Skip to main content

Gandhi in Delhi on Good Friday


Rajiv Chowk is not quite the metro rail station that Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi would approve of, notwithstanding the splendour of its architectural complexity. The underground station has quite a few tunnels and escalators carrying thousands of commuters at any given time to their respective platforms on the Yellow and Blue lines.

“The metro is Delhi’s lifeline,” I tell Gandhiji who is visibly impressed by the sparkling cleanliness and systematic orderliness of the entire station. There is something un-Indian about the place. But the jostling is very Indian, Gandhi realises.

“Is the country – or the world, for that matter – any the better for such sophisticated instruments of locomotion?” Gandhi asks me. “How do these instruments advance man’s spiritual progress? Do they not in the last resort hamper it?”

“We are building more and more temples, and splendid ones too, for our spiritual progress,” I point out. “We are becoming a spiritual nation, a Hindu Rashtra, a Rama Rajya.”

Gandhi smiles wryly. He had noticed a lot mammoth hoardings all over Delhi which made many claims and exhortations and proclamations about various things such as Atmanirbhar Bharat, Achche Din, and Azadi ka Amrit Mahotsav. The huge smiling face of the Prime Minister would not have escaped the notice of the shrewd man. Even the hoardings celebrating Azadi ka Mahotsav did not have anyone else’s pictures. Not even that of the father of the nation.

Does Gandhiji know that he is being erased from the country’s history? I wonder. The newspapers carry the information that a lot of history is being deleted and a lot of others are being added to the history textbooks of CBSE. The Mughals were already erased. Now Gandhi goes. Nehru was already discredited and character-assassinated a thousand times. Even his descendants were not left alone. Ridicule, sarcasm, direct assault on character, erasure from history… Strategies are aplenty. Is Gandhi aware of all this? I wonder. Maybe, it doesn’t matter to him.

It was not Indian independence that Gandhi had fought for; it was for an India worthy of independence. India of 2023, celebrating Azadi ka Amrit Mahotsav, is just the opposite of all that Gandhi had dreamt of.

“Do you think the temples and holy corridors and other such constructions are making Indians any better?” Gandhi asks interrupting my contemplation. “Violence is increasing in people’s hearts.” He pauses with a sigh. “You know, a violent person is a lazy person. Unwilling to do the hard work of problem solving, he throws a punch, or reaches for a gun. Cliched responses. All violence represents a failure of imagination.”

“Chhattarpur station,” the announcement is heard in the metro train’s PA system. “Please mind the gap.” It gives a friendly warning about the gap between the train and the platform.

Gaps are aplenty in India now, I reflect. Gap between the haves and have-nots. The wealthiest people of the world are in India. And hundreds of thousands who don’t get enough food to eat. Atmanirbharta belongs to hoardings. There’s a lot of gap between the slogans and the reality. Between word and deed. Not only in the most polluted city of the world but all over the country.

I am taking Gandhiji to my residence near Chhattarpur. Gandhiji is impressed by the enormous statue of Hanuman in the Chhattarpur temple complex.

“His kind of devotion is what makes people noble,” Gandhiji tells me. “It is a total surrender of the self to the divine. As Jesus did.”

Today is Good Friday, I remember. What more can you give than your life itself for any cause? That was the question of Good Friday. Didn’t Gandhi do the same? He gave his life for a cause. The cause was not Indian Independence. Indians never understood him. Now they are erasing him from history.

“Please, forgive us the gaps, Bapuji.” I utter in my mind.

PS. This post is part of #BlogchatterA2Z 2023

Yesterday’s: Friendship

Tomorrow: Hurt in the Heart

Comments

  1. My favorite post yet! Indians truly never understood Gandhi nor did we ever deserve him. I imagine Gandhiji would have so many things to say about today and the world in general, maybe he's happy he didn't have to see this day...and yep Rajiv chawk is very much how you described. You know its such timing of this post because you mention Chhattarpur here, i recently took a trip to the temple with my parents in navratri and..i didnt expect to see so many sinners and corruptness in a temple. Well, Happy Good Friday to all of us, if nothing else, we get a holiday~

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I was working in a school near Chhattarpur for 14 years. So the place is close to my heart. Delhi metro has carried me to many places. This post came as a fanciful thought yesterday as I remembered Delhi once again.

      Delete
  2. What a wonderful post Tom. You have summed it all so beautifully. There is a huge gap between the India Gandhiji envisaged and the India of 2023.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. The real tragedy is that the youth of today believe the new history being propagated.

      Delete
  3. Hari OM
    Wonderfully wrought musing on the Mahatma's stance. The news of the rewritten texts even made healines here! The heart breaks... YAM xx

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. My young students are not aware of the real freedom fighters. They think Godse and Savarkar are the heroes. That Modi liberated India from the corrupt Congress (there's some irony there, no doubt). That India is the world's superpower...

      Delete
  4. We are busy rewriting history while the biased infrastructure 'development' progresses unbridled.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Our visionary PM knows how to handle both efficiently.

      Delete
  5. loved,loved the post Sir, I think this is the best one yet in the series. It quietly tells the point, without any hammering, and yet makes the deepest impact.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Thanks, Harshita. It's quite difficult to write politics nowadays.

      Delete
  6. Of course Gandhi wouldn't like today's India, or maybe he might can't say. Rewriting or omitting history can never be good i agree with you on that. I do not however agree about the Hindu rashtra point. But yes Gandhi would probably think like you have written. A post to think and debate

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I wonder why you think that a Hindu Rashtra is not under construction.

      Delete
  7. Because construction of all mosques did not convert the nation nor construction of temples will. Not that i am in favour of constructing temples. The land can well be utilised elsewhere. Why one govt. is shaking the faith is strange

    ReplyDelete
  8. No government ever does. That's a utopian idea

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

Don Bosco

Don Bosco (16 Aug 1815 - 31 Jan 1888) In Catholic parlance, which flows through my veins in spite of myself, today is the Feast of Don Bosco. My life was both made and unmade by Don Bosco institutions. Any great person can make or break people because of his followers. Religious institutions are the best examples. I’m presenting below an extract from my forthcoming book titled Autumn Shadows to celebrate the Feast of Don Bosco in my own way which is obviously very different from how it is celebrated in his institutions today. Do I feel nostalgic about the Feast? Not at all. I feel relieved. That’s why this celebration. The extract follows. Don Bosco, as Saint John Bosco was popularly known, had a remarkably good system for the education of youth.   He called it ‘preventive system’.   The educators should be ever vigilant so that wrong actions are prevented before they can be committed.   Reason, religion and loving kindness are the three pillars of that syste...

The Adventures of Toto as a comic strip

  'The Adventures of Toto' is an amusing story by Ruskin Bond. It is prescribed as a lesson in CBSE's English course for class 9. Maggie asked her students to do a project on some of the lessons and Femi George's work is what I would like to present here. Femi converted the story into a beautiful comic strip. Her work will speak for itself and let me present it below.  Femi George Student of Carmel Public School, Vazhakulam, Kerala Similar post: The Little Girl

The Real Enemies of India

People in general are inclined to pass the blame on to others whatever the fault.  For example, we Indians love to blame the British for their alleged ‘divide-and-rule’ policy.  Did the British really divide India into Hindus and Muslims or did the Indians do it themselves?  Was there any unified entity called India in the first place before the British unified it? Having raised those questions, I’m going to commit a further sacrilege of quoting a British journalist-cum-historian.  In his magnum opus, India: a History , John Keay says that the “stock accusations of a wider Machiavellian intent to ‘divide and rule’ and to ‘stir up Hindu-Muslim animosity’” levelled against the British Raj made little sense when the freedom struggle was going on in India because there really was no unified India until the British unified it politically.  Communal divisions existed in India despite the political unification.  In fact, they existed even before the Briti...

Coffee can be bitter

The dawns of my childhood were redolent of filtered black coffee. We were woken up before the birds started singing in the lush green village landscape outside home. The sun would split the darkness of the eastern sky with its splinter of white radiance much after we children had our filtered coffee with a small lump of jaggery. Take a bite of the jaggery and then a sip of the coffee. Coffee was a ritual in our home back then. Perhaps our parents believed it would jolt our neurons awake and help us absorb our lessons before we set out on the 4-kilometre walk to school after all the morning rituals at home. After high school, when I left home for further studies at a distant place, the ritual of the morning coffee stopped. It resumed a whole decade later when I completed my graduation and took up a teaching job in Shillong. But I had lost my taste for filtered coffee by then; tea took its place. Plain tea without milk – what is known as red tea in most parts of India. Coffee ret...

Truths of various colours

You have your truth and I have mine. There shouldn’t be a problem – until someone lies. Unfortunately, lying has been elevated as a virtue in present India. There are all sorts of truths, some of which are irrefutable. As a friend said the other day with a little frustration, the eternal truth is this: No matter how many times you check, the Wi-Fi will always run fastest when you don’t actually need it – and collapse the moment you’re about to hit Submit . Philosophers call it irony. Engineers call it Murphy’s Law. The rest of us just call it life. Life is impossible without countless such truths. Consider the following; ·       Change is inevitable. ·       Mortality is universal. ·       Actions have consequences. [Even if you may seem invincible, your karma will catch up, just wait.] ·       Water boils at 100 o C under normal atmospheric pressure. ·    ...