There seems to be no historical warrant for the belief that
an exaggerated practice of Ahimsa synchronises with our becoming bereft of
manly virtues. During the past 1,500 years we have, as a nation, given ample
proof of physical courage, but we have been torn by internal dissensions and
have been dominated by love of self instead of love of country. We have, that
is to say, been swayed by the spirit of irreligion rather than of religion.
I do not know how far the charge of unmanliness can be made
good against the Jains. I hold no brief for them. By birth I am a Vaishnavite,
and was taught Ahimsa in my childhood. I have derived much religious benefit
from Jain religious works as I have from scriptures of the other great faiths of
the world. I owe much to the living company of the deceased philosopher,
Rajachand Kavi, who was a Jain by birth. Thus, though my views on Ahimsa are a
result of my study of most of the faiths of the world, they are now no longer
dependent upon the authority of these works. They are a part of my life, and,
if I suddenly discovered that the religious books read by me bore a different
interpretation from the one I had learnt to give them, I should still hold to
the view of Ahimsa as I am about to set forth here.
Our Shastras seem to teach that a man who really practises
Ahimsa in its fulness has the world at his feet; he so affects his surroundings
that even the snakes and other venomous reptiles do him no harm. This is said
to have been the experience of St. Francis of Assisi.
In its negative form it means not injuring any living being
whether by body or mind. It may not, therefore, hurt the person of any
wrong-doer, or bear any ill-will to him and so cause him mental suffering. This
statement does not cover suffering caused to the wrong-doer by natural acts of
mine which do not proceed from ill-will. It, therefore, does not prevent me
from withdrawing from his presence a child whom he, we shall imagine, is about
to strike. Indeed, the proper practice of Ahimsa requires me to withdraw the
intended victim from the wrong-doer, if I am, in any way whatsoever, the
guardian of such a child. It was, therefore, most proper for the passive
resisters of South Africa to have resisted the evil that the Union Government
sought to do to them. They bore no ill-will to it. They showed this by helping
the Government whenever it needed their help. Their resistance consisted of
disobedience of the orders of the Government, even to the extent of suffering
death at their hands. Ahimsa requires deliberate self-suffering, not a
deliberate injuring of the supposed wrong-doer.
In its positive form, Ahimsa means the largest love, the
greatest charity. If I am a follower of Ahimsa, I must love my enemy. I must
apply the same rules to the wrong-doer who is my enemy or a stranger to me, as
I would to my wrong-doing father or son. This active Ahimsa necessarily
includes truth and fearlessness. As man cannot deceive the loved one, he does
not fear or frighten him or her. Gift of life is the greatest of all gifts; a
man who gives it in reality, disarms all hostility. He has paved the way for an
honourable understanding. And none who is himself subject to fear can bestow
that gift. He must, therefore, be himself fearless. A man cannot then practice
Ahimsa and be a coward at the same time. The practice of Ahimsa calls forth the
greatest courage. It is the most soldierly of a soldier's virtues. General
Gordon has been represented in a famous statue as bearing only a stick. This
takes us far on the road to Ahimsa. But a soldier, who needs the protection of
even a stick, is to that extent so much the less a soldier. He is the true
soldier who knows how to die and stand his ground in the midst of a hail of
bullets. Such a one was Ambarisha, who stood his ground without lifting a
finger though Duryasa did his worst. The Moors who were being pounded by the
French gunners and who rushed to the guns' mouths with 'Allah' on their lips,
showed much the same type of courage. Only theirs was the courage of
desperation. Ambarisha's was due to love. Yet the Moorish valour, readiness to
die, conquered the gunners. They frantically waved their hats, ceased firing,
and greeted their erstwhile enemies as comrades. And so the South African
passive resisters in their thousands were ready to die rather than sell their
honour for a little personal ease. This was Ahimsa in its active form. It never
barters away honour. A helpless girl in the hands of a follower of Ahimsa finds
better and surer protection than in the hands of one who is prepared to defend
her only to the point to which his weapons would carry him. The tyrant, in the
first instance, will have to walk to his victim over the dead body of her
defender; in the second, he has but to overpower the defender; for it is
assumed that the cannon of propriety in the second instance will be satisfied
when the defender has fought to the extent of his physical valour. In the first
instance, as the defender has matched his very soul against the mere body of the
tyrant, the odds are that the soul in the latter will be awakened, and the girl
would stand an infinitely greater chance of her honour being protected than in
any other conceivable circumstance, barring of course, that of her own personal
courage.
If we are unmanly today, we are so, not because we do not
know how to strike, but because we fear to die. He is no follower of Mahavira,
the apostle of Jainism, or of Buddha or of the Vedas, who being afraid to die,
takes flight before any danger, real or imaginary, all the while wishing that
somebody else would remove the danger by destroying the person causing it. He
is no follower of Ahimsa who does not care a straw if he kills a man by inches
by deceiving him in trade, or who would protect by force of arms a few cows and
make away with the butcher or who, in order to do a supposed good to his
country, does not mind killing off a few officials. All these are actuated by
hatred, cowardice and fear. Here the love of the cow or the country is a vague
thing intended to satisfy one's vanity, or soothe a stinging conscience.
Ahimsa truly understood is in my humble opinion a panacea for
all evils mundane and extra-mundane. We can never overdo it. Just at present we
are not doing it at all. Ahimsa does not displace the practice of other
virtues, but renders their practice imperatively necessary before it can be
practised even in its rudiments. Mahavira and Buddha were soldiers, and so was
Tolstoy. Only they saw deeper and truer into their profession, and found the
secret of a true, happy, honourable and godly life. Let us be joint sharers
with these teachers, and this land of ours will once more be the abode of gods.
Source: The Modern Review, October, 1916.
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