Swaraj
Swaraj
Swaraj
Structure
4.1 Introduction
Aims and Objectives
4.2 Swaraj
4.3 Political Swaraj
4.4 Economic Swaraj
4.4.1 Village Decentralization (Gram Swaraj)
4.4.2 Swadeshi and Khadi
4.4.3 Trusteeship
4.4.4 Bread and Labour
4.5 Social Swaraj
4.6 Swaraj as Self-Control
4.7 Summary
4.8 Terminal Questions
4.9 Suggested Readings
4.1 INTRODUCTION
The late 19th Century witnessed a growth of a national identity and cultural
nationalism in India. The Indian National Congress was established in
1885; Swami Dayananda and Swami Vivekananda awoke India’s pride in its
own identity. They espoused the ‘Vedas’ and the greatness of India’s past. The
educated Indian middle class still felt inferior to the ‘white sahibs’. The partition
of Bengal by the British shook up the Indians and writers such as Rabindranath
Tagore were working to forge an Indian identity through their works such as
‘Swadeshi Samaj’. Tilak’s call for ‘Swaraj as my birthright’ consolidated the
new mood of Indian nationalism particularly after the Ilbert Bill (1883).
Gandhi underlined the need to bridge the gulf between the cities and villages,
educated and uneducated not under the colonial influence, but through the
awakening and efforts of the Indian themselves. In ‘Hind Swaraj’ (1909) Gandhi
propagated the spirit of ‘Swaraj’ using this word instead of the English word
independence or freedom. According to Gandhi a collective effort was needed to
build a nation with continuity of tradition, incorporating essential reforms and
giving proper position to the concept of individualism. Gandhi said that Swaraj
is an inclusive concept-political, economic, social and moral-emphasising on
the utmost necessity of the human being to be as perfect as possible.
Suruchi Aggarwal, H-6A Panchsheel Vihar, Nr. D.D.A. Flats, Khirki Extn., New Delhi 55
Gandhi’s Poliitical Concerns Political, Economic and Social dimensions of Swaraj
Swaraj as self-control
4.2 SWARAJ
The concept of Swaraj has been given much importance in Gandhi’s spiritual,
political, social and economic ideas and has been frequently espoused in his
writings and speeches. He re-evaluated the meaning of Swaraj according to the
times he lived in, and used the word, Swaraj, to reawaken the spirit of Indian
people. According to him the word Swaraj was a sacred word, a Vedic word,
meaning self-rule and self-restraint. Gandhi believed that national Swaraj could
be achieved by the same means that were needed for attaining individual Swaraj.
Gandhi believed that the methods of attaining individual Swaraj with national
Swaraj were similar and complementary to each-other. Gandhi proclaimed that
self-government depended entirely upon one’s internal strength, upon one’s ability
to fight against all odds. He said that political self-government, that is, self-
government for a large number of men and women, is no better than individual
self-government, and, therefore, it is to be attained by precisely the same means
that are required for individual self-government or self-rule.
4.4.3 Trusteeship
Economic Swaraj for Gandhi also meant an egalitarian society which would
further the cause of democracy (political Swaraj). He was against the idea of
large fortunes in the hands of few. The rich and entitled should be trustees of the
society and use their resources for the welfare of the downtrodden. In this his
views had a Marxist orientation. Trusteeship provides a means of transforming
the present capitalist order of society into an egalitarian one. It gives no importance
to capitalism, but gives the present producer/owner class the chance of reforming
itself. It is based on the faith that human nature is never beyond redemption. It
does not recognise any right of private ownership of property except the amount
permitted by society for its welfare. It proposed to fix a decent minimum living
wage, the limit of this minimum wage should be fixed according to the maximum
income allowed to any person in society. The difference between such minimum
and maximum incomes should be reasonable and equitable and should vary from
time to time so that the tendency would be towards eradication of such difference.
Gandhi believed that Swaraj or true freedom is conformity to moral law, the
inner conscience, and the law of one’s true being. It induces a person to seek the
good and attain it, an end that is worthy. Freedom means self-control, a conquest
over self which can be attained only by being fearless. It involves rigorous
discipline and requires that one follows one’s vows of self-purification and self-
realisation. It is through active involvement and participation in the day to day
affairs of society that the individual attains salvation or ‘moksha’. Gandhi insisted
on the need to rationalise and synthesise desires in an integrated life in order to
attain the morals necessary to distinguish humans from brutes. Another implication
of Swaraj is moral and spiritual freedom or ‘anâsakti’ which comes as the
consequence of will and reason leading to concentration of energy. This was the
most important lesson that Gandhi learnt from the ‘Bhagavad Gita’.
Gandhi saw an intimate link between Swaraj and Swadeshi or self-reliance. For
Gandhi, freedom is rooted in human nature and is to be claimed as part of self-
awareness earned through self-effort and conversely, any external threat to human
freedom arises not from circumstances outside one’s control but by recognising
our weaknesses in the first place, which is why he considered self-purification
as integral to the concept of Swaraj. This gives the individuals the strength and
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Gandhi’s Poliitical Concerns capacity to translate the abstract notion of freedom into a practical reality in
society and politics. According to Gandhi, a person truly realises freedom if he
listens to his conscience or the inner voice, the only tyrant that one should accept.
Fearlessness, self-rule, self-restraint, self-discipline, non-attachment, renunciation
and voluntary self-sacrifice would make resistance to evil easy and that forms
the core of the philosophy of ‘Satyagraha’. Gandhi described Satyagraha as the
act of the brave and the fearless and through it, “Gandhi turned the moral tables
on the English definition of courage by suggesting that aggression was the path
to mastery of those without self-control, non-violent resistance the path of those
with control”28
4.7 SUMMARY
This elaborate explanation of the meaning of Swaraj and the three pillars of
Swaraj sums up the entire political philosophy and action of Gandhi. Emphasising
on the utmost necessity to have unity in a situation of larger plurality and also
with the larger awareness of two Indias, one of the city and another of the village
with abject poverty allowed him to portray a more realistic depiction of the Indian
reality, much better than attempted by the socialists and the Marxists. To give
life and meaning to the concept of Swaraj, Gandhi’s formulation of the
constructive programme is of supreme importance. It portrays the essential
reformative nature of his theories ensuring the minimum resources and
environment essential for self-development of every single Indian and as a means
of reaching the goal of Swaraj.
Gandhi prefers to use Swaraj instead of the English word, independence or
freedom. By Swaraj Gandhi did not mean only political Swaraj. Freedom or
Swaraj, for Gandhi, is an inclusive concept-political, economic, social and moral
emphasising on the utmost necessity of the human being to be as perfect as
possible. Gandhi borrows the term ‘Swaraj’ from the Vedas. One meaning of
Swaraj is self-rule and self-control and differs from the English usage, which
implies freedom without restraints. Swaraj for Gandhi also meant positive
freedom, to participate in the process of politics in every possible way. It implies
participatory democracy as there exists an intimate relationship between the
citizen and the state. Gandhi’s concern for majority alleviation led him to advance
the notion of village decentralization or ‘Gram Swaraj’ with its focus on the
village, at the centre of his social, political and economic philosophy.
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