Ad Valorem
We have seen how the ideas upon which political economy is based
are
misleading. Translated into action they can only make the
individual and
the nation unhappy. They make the poor poorer and the rich richer
and
none are any the happier for it.
Economics do not take the conduct of men into account but hold
that
the accumulation of wealth is the sign of prosperity, and that the
happiness
of nations depends upon their wealth alone. The more factories,
the
merrier. Thus men leave village farms with their spring winds and
coming to cities, live diminished lives in the midst of noise, of
darkness,
and of deadly exhalation. This leads to deterioration of the
national
physique, and to increasing avarice and immorality. If some one
talks of
steps to be taken to eradicate vice, so-called wise men will say
that it is of
no use at all that the poor should receive education and that it
is best to
let things alone. They however forget that the rich are
responsible for the
immorality of the poor, who work like slaves in order to supply
them
with their luxuries, and have not a moment which they can call
their
own for self-betterment. Envying the rich, the poor also try to be
rich,
and when they fail in this effort, they are angry. They then lose
their
senses, and try to make money by force of fraud. Thus both wealth
and
labour are barren of all fruit or else are utilized for chicanery.
Labour in the real sense of the term is that which produces useful
articles.
Useful articles are those which support human life, such as food,
clothes or houses, and enable men to perfect the functions of
their own
lives to the utmost and also to exercise a helpful influence over
the lives
of others. The establishment of big factories with a view to
getting rich
may lead a person into sin. Many people amass riches but few make
a
good use of it. Accumulated wealth which leads to the destruction
of a
nation is of no earthly use. The capitalists of modern times are
respon26
/ M. K. Gandhi
sible for wide spread and unjust wars which originate from the
covetousness
of mankind.
Some people say that it is not possible to impart knowledge so as
to
ameliorate the condition of the masses; let us therefore live as
seems fit
and amass riches. But this is an immoral attitude. For the good
man who
observes ethical rules and does not give way to greed has a
disciplined
mind, does not stray from the right path, and influences others by
his
acts. If the individuals who constitute a nation are immoral, so
is the
nation too. If we behave as we choose and at the same time take
our
neighbours to task for their wrongdoing, the results can only be
disappointing.
We thus see that money is only an instrument which makes for
misery
as well as happiness. In the hands of a good man it helps in the
cultivation
of land and the harvesting of crops. Cultivators work in innocent
contentment and the nation is happy. But in the hands of a bad
man,
money helps to produce say gunpowder which works havoc among its
manufacturers as well as among its victims. Therefore THERE IS NO
WEALTH BUT LIFE. That country is the richest which nourishes the
greatest number of noble and happy human beings; that man is
richest
who, having perfected the functions of his own life to the utmost,
has
also the widest helpful influence, both personal and by means of
his
possessions, over the lives of others.
This is not a time for self-indulgence but for each of us to
labour
according to our capacity. If one man lives in idleness, another
has to put
in a double amount of work. This is at the root of the distress of
the poor
in England. Some so-called work is nugatory as in jewel-cutting
and
even destructive as in war. It brings about a diminution in the
national
capital, and is not beneficial to the worker himself. It seems as
if men are
employed, but really they are idle. The rich oppress the poor by
misuse
of riches. Employers and employees are at daggers drawn with one
another, and men are reduced to the level of beasts.
Unto This Last: A Paraphrase / 27
Conclusion
Ruskin’s book thus paraphrased has a lesson for Indians no less
than for
the Englishmen to whom it was primarily addressed. New ideas are
in
the air in India. Our young men who have received Western
education
are full of spirit. This spirit should be directed into the right
channels, as
otherwise it can only do us harm. ‘Let us have Swaraj’ is one
slogan; ‘Let
us industrialize the country’ is another.
But we hardly understand what Swaraj is. Natal for instance enjoys
Swaraj but her Swaraj stinks in our nostrils, for she crushes the
negroes,
and oppresses the Indians. If by some chance the negroes and the
Indians left Natal, its white men would fight among themselves and
bring about their own destruction.
If not like Natal’s will we have Swaraj as in the Transvaal one of
whose
leaders, General Smuts, breaks his promises, says one thing and
does
another? He has dispensed with the services of English policemen
and
employed Afrikanders instead. I do not think that this is going to
help
any of the nationalities in the long run. Selfish men will loot
their own
people, when there are no more ‘outsiders’ left to be looted.
Thus Swaraj is not enough to make a nation happy. What would be
the
result of Swaraj being conferred on a band of robbers? They would
be
happy only if they were placed under the control of a good man who
was not a robber himself. The United States, England and France
for
instance are powerful States, but there is no reason to think that
they are
really happy.
Swaraj really means self-control. Only he is capable of
self-control who
observes the rules of morality, does not cheat or give up truth,
and does
his duty to his parents, wife and children, servants and
neighbours. Such
a man is in enjoyment of Swaraj, no matter where he lives. A state
enjoys
Swaraj if it can boast of a large number of such good citizens.
It is not right that one people should rule another. British rule
in India
28 / M. K. Gandhi
is an evil, but let us not run away with the idea that all will be
well when
the British quit India.
The existence of British rule in the country is due to our
disunity,
immorality and ignorance. If these national defects were overcome,
not
only would the British leave India without a shot being fired but
we
would be enjoying real Swaraj.
Some foolish Indians rejoice in bomb-throwing, but if all the
Britishers
in the country were thus killed, the killers would become the
rulers of
India who would only have a change of masters. The bomb now thrown
at Englishmen will be aimed at Indians after the English are there
no
longer. It was a Frenchman who murdered the President of the
French
Republic. It was an American who murdered President Cleveland. Let
us
not blindly imitate Western people.
If Swaraj cannot be attained by the sin of killing Englishmen, it
cannot
be attained either by the erection of huge factories. Gold and
silver may
be accumulated but they will not lead to the establishment of
Swaraj.
Ruskin has proved this to the hilt. Western civilization is a mere
baby, a
hundred or only fifty years old. And yet it has reduced Europe to
a sorry
plight. Let us pray that India is saved from the fate that has
overtaken
Europe, where the nations are poised for an attack on one another,
and
are silent only because of the stockpiling of armaments. Some day
there
will be an explosion, and then Europe will be a veritable hell on
earth.
Non-white races are looked upon as legitimate prey by every
European
state. What else can we expect where covetousness is the ruling
passion
in the breasts of men? Europeans pounce upon new territories like
crows
upon a piece of meat. I am inclined to think that this is due to
their massproduction
factories.
India must indeed have Swaraj but she must have it by righteous
methods. Our Swaraj must be real Swaraj, which cannot be attained
by
either violence or industrialization. India was once a golden
land,
because Indians then had hearts of gold. The land is still the
same but it
is a desert because we are corrupt. It can become a land of gold
again
only if the base metal of our present national character is
transmuted
into gold. The philosopher’s stone which can effect this1 transformation
Unto This Last: A Paraphrase / 29
is a little word of two syllables – Satya (Truth). If every Indian sticks to
truth, Swaraj will come to us of its own accord.
1 ‘Institutions,’ says Herbert
Spencer, ‘are dependent on character; and
however changed in their superficial aspects, cannot be changed in
their
essential natures faster than character changes.’
ምንም አስተያየቶች የሉም:
አስተያየት ይለጥፉ