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- "Myth of Mohandas
K. Gandhi"
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- By Velu Annamalai, Ph.D.
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- Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. might have
heard the word of non-violence from Gandhi, but it is certain
that Dr. King did not know the true colors of Mr. Gandhi. From
the beginning to the end, M.K. Gandhi was loyal to imperialism.
The Western news media and their Indian allies by a massive propaganda
exercise created the illusion of sainthood around Gandhi and
made people believe that he fought Apartheid in South Africa,
and in the process of doing so developed a new method of non-violent
struggle called satyagraha. Nothing is farther from the truth.
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- Gandhi, for the major part of his life,
worshipped British imperialism and too often proudly proclaimed
himself a lover of the Empire. He was Kipling's Gunga Din in
flesh and blood.
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- To understand Gandhi's politics in South
Africa, it is essential to note the three fundamental trends
which all along persisted underneath all his activities. They
were: (1) his loyalty to the British Empire, (2) his apathy with
regard to the Indian "lower castes", India's indigenous
population, and (3) his virulent anti-African racism.
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- Gandhi was once thrown out of a train
compartment which was reserved exclusively for the Whites. It
was not that Gandhi was fighting on behalf of the local Africans
that he broke the rule in getting into a Whites' compartment.
No! that was not the reason. Gandhi was so furious that he and
his merchant caste Indians (Banias) were treated on par with
the local Africans. This is the real reason for his fighting
race discrimination in South Africa, and he had absolutely no
concern about the pitiable way the Africans were treated by the
Whites.
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- On June 2, 1906 he commented in the Indian
Opinion that "Thanks to the Court's decision, only clean
Indians (meaning upper caste Hindu Indians) or colored people
other than Kaffirs, can now travel in the trains."
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- During the `Kaffir Wars' in South Africa
he was a regular Gunga Din, who volunteered to organize a brigade
of Indians to put down the Zulu uprising and was decorated himself
for valor under fire.
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- Gandhi said on September 26, 1896 about
the African people: "Ours is one continued struggle sought
to be inflicted upon us by the Europeans, who desire to degrade
us to the level of the raw Kaffir, whose occupation is hunting
and whose sole ambition is to collect a certain number of cattle
to buy a wife, and then pass his life in indolence and nakedness."
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- Again in an editorial on the Natal Municipal
Corporation Bill, in the Indian Opinion of March 18, 1905, Gandhi
wrote: "Clause 200 makes provision for registration of persons
belonging to uncivilized races (meaning the local Africans),
resident and employed within the Borough. One can understand
the necessity of registration of Kaffirs who will not work, but
why should registration be required for indentured Indians...?"
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- Again on September 9, 1905, Gandhi wrote
about the local Africans as: "in the majority of cases it
compels the native to work for at least a few days a year"
(meaning that the locals are lazy).
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- Nothing could be farther from the truth
that Gandhi fought against Apartheid, which many propagandists
in later years wanted people to believe. He was all in favor
of continuation of White domination and the oppression of Africans
in South Africa.
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- In the Indian Opinion of March 25, 1905,
Gandhi wrote on a Bill regulating fire-arms: "In the instance
of fire-arms, the Asiatic has been most improperly bracketed
with the natives.
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- The British Indian does not need any such
restrictions as are imposed by the Bill on the natives regarding
the carrying of fire-arms. The prominent race can remain so by
preventing the native from arming himself. Is there the slightest
vestige of justification for so preventing the British Indians?"
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- Gandhi always advised Indians not to align
with other political groups in either colored or African communities.
He was strongly opposed to the commingling of races. In the Indian
Opinion of September 4, 1904, Gandhi wrote: "Under my suggestion,
the Town Council (of Johannesburg) must withdraw the Kaffirs
from the Location. About this mixing of the Kaffirs with the
Indians I must confess I feel most strongly. It think it is very
unfair to the Indian population, and it is an undue tax on even
the proverbial patience of my countrymen."
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- In the Indian Opinion of September 24,
1903, Gandhi said: "We believe as much in the purity of
races as we think they (the Whites) do...by advocating the purity
of all races."
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- Again on December 24, 1903, in the Indian
Opinion Gandhi stated that: "so far as British Indians are
concerned, such a thing is particularly unknown. If there is
one thing which the Indian cherishes more than any other, it
is purity of type."
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- When he was fighting on behalf of Indians,
he was not fighting for all the Indians, but only for his rich
merchant class upper caste Hindus!
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- In the Anglo-Boer War of 1899, Gandhi,
in spite of his own belief that truth was on the side of the
Boers, formed an ambulance unit in support of the British forces.
He was very earnest about taking up arms and laying down his
life for his beloved Queen. He led his men on to the battlefield
and received a War Medal.
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- Gandhi joined in the orgy of Zulu slaughter
when the Bambata Rebellion broke out. One needs to read the entire
history of Bambata Rebellion to place Gandhi's nazi war crimes
in its proper perspective.
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- A SELECTED LIST OF
WORKS ABOUT MOHANDAS K. GANDHI
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- Ambedkar, B.R. What Congress
and Gandhi Have Done to the Untouchables. Bombay: Thacker, 1945.
- Annamalai, Velu. Sergeant-Major
M.K. Gandhi. Bangalore: Dalit Sahitya Akadiy, 1995.
- Assisi, Francis. "Gandhi's
Links with South Africa Examined." India West, 28 Sep 1990:
45.
- Assisi, Francis. "Mahatma
Gandhi's Links with SA Blacks Questioned." News India, 28
Sep 1990: 1.
- Assisi, Francis. "Two New
Books on Gandhiji." India West, 28 Sep 1990: 45.
- Das, Nani Gopal. Was Gandhiji
a Mahatma? Calcutta: Dipali Book House, 1988.
- Edwards, Michael. The Myth of
the Mahatma. London: Constable, 1986.
- Gandhi, Mohandas K. Untouchability.
Edited by Bharatan Kumarappa. Ahmedabad: Navajivan Publishing
House, 1954.
- Grenier, Richard. The Gandhi
Nobody Knows. Nashville: Thomas Nelson, 1983.
- Grenier, Richard. "The
Gandhi Nobody Knows." Commentary (Mar 1983): 59-72.
- Huq, Fazlul. Gandhi: Saint or
Sinner? Foreword by V.T. Rajshekar. Bangalore: Dalit Sahitya
Akadiy, 1991.
- Kapur, Sudarshan. Raising Up
a Prophet: The African-American Encounter with Gandhi. Boston:
Beacon Press, 1992.
- Rajshekar, V.T. Hinduism, Fascism
and Gandhism: A Guide to Every Intelligent Indian. Bangalore:
Dalit Sahitya Akadiy, 1984.
- Rajshekar, V.T. Why Godse Killed
Gandhi? Bangalore: Dalit Sahitya Akadiy, 1986.
- Rajshekar, V.T. Clash of Two
Values: Mahatma Gandhi and Babasaheb Ambedkar (The Verdict of
History). Bangalore: Dalit Sahitya Akadiy, 1989.
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- Velu Annamalai, Ph.D., a native of Tamil
Nadu, India, is the President of the International Dalit Support
Group and the author of Sergeant-Major M.K. Gandhi published
by the Dalit Sahitya Akademy in Bangalore, India in 1995. He
currently resides in New Orleans, Louisiana.
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- Beyond Words Village
- Give us your
thoughts and opinions!
-
-
- This article was
published courtesy of Velu Annamalai, Ph.D
- Copyright ©
2001 Velu Annamalai, Ph.D. All rights reserved.
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