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Liberal Myths |
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One the anachronism of modern liberalism is that it elevates scoundrels to be heroes, and denigrates heroes into scoundrels. And when it cannot do that, liberalism simply lies. So it is the case with one of liberalism's icons, Mahatma Gandhi. All over the world, the Indian leader Gandhi is held up as an icon of peace, pacifism, tolerance and brotherly love. Statues are erected to him, his example is taught to Western schoolchildren, and Hollywood has even made a film about him. In all of these, Gandhi is portrayed as the ultimate peacemaker, the living example of multi-culturalism. Sadly, liberalism and the truth have seldom met. For in reality, Gandhi was a first class Indian racist who not only despised Blacks, but also lower caste Indians! Those who have been subjected to some conventional Gandhi propaganda will know that he was born in India, studied to become an attorney in England, spent many years organizing passive resistance in South Africa, and then returned to India to lead the passive resistance movement against British rule in that country. He was finally assassinated by one of his own kind. Gandhi the anti-black racist Lying in the publicly accessible archives of the South African state records in Pretoria and in the Johannesburg public library are full sets of the newspaper which Gandhi started in that country: the Indian Opinion. In addition, the Indian government has built an Internet site dedicated to Gandhi, and much of his writing is now available online as well. From these, and the official compilation of Gandhi’s writings, the Collected Works, the true face of Gandhi emerges: an anti-Black Indian racist! The raw Kaffir – Gandhi describing the blacks When Gandhi addressed a public meeting in Bombay on 26 September 1896, he had the following to say about the Indian struggle in South Africa:
In 1904, opposing the then White British South African government's plan to draw up a register of all non- Whites in the urban areas, Gandhi wrote about natives who do not work: It is one thing to register natives who would not work, and whom it is very difficult to find out if they absent themselves, but it is another thing -and most insulting - to expect decent, hard-working, and respectable Indians, whose only fault is that they work too much, to have themselves registered and carry with them registration badges. (2) Commenting on a piece of legislation planned by the White Natal Municipal authority, called the Natal Municipal Corporation Bill, Gandhi wrote in his newspaper, the Indian Opinion on March 18 1905:
The native – little benefit to the State – Gandhi The Indian Opinion published an editorial on September 9 1905 under the heading, "The relative Value of the Natives and the Indians in Natal". In it, Gandhi referred to a speech made by Rev. Dube, an early African nationalist, who said that an African had the capacity for improvement, if only the Whites would give them the opportunity. In his response, Gandhi suggested that:
Then he added:
Gandhi complained about British use of Kaffir Police In a letter to the editor of the Times of London, published in 12 November 1906. Gandhi complained that under British rule, Kaffir police were hustling Indians in South Africa. Gandhi wrote:
Gandhi’s opinion of a series of 1906 amendments to the Asiatic Law, No. 3 of 1885, which placed certain restrictions upon Indians in British South Africa, are also insightful as to his true views on race. Writing in his Indian Opinion newspaper on 8 June 1907, Gandhi remarked that that the law does not apply to Kaffirs and Cape Boys (7) and went on to write that one of the main concerns he had with the act, which he called an obnoxious law, was that a Kaffir police constable could detain an Indian. He wrote:
After dealing with a number of other grievances with the law, Gandhi added:
Gandhi’s role in the Bambetta uprising In 1906 a Zulu rebellion against British rule took place in the colony of Natal. His alleged pacifist ideals notwithstanding, Gandhi joined up with the British forces and became an ambulance stretcher bearer, helping to suppress the Black rebellion, known as the Bambetta Uprising.In his memoirs of the campaign to help the British defeat the Blacks, Gandhi wrote of how he saw a Kaffir who did not wear the loyal badge – i.e. A Zulu who was not loyal to the British and who had taken part in the uprising against the White British colonial rule.
Gandhi also remarked on how unreliable these loyal Blacks were, writing that:
The most poignant line in Gandhi’s Zulu war memoirs is however this one, which exposes his alleged pacifism as a hoax:
Contrary to the liberal myth, Gandhi never once tried to help anybody else but Indians, and even then, only upper caste Indians at that. He consistently sought a special position for his people which would be separated from and superior to that of the Blacks. (13) A good example came when the British colony of Natal took active steps to ensure that the Indians in that colony were deprived of the vote. The Franchise Amendment Bill introduced in 1896, prohibited Indians from registering for the vote, while allowing those already on the rolls to remain. Within a few years, this eliminated the Indian as a voting factor in Natal, and it was this law which caused the Indian merchants to ask Gandhi to stay in South Africa, and around it was established the Natal Indian Congress, the first Indian political organisation in South Africa. One of the first achievements of the Natal Indian Congress - which Gandhi established - was the creation of a third separate entrance to the Durban Post Office. The first was for Whites, but previously Indians had to share the second with the Blacks. The third entrance – for Indians alone – satisfied Gandhi. (14) Indian ranked lower than the rawest native In their petitions against the Natal franchise bill, the Indians, with Gandhi as their spokesman, complained that "the Bill would rank the Indian lower than the rawest Native". In attempting to protect their own position, they believed they had to separate themselves from the native Blacks. (15)In addition, other prominent Indians, all colleagues of Gandhi, frequently complained of being mixed in with Natives in railway cars, lavatories, pass laws, and in other regulations. (16) Recalling his time in a Transvaal prison in October 1908, Gandhi said later that he spent the "first night in the company of some kaffir criminals, wild-looking, murderous, vicious, lewd and uncouth." (17) Gandhi and race Gandhi was, despite modern propaganda, acutely aware of the differences between races, as this letter to W.T. Stead, an English friend of his in London, written in 1906, clearly shows:
Indeed, Gandhi remarked about the issue of taxation of Indians in South Africa that "A Kaffir is to be taxed because he does not work enough: an Indian is to be taxed because he works too much." (19) Writing about a law which was designed to restrict Indian movement in the British Cape Colony, Gandhi objected on the basis that it dragged Indians down with the Kaffir(s). He wrote: The bye-law has its origin in the alleged or real, impudent and, in some cases, indecent behaviour of the Kaffirs. But, whatever the charges are against the British Indians, no one has ever whispered that the Indians behave otherwise than as decent men. But, as it is the wont in this part of the world, they have been dragged down with the Kaffir without the slightest justification. (20) Gandhi was aware of the abusive nature of his words In what context did Gandhi use this word kaffir which is most certainly a term of abuse? Gandhi himself understood full well the word’s meaning, as he himself commented in later life the following when commenting upon another person’s use of the word to describe a Christian: And finally, about Mr. Douglas who, as I have stated above, has tendered his resignation. The gentleman has been simply overhasty. He took offence at the Maulana Saheb's use of the word kaffir for a Christian. I can understand his resentment. It would have been better if the word kaffir were not used. (21) In addition, Gandhi remarked "If Kaffir is a term of opprobrium, how much more so is Chandal?” referring to Hindu and Muslim slang words for each other. (22) Therefore there can be little doubt as to Gandhi’s racist intention when he referred to kaffirs in South Africa, and only a deluded liberal would suggest otherwise. The prominent race In the Government Gazette of Natal for Feb. 28 1905, a Bill was published regulating the use of fire-arms by Blacks and Indians. Commenting on the Bill, Gandhi wrote in his newspaper, the Indian Opinion on March 25 1905: In this instance of the fire-arms, the Asiatic has been most improperly bracketed with the natives. 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 a slightest vestige of justification for so preventing the British Indian? (23) Gandhi, like many caste conscious Indians (he was born to a fairly high shop owner caste) was all in favor of segregation from the Blacks. His reaction to a 1906 petition launched by non-Whites in South Africa to the British King, demanding voting rights, reveals this attitude clearly:
The famous train incident In the Hollywood film made about Gandhi, much emphasis was placed on a scene where he was arrested for riding in a South African train coach reserved for Whites. This incident did indeed occur, but for very different reasons than those the film portrayed! For the liberal myth is that Gandhi was protesting at the exclusion of non-Whites from the train coach: in fact, he was trying to persuade the authorities to let ONLY upper caste Indians ride with the Whites. It was NEVER Gandhi’s intention to let Blacks, or even lower Caste Indians, to share the White compartment! Here, in Gandhi's own words, are his comments on this famous incident, complete with reference to upper caste Indians, who he differentiated from lower caste Indians by calling the former clean: You say that the magistrate's decision is unsatisfactory because it would enable a person, however unclean, to travel by a tram, and that even the Kaffirs would be able to do so. But the magistrate's decision is quite different. The Court declared that the Kaffirs have no legal right to travel by tram. And according to tram regulations, those in an unclean dress or in a drunken state are prohibited from boarding a tram. Thanks to the Court's decision, only clean Indians or colored people other than Kaffirs, can now travel in the trams. (25) Gandhi supported segregation It is also a myth to presume that Gandhi was opposed to racial segregation. Witness this piece of his writing, published in his newspaper, Indian Opinion, of 15 February 1905. It was a letter to the White Johannesburg Medical Officer of Health, a Dr. Porter, concerning the fact that Blacks had been allowed to settle in an Indian residential area:
Gandhi’s support for purity of race In response to the rise of White nationalist politics, which stressed racial separation, Gandhi wrote in his Indian Opinion of 24 September 1903:
On 24 December 1903, Gandhi added this in his Indian Opinion newspaper:
And yet the liberal delusion over Gandhi lives on . . . Sources: (1) The Collected Works of Mahatma Gandhi, Ahmedabad, 1963, Volume II p. 74 (2) The Collected Works of Mahatma Gandhi, Ahmedabad, 1963, Volume IV p. 193 (3) MK Gandhi, Indian Opinion, 18 March 1905 (4) MK Gandhi, Indian Opinion, 9 September 1905 (5) MK Gandhi, Indian Opinion, 9 September 1905 (6) MK Gandhi, Letter to The Times, London, 12 November, 1906, as reproduced on The Complete Site on Mathatma Gandhi, http://www.mkgandhi.org/cwm/vol6/ch060.htm (7) MK Gandhi, Indian Opinion, 8-6-1907, New Obnoxious Law, as reproduced at The Complete Site on Mathatma Gandhi, formerly at - http://www.mkgandhi.org/cwm/vol6/ch409.htm (8) MK Gandhi, Indian Opinion, 8-6-1907, New Obnoxious Law, as reproduced at The Complete Site on Mathatma Gandhi, formerly at - http://www.mkgandhi.org/cwm/vol6/ch409.htm (9) MK Gandhi, Indian Opinion, 8-6-1907, New Obnoxious Law, as reproduced at The Complete Site on Mathatma Gandhi, formerly at - http://www.mkgandhi.org/cwm/vol6/ch409.htm (10) MK Gandhi, Memoirs of the Indian Stretcher Bearer Corps, as published in Indian Opinion, 28-7-1906, and reproduced on The Complete Site on Mathatma Gandhi, formerly at - http://www.mkgandhi.org/cwm/vol5/ch262.htm (11) MK Gandhi, Memoirs of the Indian Stretcher Bearer Corps, as published in Indian Opinion, 28-7-1906, and reproduced on The Complete Site on Mathatma Gandhi, formerly at- http://www.mkgandhi.org/cwm/vol5/ch262.htm (12) MK Gandhi, Collected Works, memoirs of the Indian Stretcher Bearer Corps, as published in Indian Opinion, 28-7-1906, and reproduced on The Complete Site on Mathatma Gandhi, formerly at - http://www.mkgandhi.org/cwm/vol5/ch262.htm (13) James D. Hunt, Gandhi and the Black People of South Africa, Shaw University and reproduced on The Complete Site on Mathatma Gandhi, http://www.mkgandhi.org/articles/jamesdhunt.htm (14) James D. Hunt, Gandhi and the Black People of South Africa, Shaw University and reproduced on The Complete Site on Mathatma Gandhi, http://www.mkgandhi.org/articles/jamesdhunt.htm (15) James D. Hunt, Gandhi and the Black People of South Africa, Shaw University and reproduced on The Complete Site on Mathatma Gandhi, http://www.mkgandhi.org/articles/jamesdhunt.htm (16) James D. Hunt, Gandhi and the Black People of South Africa, Shaw University and reproduced on The Complete Site on Mathatma Gandhi, http://www.mkgandhi.org/articles/jamesdhunt.htm (17) B. R. Nanda, Mahatma Gandhi - A Biography, page 105, The Official Mahatma Gandhi Archive, Mahatma Gandhi Foundation – India, formerly at:- http://www.mahatma.org.in/books/... (18) MK Gandhi, Letter to W.T. STEAD, London, 16 November 16, 1906, from a photostat of the typewritten office copy: S.N. 4584, as reproduced at The Complete Site on Mathatma Gandhi, formerly at - http://www.mkgandhi.org/cwm/vol6/ch092.htm (19) MK Gandhi, The Collected Works of Mahatma Gandhi - Volume III, page 337, The Official Mahatma Gandhi eArchive, Mahatma Gandhi Foundation – India, formerly at:- http://www.mahatma.org.in/books/... (20) MK Gandhi, The Collected Works of Mahatma Gandhi, Volume III, page 285, The Official Mahatma Gandhi eArchive, Mahatma Gandhi Foundation – India, formerly at:- http://www.mahatma.org.in/books/... (21) Mahadev Desai , Day to day with Gandhi - Volume II, page 291, The Official Mahatma Gandhi eArchive, Mahatma Gandhi Foundation – India, (22) MK Gandhi, The Hindu-Muslim Unity, page 45, The Official Mahatma Gandhi eArchive, Mahatma Gandhi Foundation – India, formerly at:- http://www.mahatma.org.in/books/... (23) MK Gandhi, Indian Opinion, 25 March 1905 (24) MK Gandhi, Indian Opinion, 24 March 1906 (25) MK Gandhi, Indian Opinion, 2 June 1906 (26) MK Gandhi, Indian Opinion, 15 February 1905 (27) MK Gandhi, Indian Opinion, 24 September 1903 (28) MK Gandhi, Indian Opinion,24 December 1903 |