Read Great Soul: Mahatma Gandhi and His Struggle With India Online
Authors: Joseph Lelyveld
Tags: #Political, #General, #Historical, #Biography & Autobiography, #History, #Biography, #South Africa - Politics and government - 1836-1909, #Nationalists - India, #Political Science, #South Africa, #India, #Modern, #Asia, #India & South Asia, #India - Politics and government - 1919-1947, #Nationalists, #Gandhi, #Statesmen - India, #Statesmen
1
When he intoned
: Jaswant Singh,
Jinnah
, p. 111.2
“
My heart refuses
”:
CWMG
, vol. 32, pp. 452, 473–74.3
The Times of India
spread
: Jaswant Singh,
Jinnah
, p. 113.4
His covering letter
: Mahadev Desai,
Day-to-Day with Gandhi
, vol. 9, p. 304.5
In his view, Gandhi
: Jordens,
Swami Shraddhananda
, p. 110.6
The start of the noncooperation
: Tinker,
Ordeal of Love
, p. 151.7
So, in December 1919
: Jordens,
Swami Shraddhananda
, p. 117.8
“
Is it not true
”: Ibid.9
“
That was a grave mistake
”: Ibid., p. 119.10
“
it is a bigger problem
”:
CWMG
, vol. 19, p. 289.11
“
While Mahatmaji stood
”: Jordens,
Swami Shraddhananda
, p. 119.12
“
If all untouchables
”: Ibid., p. 144.13
This led to a public exchange
:
CWMG
, vol. 23, pp. 567–69.14
“
No propaganda can be allowed
”: Ibid., vol. 24, pp. 145, 148–49.15
Bhimrao Ramji Ambedkar
: B. R. Ambedkar,
What Congress and Gandhi Have Done to the Untouchables
, p. 23.16
“
greatest and most sincere champion
”: Ibid.17
Although Gandhi had called
:
CWMG
, vol. 19, p. 289.18
“
I am trying to make
”: Ibid., vol. 25, p. 228.19
Due to his many years
: Ibid., vol. 26, p. 408.20
“
To endure or bear hardships
”: Ibid., pp. 264–65.21
“
One caste, one religion
”: Mendelsohn and Vicziany,
Untouchables
, p. 97.22
at first ambivalent
: Interview with M. K. Sanoo, Ernakulam, Jan. 18, 2009.23
rename the boy
: Interview with Dr. Babu Vijayanath, Harippad, Jan. 17, 2009.
Malayala Manorama
article of Oct. 15, 1927, describes naming ceremony.24
an untouchable leader
: Interview with K. K. Kochu, near Kottayam, Jan. 19, 2009. T. K. Ravindran suggests that this blinding may have been temporary in his book
Eight Furlongs of Freedom
, p. 108.25
“
I think you should let
”:
CWMG
, vol. 23, p. 391.26
The letter didn’t reach
: Joseph,
George Joseph
, pp. 166–69. Gandhi’s version of these events can be found in
Removal of Untouchability
, a collection of his writings on that theme, pp. 107–14.27
Despite the Congress support
:
CWMG
, vol. 23, p. 471.28
“
I personally believe
”: Ibid., p. 519.29
The villages were divided
: Rudrangshu Mukherjee, ed.,
Penguin Gandhi Reader
, p. 221.30
He would also argue
: M. K. Gandhi,
Selected Political Writings
, pp. 124–25.31
“
I spoke to Gandhi repeatedly
”: Mende,
Conversations with Mr. Nehru
, pp. 27–28.32
“
The caste system, as it exists
”:
CWMG
, vol. 59, p. 45.33
“
If untouchability goes
”: Chandrashanker Shukla,
Conversations of Ganhiji
(Bombay, 1949), p. 59.34
harmful both to spiritual and national growth
:
Harijan
, July 18, 1936, also in Gandhi,
Removal of Untouchability
, p. 36.35
“
no interest left in life
”: Quoted in Coward,
Indian Critiques of Gandhi
, p. 61.36
only remaining varna
:
CWMG
, vol. 80, pp. 222–24, cited by Martin Green in
Gandhi in India: In His Own Words
(Hanover, N.H., 1987), pp. 324–26.37
“
the deep black ignorance
”: Mahadev Desai,
Day-to-Day with Gandhi
, vol. 6, p. 86.38
The meeting took place
:
CWMG
, vol. 24, pp. 90–94. Quotations in these paragraphs are all drawn from a document summarizing conversations with two Vaikom emissaries.39
On their return
: Ravindran,
Eight Furlongs of Freedom
, p. 86.40
The meeting sent
: Ibid., p. 95.41
The freed leaders threw
: Ibid., p. 99.42
On his release from jail
:
CWMG
, vol. 24, pp. 268–69.43
By the end of the year
: Ibid., vol. 25, p. 349.44
Standing on their sense
: Mahadev Desai,
Day-to-Day with Gandhi
, vol. 6, p. 58.45
But it’s Indanturuttil Nambiatiri
: Ravindran,
Eight Furlongs of Freedom
, pp. 164–91.46
“
I am not ashamed
”: Mahadev Desai,
Day-to-Day with Gandhi
, vol. 6, p. 84.47
The likelier explanation
:
CWMG
, vol. 19, p. 571.48
Perhaps Nehru’s summing-up
: Mende,
Conversations with Mr. Nehru
, pp. 28–29.49
“
I am trying myself
”: Mahadev Desai,
Day-to-Day with Gandhi
, vol. 6, p. 83.50
“
I have come here to create peace
”:
Malayala Manorama
, March 14, 1925.51
To break the impasse
: Ravindran,
Eight Furlongs of Freedom
, pp. 187–90.52
“
We will forsake
”: Raimon,
Selected Documents on the Vaikom Satyagraha
, p. 112.53
accommodate to change
: Interview with Krishnan Nambuthiri, Vaikom, Jan. 14, 2009.54
a crowd of twenty thousand
:
Malayala Manorama
, March 14, 1925.55
“
I claim to be a sanatani
”: Mahadev Desai,
Day-to-Day with Gandhi
, vol. 6, pp. 68–70.56
“
A few days or forever
”: Ibid., pp. 77, 81.57
Caste, untouchability, and social action
: Ibid., pp. 84–88.58
In reality, the Gandhi
: Interview with Babu Vijayanath, Harippad, Jan. 17, 2009. The visit is also summarized in Mahadev Desai,
Day-to-Day with Gandhi
, vol. 6, pp. 124–25.59
“
He thinks I shall have to appear
”: Mahadev Desai,
Day-to-Day with Gandhi
, vol. 6, p. 88.60
According to a police report
: Ravindran,
Eight Furlongs of Freedom
, p. 340.61
In one such clash
: Interview with Dr. Babu Vijayanath, Hariippad, Jan. 17, 2009.62
Hearing of the Mahatma’s
: This verse was pointed out to me by M. K. Sanoo and subsequently located by journalists at
Malayala Manorama
who translated it.63
Definitely it was Gandhi
: Raimon,
Selected Documents on the Vaikom Satyagraha
, p. 203.64
K. K. Kochu, a Dalit intellectual
:
Madhyamam
, April 2, 1999.65
“
I only wish
”: Interview with K. K. Kochu, Kaduthuruthi, Kottayam district, Jan. 18, 2009.66
“
How many among you
”: Mahadev Desai,
Day-to-Day with Gandhi
, vol. 6, pp. 114–15.67
“
Gandhi was sitting cross-legged
”: An excellent description, but Mahadev Desai’s contemporaneous diary note makes it clear they reached Alwaye by boat and car. Ibid., p. 118.68
In his account
: Muggeridge,
Chronicles of Wasted Time
, pp. 109–10.
1
Discovering they were prepared
: Tendulkar,
Mahatma
, vol. 2, p. 140.2
In the pointlessness
: Ibid., p. 142. Emphasis mine.3
His reaction to this onset
: Ibid., p. 327.4
“
What is one to do
”:
CWMG
, vol. 31, p. 504.5
He blamed “educated India
”: Ibid., p. 369.6
Next he blamed the British
: Fischer,
Life of Mahatma Gandhi
, pp. 241–42.7
“
The government of India
”:
CWMG
, vol. 32, p. 571.8
“
I am an optimist
”: Ibid., vol. 31, p. 504.9
“
appears to be my inaction
”: Ibid., p. 368.10
“
I am biding my time
”: Brown,
Gandhi
, p. 213.11
“
Give me blood
”: Fischer,
Life of Mahatma Gandhi
, p. 261.12
“
given up reading newspapers
”:
CWMG
, vol. 31, p. 554.13
At a mammoth All Parties Convention
: Wells,
Ambassador of Hindu-Muslim Unity
, p. 177.14
“
We are sons of this land
”: Leonard A. Gordon,
Brothers Against the Raj: A Biography of Indian Nationalists
, p. 189.15
Within weeks of this rupture
: Tendulkar,
Mahatma
, vol. 2, p. 334. Within two years Muhammad Ali would die in London.16
“
This is the parting
”: Philips and Wainwright,
Partition of India
, p. 279.17
a younger wife:
Ruttie Jinnah was originally a Parsi, a member of a minority composed of Indians of Persian descent who retain their Zoroastrian religion, but converted to Islam before their marriage. On her death, she was buried in a Muslim cemetery with her former husband sobbing at her graveside.18
Swaraj within a year
: Brown,
Gandhi
, p. 222, draws the parallel to the 1921 campaign. January 26 is still celebrated in India as
Republic Day; August 15, the date on which India actually became independent in 1947, is celebrated as Independence Day.19
“
For me there is only
”:
CWMG
, vol. 31, pp. 368–69.20
“
In the present state
”: Ibid., vol. 42, p. 382.21
Civil disobedience, he told Nehru
: Brown,
Gandhi
, p. 235.22
“
next to water and air
”: Rajmohan Gandhi,
Gandhi
, p. 303.23
The viceroy also stuck
: Fischer,
Life of Mahatma Gandhi
, pp. 271–72.24
“
The fire of a great resolve
”: As quoted in Rajmohan Gandhi,
Gandhi
, p. 309.25
“
Hail, Deliverer
”: Fischer,
Life of Mahatma Gandhi
, p. 273. Thomas Weber questions whether these words were ever uttered, noting their absence from contemporary accounts and arguing that the quotation first appeared in an article by a British journalist who was actually in Berlin on the day Gandhi reached Dandi. See “Historiography and the Dandi March,” in
Gandhi, Gandhism, and the Gandhians
.26
“
The last four months in India
”:
CWMG
, vol. 44, p. 468.27
Gandhi made a sly allusion
: Ibid., vol. 48, p. 18.28
“
No living man
”: Harold Laski opinion piece in
Daily Herald
(London), Sept. 11, 1931.29
“
Your Majesty won’t expect
”: Tendulkar,
Mahatma
, vol. 3, p. 127.30
By the time Ambedkar returned
: B. R. Ambedkar,
Letters
, p. 220.31
betrothed to him at the age of nine
: The marriage apparently took place three
years later, when he would have been seventeen and she twelve, although his biographers cannot agree on their ages. Keer,
Dr. Ambedkar
, p. 20, says he was seventeen; Omvedt,
Ambedkar
, p. 6, says he was fourteen.32
For an untouchable youth
: B. R. Ambedkar,
Essential Writings
, p. 52.33
When he sought to study
: Keer,
Dr. Ambedkar
, p. 18.34
So Bhima took
: Omvedt,
Ambedkar
, p. 4.35
One of these campaigns
: Keer,
Dr. Ambedkar
, p. 74.36
“
When one is spurned
”: Zelliot,
From Untouchable to Dalit
, p. 163.37
“
I am a difficult man
”: Omvedt,
Ambedkar
, p. 119.38
“
You called me to hear
”: Keer,
Dr. Ambedkar
, p. 165.39
“
Gandhiji, I have no homeland
”: Ibid., p. 166.40
“
Till I left for England
”: Mahadev Desai,
Diary of Mahadev Desai
, p. 52.41
“
revelatory of the stereotypes
”: Omvedt,
Ambedkar
, p. 43.42
The go-betweens who set up
: Zelliot,
From Untouchable to Dalit
, p. 166.43
Their next meeting, in London
: Omvedt,
Ambedkar
, p. 43.44
Maybe Gandhi had been
: Zelliot,
From Untouchable to Dalit
, p. 166.45
“
Who are we to uplift Harijans?
”: Mahadev Desai,
Diary of Mahadev Desai
, p. 53.46
Drawing the parallel himself
:
CWMG
, vol. 48, p. 224.47
“
Dr. A. always commands
”: Ibid., p. 208.48
“
He has a right even to spit
”: Ibid., pp. 160–61.49
“
Above all, the Congress represents
”: Ibid., p. 16.50
Three days later
: Ibid., p. 34.51
“
I fully represent the claims
”: B. R. Ambedkar,
Writings and Speeches
, vol. 3, contains transcripts of the Round Table Conference sessions quoted here. The exchanges between Gandhi and Ambedkar can be found on pp. 661–63 of that volume.52
“
This has been the most humiliating
”: Shirer,
Gandhi
, p. 194, cited in Herman,
Gandhi and Churchill
, p. 372.53
“
a more ignorant
”: Narayan Desai,
My Life Is My Message
, vol. 3,
Satyapath
, p. 169.54
Gandhi claimed to be
: B. R. Ambedkar,
Letters
, p. 215.55
“
Mr. Gandhi made nonsense
”: B. R. Ambedkar,
What Congress and Gandhi Have Done to the Untouchables
, p. 275.56
As the London conference
: B. R. Ambedkar,
Letters
, p. 215.57
Nehru didn’t go into that
: Nehru to S. K. Patil, Nov. 31, 1931, Nehru Memorial Museum archive, AICC Papers, G86/3031.58
“
Gandhi’s Good-Bye Today”: Daily Herald
(London), Dec. 5, 1931.59
Years later George Orwell
: George Orwell, “Reflections on Gandhi,” in
A Collection of Essays
(Garden City, N.Y., 1954), p. 180.60
But he was skeptical
: Rolland,
Mahatma Gandhi
, p. 248.61
Pope Pius XI sent his regrets
: Nayar,
Salt Satyagraha
, p. 403; Slade,
Spirit’s Pilgrimage
, p. 151.62
“
No indeed
”: Nayar,
Salt Satyagraha
, p. 403.
Sushila Nayar completed the biography begun by her brother, who seldom signed himself by his full name, Pyarelal Nayar.63
Before the letter could be mailed
: Ibid., p. 405.64
On January 4, 1932
: Ibid., p. 414. The Englishman who describes this scene is the ethnologist Verrier Elwin.