Navagam
Thursday,
July 25,1918
Chi.
Maganlal,
You
have been frightened by Raojibhai as he was by me. He read too much into my
words.
No,
my ideals have not changed. Despite my bitter experiences in India, my
conviction remains the same as ever, that we have but little to learn from the
West. The evils I have seen here have made no changes in my fundamental idea
nor has this war. The old idea has developed
into something purer. I have certainly not come to feel that we shall
have to introduce Western civilization. Nor do I suppose that we shall have to
take to drinking and meat-eating. To be sure, I have felt, in all seriousness,
that Swaminarayana and Vallbhacharaya have robbed us of our manliness. They made
the people incapable of self-defense. It was all to the good, of course, that
people gave up drinking, smoking, etc.; this, however, is not an end in itself,
it is only a means. If a smoker happens to be a man of character his company is
worth cultivating. If, on the contrary, a man who has never smoked in his life
is an adulterer, he can be of little service. The love taught by Swaminarayana
and Vallabh is all sentimentalism.
It cannot make one a man of true love. Swaminarayana
and Vallabh simply did not reflect
over the true nature of non-violence. Non-violence consists in holding in check
all impulses in the chitta. (mind). It comes into play especially in men’s
relations with one another. There is not even a suggestion of this idea in
their writings. Having been born in this
degenerate age of ours, they could
not remain unaffected by its atmosphere and had, in consequence, quite an undesirable effect on Gujarat.
Tukaram and Ramdas had no such effect.
The Abhangas of the former and the shlokas of the latter admit ample scope for manly striving. They,
too, were Vaishnavas. Do not mix up the
Vaishnava tradition with the
teaching of Vallabh and Swaminarayana.
Vaishnavism is an age-old truth. I have come to see, what I did not so
clearly before, that there is non-violence
in violence. This is the big change
which has come about. I had not fully realized the duty of restraining a
drunkard from doing evil, of killing a dog in agony or one infected with
rabies. In all these instances, violence is in fact non-violence. Violence is a function of the body. Brahmacharya consists in refraining from sexual
indulgence, but we do not bring up our children to be impotent. They will have
observed bramachraya only if, though
possessed of the highest virility, they can master the physical urge. In the
same way, our offspring must be strong in physique. If they cannot completely
renounce the urge to violence, we may permit them to commit violence, to use
their strength to fight and thus make them non-violent. Non-violence was taught
by a Kshatriya to a Kshatriya.
The
difference between the West and the East
is what I have explained to be, and it is a great one. The civilization of
the West is based on self-indulgence, ours on self-control. If we commit
violence, it will be as a last resort and with a view to lokasangraha. (That which promotes the conservation of society). The
West will indulge in violence in self-will. My taking part in ( the movement for)
a Parliament and similar activities is not a new development; it is quite an old thing and is
only intended to ensure a check on these bodies. You will see this if you read
my article on Mr Montagu’s scheme. I simply cannot bring myself to take
interest in the movement, but I can
spread my ideals by working in it. When I saw that I could continue in
it only by sacrificing my ideals, I
decided to retire from the movement.
I think you have your reply
in what I have said. I cannot explain much when I am there for a day and so I
have set down the thing in writing. This will enable you to think and ask me
questions, if fresh doubts occur to you.
I continue to be Navagam. I
wanted to leave from here today, but perhaps I may not be able to do so.
Blessings
from BAPU,
(Collected
Works of Mahatma Gandhi, Vol.XIV, pp.504-5)
(1).Swaminarayana
: The Vaishnava sect whose founder was Swami Sahajanand.(1781-1833)
(2).
Vallabhacharya (1473-1531) – Religious Teacher, principally responsible for
spreading the Bhakti cult in Gujrat.
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