesmen had forcibly occupied most of this capital of the North-West Frontier and sprayed bullets into the British cantonment just outside the city. The front wall of my room in the rest house there was pockmarked with bullet holes.

But by early winter the British seemed to have just about put down the rebellion by force, though their ruthlessness, even toward the women agitators, thousands of whom had been brutally beaten and jailed, had left India seething with resentment from one end to the other. You could feel the tension in the fetid air of the bazaars, on the aroused campuses of the universities, in the stinking tenements of Bombay and Calcutta, in the littered streets everywhere, and wherever else Indians congregated.

What would Gandhi do now? I wondered. I needed to talk to him. Not only to learn something of how he would shape the tactics and the strategy of his strange revolution from now on, but also because he was, of all the world figures, the one I most wanted to get to know.

For years, ever since I had read of his first imprisonment in India in 1922 and had been overwhelmed by the eloquence of his words in his own defense at that famous trial, and then more recently read his autobiography and followed as best I could in the Western press his efforts to free India, I had had a feeling that perhaps he was the greatest living man on our planet.

Our time had never seen anyone like him: a charismatic leader who had aroused a whole continent and indeed the consciousness of the world; a shrewd, tough politician, but also a deeply religious man, a Christlike figure in a homespun loincloth, who lived humbly in poverty, practiced what he preached and who was regarded by tens of millions of his people as a saint. They had insisted, despite his protests, on calling him Mahatma, which meant Great Soul. They had got from him something so baffling to the Western mind and temperament—darshan, a sort of collective glow of suprapersonal happiness and assurance that comes from being in the presence of a manifestation of their collective consciousness. Gandhi had not liked that either. " . . . . I was the victim of their craze for darshan," he said. " . . . the darshanvalas’ blind love has often made me angry, and more often sore at heart."* It also, he complained, impeded his work.

For ten years he had been leading the strangest revolution the world had ever seen. He had been trying to drive the British out of India and win independence for his country by a highly organized and disciplined campaign of non-violent civil disobedience. To British guns, bayonets and lathi sticks, he was opposing peaceful, unarmed, passive resistance. It was not the way we in the late 1770’s had begun to drive the British out and win our own national freedom. We had opposed British violence with violence, used our guns against theirs, and it had worked.

I had not understood at first how you could wage a revolution any other way. What Gandhi was trying to do had not made much sense in the West, where violence was second nature to us and had dominated most of our history. He had tried at the outset to explain it—to his own people and to the world. The British, he said, want us to put the struggle on the plane of machine guns where they have the weapons and we do not. Our only assurance of beating them is putting the struggle on a plane where we have the weapons and they have not. His logic was impeccable. This was the only strategy left to the unarmed Indians, but in the beginning, few in India or abroad understood this.

It was against that background that I had flown out to India from Vienna in August of 1930 to report for the Chicago Tribune on Gandhi’s peculiar revolution. In the spring that year, by a symbolic act whose significance I myself did not grasp, a march through the stifling heat to the sea with a little band of followers to make illegal salt, Gandhi had aroused the Indian people from the lethargy into which they had long sunk after nearly three centuries of British rule, if you counted the incredible period when they were governed for two hundred years not by a foreign country but by a bizarre band of traders greedy for profit, the honorable members and agents of the East India Company. These hustlers had first come out from England early in the seventeenth century, found the pickings beyond their fondest dreams, and, by hook and by crook and by armed might, had stolen the country from the Indians.

It was the only instance in history, I believe, of a private commercial enterprise taking over a vast, heavily populated subcontinent, ruling it with an iron hand and exploiting it for private profit. Probably only the British, with their odd assortment of talents, their great entrepreneurial drive, their ingrained feeling of racial superiority, of which Rudyard Kipling would sing so shrilly, their guile in dividing the natives and turning them against one another, and their ruthlessness in putting down all who threatened their rule and their profits, could have done it, and got away with it for so long.

Perhaps only the Indians, divided as they were after the decay of the Mogul Empire into dozens of quarreling, warring states, great and small, could have succumbed so easily and so quickly to the aggression of a handful of determined merchants, backed by a small band of British troops in the service of the Company, and remained so long in abject subjection. As Radhakrishnan, the great Hindu philosopher, put it in our own time: The day India lost her freedom a great curse fell on her and she became petrified.

Occasionally the Indians had risen in armed revolt against their white conquerors and there was savagery on both sides. As early indeed as 1764, the Encyclopaedia Britannica ventures to inform us in a section on the history of India written with a typical British bias, "it had been necessary to quell mutiny by the usual oriental {sic} punishment of blowing away the offenders from the guns, when 30 sepoys were so disposed of’—a spectacle I myself would witness in Kabul, where the Afghan executioners, about to dispatch a wretched rebel from the mouth of a cannon, would explain that there was nothing oriental about it; they had learned the trick, they said, from the British during the Afghan wars.

Every British schoolboy knew the story of the Black Hole of Calcutta and believed it to be an example of Indian cruelty, though the Indians saw it somewhat differently. In 1756 an Indian nawab had captured the English trading settlement of Calcutta, imprisoning 146 Englishmen in their own military prison, which measured eighteen by fifteen feet. The heat was sweltering and the next day only 23 prisoners emerged alive; the rest had suffocated. How many Indian prisoners had died previously in that hole is not known. By this time the English were writing the history of India.

There had to be a turning point. In the changing world of the mid-nineteenth century the rule by a trading company of a continent of a quarter of a billion people, possessed as they were of a rich culture much older than that of their conquerors, and deeply influenced by two great religions, Hinduism and Mohammedanism, was an anachronism. It could not last much longer.

The explosion that did away with it came in 1857 when the sepoys of the Bengal Native Army, commanded by British officers, revolted and set off a rebellion that spread through most of northern and central India. The slaughter on both sides in the suffocating heat of an Indian summer was terrible; no quarter was given. In the end the Company’s British troops put it down.

But it was a close thing. There were moments that long, hot summer during a score of crucial battles when it seemed that the East India Company, with all its British officials, officers and troops, would be thrown out of the country and India restored to the Indians. In London the government concluded that a trading company was no longer fit to rule over so vast a territory with such a large slice of the human race. On August 12, 1858, the thirty-nine-year-old Queen Victoria signed an Act transferring the Indian subcontinent from the hands of the Company to the Royal Crown. Some 258 years had passed since another English queen, Elizabeth, had granted on December 31, 1599, a charter to the East India Company to open up trade with the East Indies. At that time the British had been mainly concerned with breaking the Dutch monopoly on pepper and other spices from the Indies and reducing the price—from such a trivial matter had come the conquest of a rich continent. The span of two and a half centuries of the Company’s occupation, rule and exploitation of India constitutes one of the oddest chapters in history. For the Indians it was, as Radhakrishnan said, a curse, though the British, with that insensitivity common to all imperialists, never seemed to be aware of this.

Queen Victoria was crowned Empress of India, which became a British colony, the jewel of the Empire, its largest, most populous, most profitable imperial holding.

There now began for India another episode in its experience of British domination, the Victorian era, celebrated by the Indianborn jingoistic poet and storyteller Rudyard Kipling, from whom the West, principally England but also to a large extent America, got its British-biased, colorful but superficial view of India. To Kipling and to his immense following, the English were the Master Race, destined to rule over the lesser breeds. The governing of hundreds of millions of Indians, Kipling was sure, had been placed by the inscrutable design of providence upon the shoulders of the British race. And though Kipling knew India well, he, like his fellow countrymen who spent their lives in the service of the Crown there, seemed to be unaware that the lesser breeds were still living in a civilization not only more ancient but in many ways much richer and maturer than his own. There is no hint in his prolific writings of the deep Hindu religious and philosophical consciousness that had knit the vast majority of Indians together for more than two millenniums through all the foreign conquests and preserved one of the great heritages of the human race.

Still, as Radhakrishnan had said, and as Gandhi would reiterate to me after I came to know him, British rule, especially beginning with the Victorian era when the Empire reached its zenith, left India petrified, its people without hope that they would ever regain their freedom. In my first few months in India many of the older generation had given me an inkling of the despair they had felt as they began to grow up under the British yoke. Some, like Gandhi, had gone to England for their university and professional education, learned English and English ways and conceptions, absorbed the Englishman’s passion for political freedom, and returned to their native land only to be considered by the English little better than outcasts, made aware constantly of their inferior status by the white sahibs.

Indeed they told me that around the turn of the century, when the British had consolidated their hold on the country, built roads, railroads and telegraph lines to knit the huge country together, and make it more profitable and easier to govern, the imperial mastery of the subcontinent had seemed so complete that they reluctantly were forced to conclude that the white foreigner would rule them forever. He would milk them to the last rupee and emasculate them as human beings by depriving them of any say in the way their country was run, or even in the way their own lives could develop.

So far as I could see, the Englishmen who governed India were completely insensate to the fact that they were masters in someone else’s country, were unwanted and unloved there, and that their very presence, their arbitrary rule, their condescending attitude toward an ancient and highly civilized people whom they regarded as racially, socially, culturally and even intellectually inferior and not fit to govern themselves, was a constant humiliation to the Indian people.

The necessity for an Indian to bow and scrape to the white sahib if he wanted to get ahead, or even to decently survive, was a ceaseless mortification. The activities of the legion of Christian missionaries was another. I did not realize until I got to India the depth of the resentment of Hindus and Moslems to the zealous endeavors of these good people to convert the heathen to Christ. Even Gandhi, the most tolerant of men toward all religions and who often would tell me of how much he had found in the New Testament that was uplifting (he took a grim view of the Old), expressed unusual resentment at the proselytizing of the Christian missionaries in his hometown as he grew up. A devout but liberalminded Hindu, he found it insulting to his religion and to him.

Until Gandhi’s appearance on the scene, it had been easy enough for the British to lord it over the Indians. Since the end of the Company’s reign, they had ruled a quarter of a billion people with a handful of Englishmen: some 2,000 members of the Indian Civil Service and 10,000 officers and 60,000 regular troops who kept the 200,000 native soldiers of the Indian Army in line and often used them to keep down their fellow countrymen.

Over all was the Viceroy, with the power of an absolute monarch, with no responsibility at all to the Indian people and subject only to the British government in London. There were, of course, thousands of English, and especially Scottish, traders, shopkeepers, lawyers and doctors, journalists who manned the dozen or so major English-language newspapers (English was the official language of the country, though only a small minority of Indians understood it), clergymen and missionaries.

The Hindus had their rigid caste system, but so did the British. The English in trade were scarcely accepted socially by British officials and Army officers. Indeed they were snubbed by them, but at least they had the satisfaction of being regarded as a cut above the natives, even the highest of the Brahmans. The British did not mix socially with those they governed, no matter how highly cultivated the latter might be. This was taboo. A few days after arriving in Bombay, a high official who took me to lunch at the Bombay Yacht Club boasted as we were leaving that no Indian had ever crossed its portal. And once when I invited a distinguished Moslem couple and their daughter, one of the first woman students (and possibly the first Moslem woman) to be enrolled in the Medical College to study medicine, to dinner with me at the Taj Mahal Hotel, where I was staying, and afterward danced with the young lady, who I thought looked very beautiful in her crimson sari, I was set upon the next day by some English acquaintances who told me "it

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