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Non-ViolenceThe
Greatest Force
M. K. Gandhi
Mohandas K. Gandhi was one of the towering
figures, not just of the twentieth century, but of all time. The
nonviolent struggle that he led for Indian independence provided
peace groups in other countries of the world with hope and a practical
model for achieving that hope. Others before him had articulated
and even used nonviolent tactics in opposition to oppression, from
the Hebrew midwives to Jesus, and Gandhi learned much from them.
But no one had been able to operationalize nonviolence, to make
it the basis of an ongoing movement, and at the same time the basis
of a philosophical and spiritual way of living. The FOR lionized
Gandhi, and its magazine ran over thirty articles and even whole
issues about him. But no one was able to figure out how to transfer
his earnings elsewhere until Martin Luther King, Jr., and the bus
boycott in Montgomery. When one regards the work of Gandhi and King
from a historical promontory, the creative genius of these two innovators
is breathtaking. (The World Tomorrow 9 [October 1926], 143)
* * * * *
Non-violence is the greatest force man has been
endowed with. Truth is the only goal he has. For God is none other
than Truth. But Truth cannot be, never will be reached except through
non-violence.
That which distinguishes man from all other animals
is his capacity to be non-violent. And he fulfills his mission only
to the extent that he is non-violent and no more. He has no doubt
many other gifts. But if they do not subserve the main purposethe
development of the spirit of non-violence in himthey but drag
him down lower than the brute, a status from which he has only just
emerged.
The cry for peace will be a cry in the wilderness,
so long as the spirit of non-violence does not dominate millions
of men and women.
An armed conflict between nations horrifies us.
But the economic war is no better than an armed conflict. This is
like a surgical operation. An economic war is prolonged torture.
And its ravages are no less terrible than those depicted in the
literature on war properly so-called. We think nothing of the other
because we are used to its deadly effects.
Many of us in India shudder to see blood spilled.
Many of us resent cow slaughter, but we think nothing of the slow
torture through which by our greed we put our people and cattle.
But because we are used to this lingering death, we think no more
about it.
The movement against war is sound. I pray for
its success. But I cannot help the gnawing fear that the movement
will fail, if it does not touch the root of all evil man's
greed.
Will America, England and the other great nations
of the West continue to exploit the so called weaker or uncivilized
races and hope to attain peace that the whole world is pining for?
Or will Americans continue to prey upon one another, have commercial
rivalries and yet expect to dictate peace to the world?
Not till the spirit is changed, can the form be
altered. The form is merely an expression of the spirit within.
We may succeed in seemingly altering the form but the alteration
will be a mere make believe, if the spirit within remains unalterable.
A whited sepulchre still conceals beneath it the rotting flesh and
bone.
Far be it from me, to discount or under-rate the
great effort that is being made in the West to kill the war-spirit.
Mine is merely a word of caution as from a fellow seeker who has
been striving in his own humble manner after the same thing, maybe
in a different way, no doubt on a much smaller scale. But if the
experiment demonstrably succeeds on the smaller field and, if those
who are working on the larger field have not overtaken me, it will
at least pave the way for a similar experiment on a large field.
I observe in the limited field in which I find
myself, that unless I can reach the hearts of men and women, I am
able to do nothing. I observe further that so long as the spirit
of hate persists in some shape or other, it is impossible to establish
peace or to gain our freedom by peaceful effort. We cannot love
one another, if we hate Englishmen. We cannot love the Japanese
and hate Englishmen. We must either let the law of love rule us
through and through or not at all. Love among ourselves based on
hatred of others breaks down under the slightest pressure. The fact
is, such love is never real love. It is an armed peace. And so it
will be in this great movement in the West against War. War will
only be stopped when the conscience of mankind has become sufficiently
elevated to recognize the undisputed supremacy of the Law of Love
in all the walks of life. Some say this will never come to pass.
I shall retain the faith till the end of my earthly existence that
it shall come to pass.
©2001 Fellowship of Reconciliation
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