Gandhi as the marketplace
of ideas (Part I)
18/07/05 20:58 Filed by Saswat Pattanayak in:
Saswat | Editorial
By Saswat Pattanayak
Gandhi was never out of the limelight.
But since a couple of years now, he has been in it
for all the wrong reasons.
The pan-African movement recognizes him as a crude
Indian nationalist by citing that he never stood up
for the then South African Black people as much he
did for the Indian population. The Indian rightists
ruling class abhor Gandhi for his alleged
anti-nationalist stance when it came to his professed
compassion for the Muslims. The bourgeois
intellectual film directors Raj Kumar Santoshi and
Shyam Benegal have portrayed Gandhi in ways to suit
their standpoints: movies have been made to celebrate
Bhagat Singh and Subhas Bose only so that their
characters can clash with Gandhi. The pacifists have
used Gandhi to show that we don’t need any violence
at all, as though that were the lessons Gandhi
demonstrated. The conservatives have utilized Gandhi
to prove that religious fundamentalism is the path to
God and hence prayers should be made compulsory in
schools. Dalits think Gandhi was their worst enemy.
Brahmins think Gandhi was their worst enemy.
Gandhi is back in limelight. I shall allow myself to
swim in the bundle of contradictions and take a
retake on my own view of the first para: maybe he has
been in it for all the right reasons.
So that we be forced to rethink. Not to rethink
Gandhi per se, which is the act, several interest
groups are hard-pressing for the people to do. For I
don’t think Gandhi being right or wrong is all that
important (since no person can logically be right all
the time—where will that leave the relativity of
judgments leading to the mindless wars we have
witnessed—the need is not to be right all the time,
but to be right for the just causes). To me, what’s
crucial is our motives for evaluating him the way we
have done...
Tags: Saswat, History, India, Colonialism, Bollywood, Film