Saturday, April 19, 2008

A Young Man who became a Mahatma...

The Making Of Mahatma...

"What made him a Mahatma..?"

This was the question i had in my mind for many years, knowing that i am just a normal person and there's nothing much special about me besides the fact that i have some born talents and i can nurture them to succeed in life..

But my Quest for Life was to know...

How does one become a Mahatma?
How come only one man achieved that great title?
and Was he born a Mahatma?

This article is the result of my research on One Man's Life, through which i try to churn out the answers for these questions i had in mind for sometime, going back in history, surfing on the incidents and experiences of Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi's Life that i believe changed his life completely and evolved him to being a Mahatma("Great Soul")...





Mahatma Gandhi was born in Porbandar in the present state of Gujarat on October 2, 1869, and educated in law at University College, London.

In 1891, after having been admitted to the British bar, Gandhi returned to India and attempted to establish a law practice in Bombay, with little success. Two years later an Indian firm with interests in South Africa retained him as legal adviser in its office in Durban.

In 1893, a 24-year-old Indian lawyer Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi arrived in Durban South Africa to take part in a lawsuit in Transvaal and he later became the first so-called "coloured" lawyer admitted to the Supreme Court.

In South Africa, Gandhi's work dramatically changed him, as he faced the discrimination commonly directed at blacks and Indians.

Young Gandhi

One day in court at Durban, the magistrate asked him to remove his turban. Gandhi refused and stormed out of the courtroom. Just before Gandhi was to return to India, he booked a first-class train ticket to Johannesburg – and was ordered out of the train because of his colour. He spent a cold night in the non–European waiting - room at Pietermaritzburg railway station. His experience made him decide to remain in Natal and help the growing community of Indians imported to work on the sugar plantations.

In 1894, at the age of 25, Mohandas Gandhi found his calling. Working as a lawyer for an Indian firm in Durban, South Africa, Gandhi was booted out of a first-class train compartment and denied hotel accommodation because of his race. Gandhi was embittered by the experience, and despite his ignorance of current events and terror of public speaking, he launched an all-out assault on South African prejudices, persuading the Natal Indian Congress to run a campaign of education and peaceful non-cooperation with authorities.

Gandhi along with the co-founders of Natal Indian Congress

In 1894, Gandhi founded the Natal Indian Congress which was an organization that aimed to fight discrimination against Indians in SouthAfrica. It later allied itself with the African National Congress.

In 1896, Gandhi began to teach a policy of passive resistance to, and non-cooperation with, the South African authorities. Gandhi considered the terms passive resistance and civil disobedience inadequate for his purposes, however, and coined another term, Satyagraha ("truth and firmness").

In 1903 Gandhi began publishing the weekly Indian Opinion, and he had also started a communal farming project for Indians. In 1906 he gave aid against the Zulu revolt. Later in 1906, however, Gandhi began his peaceful revolution. He declared he would go to jail or even die before obeying an anti-Asian law. Thousands of Indians joined him in this civil disobedience campaign. Gandhi organised strikes on the coalfields and sugar plantations and led a march of Indians from Natal to the Transvaal to protest the measures put in place by the Immigration Act. He was arrested several times.


In 1914 the government of the Union of South Africa made important concessions to Gandhi's demands, including recognition of Indian marriages and abolition of the poll tax for them. His work in South Africa complete, he returned to India.

Several years later, just before his seventieth birthday in 1939, Gandhi was interviewed by a missionary, Dr. John R. Mott. Mott asked Gandhi to single out the most creative experience of his life. This was Gandhi’s reply:


"I recall particularly one experience that change the course of my life. Seven days after I had arrived in South Africa the client who had taken me there asked me to go to Pretoria from Durban. It was not an easy journey. On the train I had a first-class ticket, but not a bed ticket. At Maritzburg, when the beds were issued, the guard came and turned me out. The train steamed away leaving me shivering in cold. Now the creative experience comes there. I was afraid for my very life. I entered the dark waiting room. There was a white man in the room. I was afraid of him. What was my duty; I asked my self. Should I go back to India, or should I go forward, with God as my helper and face whatever was in store for me? I decided to stay and suffer. My active non-violence began from that day."

-Gandhi

This decision changed the lives of thousands of South Africans and still inspires them to this date.



When Gandhi's bronze statue was unveiled in Johannesburg, newspapers published letters from some Africans who questioned the move. They complained that Gandhi fought only for the Indians and not for the majority blacks. Ela Gandhi vehemently denies that his grandfather was not interested in the affairs of black people. "Gandhi did not want to impose his leadership on them. He felt that Africans should carry out their own struggle. In fact, many African National Congress leaders have given credit for Mahatma for being their source of inspiration."


GANDHI'S TWENTY-ONE YEARS of experience in South Africa transformed his views on life and human existence. He started to look at the world from a poverty-trapped peasant's perspective, rather than from a middle-class bourgeois perspective. Stories of atrocities committed against exploited workers by their masters shaped his thinking and humbled him. He said, in interpreting John Ruskin's book Unto This Last:

  1. The good of the individual is contained in the good of all.
  2. A lawyer's work has the same value as the barber's, as all have the same right of earning their livelihood from their work.
  3. A life of labour, i.e. the life of the tiller of the soil and the crafts person, is a life worth living.

The profoundness of these three simple statements provided the essential philosophic underpinning of his movement in South Africa, and led to the creation of three principles, Sarvodaya, Swadeshi and Satyagraha.

Gandhi's belongings-He clearly did not need a suitcase nor a wardrobe

Sarvodaya (upliftment of all) was a philosophical position that Gandhi maintained. He believed that morality must underpin all human actions. Society must strive for the economic, social, spiritual and physical well-being of all, not just the majority.

He advocated that the locus of power must be situated in the village or neighbourhood unit. He believed that there should be equitable distribution of resources and that communities must become self-sustaining through reliance on local products instead of large-scale imports from outside. In this way each individual would be able to utilize his or her skills and be able to market his or her goods in the neighbourhood. People would then make goods for local consumption and become interdependent within each locality.

Gandhi was opposed to large-scale industrialisation, and favoured small local industries instead. In this way there would be a certainty that each individual would be gainfully employed and able to live a self-sufficient fulfilled life.

This local self-sufficiency he called Swadeshi. It means buy local, be proud of local, support local, uphold and live local. It was based on the theory of decentralized local interdependence and universal employment. When we buy or sell something outside our area then we are depriving a local person of his or her livelihood.


Finally, Gandhi's best-known theory of Satyagraha or non-violent direct action is in fact a way of life, not just an absence of violence. He believed that to carry out non-violent action one needed to be disciplined. His discipline entailed the important element of self-restraint in respect of all the sensory urges and consumptions. It also entailed respect for all beings regardless of religious beliefs, caste, race or creed, and a devotion to the values of truth, love and responsibility.

Gandhi left South Africa in 1914 for India and become a major spiritual and political leader in India and the India Independence movement.


Pictured here with his wife, Kasturba


Gandhi took on India's British colonial rulers upon his return, organizing passive resistance campaigns and shaping the Indian National Congress into an effective grassroots party, based around his own philosophy of satyagraha, or unconditional nonviolence.

All his actions for the upliftment of the poor n downtrodden of the Indian Villages and the equality of one n all along with his disciplined philosophical principles of Sarvodaya,Swadeshi & Satyagraha, earned him the title of "Mahatma," or "Great Soul."

His dream and vision of an Independent India came true and he was rightly called the FATHER OF THE NATION.

No man is born a Mahatma, its his life that makes him one...its his principles,thoughts and actions that help him to evolve first as a person, a citizen, a patriot and a great human being.

Its up to each individual to choose which path he/she wants to march on.The incidents which unfolded in South Africa changed Gandhi's life completely from being just another Common Man, to evolving as the Father of the Nation and an act of Inspiration for One and for All...

Mahatma Gandhi once said..."My Life is my Message"

I think he was absolutely spot on letting each of us know that its only Our Life, and the way We Live it...makes us what We are...

I bow down on my knees and salute the great soul of Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi, who has inspired me in many ways to live a better life and make it beautiful...This is a Tribute to this Great Human Being from the bottom of my heart...I hope this inspires you just like it did me, to make your(along with your loved ones) Life, a Better one...

-Dilse...
MunnaSrk

25 comments:

Anonymous said...

nice research done... it is quite commendable that u were inspired by his views and values at a time when the common belief is they r of no use in the modern age,where the mantra is survival of the fittest ,who can drag down all others by any means and he only succeeds.hope many others do go through ur writings and get some idea about our father of the nation. yesterday i had an experience.. we were watching the movie ,,crazy4.. where there is a scene in which on aug 15th in a mall a little girl is rendering national anthem all alone,no one bothers to lend a ear,, then one of the crazy 4,mentally challenged man, who leaves in the independence days, stands at attention bfore her and sings along. slowly one by one the passers by join and a large gathering forms at the end...a touching ,moving scene indeed....but what touched me most was what i saw in the hall,,one by one the audience in the theatre also started standing up and finally all were on their feet...a rare sight, which was later applaused by all.. i dont know who first stood up... he needs to be complimented... now today ur blog on this...quite a coincidence...i am proud that my son gets inspired by these, bcose these r those things which moulds ones life, his character,behaviour, vision and deeds.... hats off to u...

Anonymous said...

Hey Kalesh , Your new article is simply wonderful , Im sure I can expect more surprises from you in the days to come - Keep Rocking !

Lots of support and Care
Manni :)

ps:- Finally I took time to key in the words .

Unknown said...

The Making of the Mahatma (movie) capture his journey very well and gives some good insights.

what makes mahatma?
he lead by example and had great self-control with very clear vision, knowledge and importantly inspire & influence other person's mind by understanding the emotions of other people (sometime very convincingly). good intention doesn't make great man. so many leader of his time had that but gandhi was smart man with good intentions. had great emotional and social intelligence. that's what makes him special.

jvvas said...

Yah really good... one can always recomment ur blog for understandin the father of r nation. Very well crafted.

Anonymous said...

This was really great...You are really good at writing on different different topics...God!Just talented...U r just different from others...Usually blogs are where lives of ones own are reviewed..This is just wonderful...

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- Murk

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