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November 23, 2011

Where have All The Gandhis Gone? Part 2


Gandhi was a king without a throne; a prince without a scepter. A warrior of the true order of St. Michael, he carried no ordinary two-edged sword. And still he conquered an empire and ruled without a title or a crown. What Jesus did not achieve in his lifetime, Gandhi achieved: Through his instrumentality he brought an empire to its knees without firing a round of ammunition.
In the year 2010, here in Suriname, thousands of miles across the ocean from India, what does this have to do with us?
One year ago, on the occasion of the 140th Jayanthi, I posed a question: Where have all the 'Gandhis' gone? The question was a deliberate echo of Bob Dylan's famous song, 'Where have all the flowers gone?' a song that reverberated in an era of protest across the international airwaves even as war raged in parts of south-east Asia. And here we are gathered one year later, and like an old scratched record, Mr. Taylor poses the same question: 'Where have all the Gandhis gone?'
Some of you may ask why repeat the question a year later? The speaker's intent then, as today, is a deliberate attempt to demythologize Gandhi as a relic of history, an icon of the last century. It is a serious attempt to wrench Mohandas Gandhiji out of dry history books and academic study, and instead to say that his approach is relevant to our world, in our time, at this moment of history - right here and now with climate change on everyone's doorsteps in the global village of the 21St century - yes, right here in Suriname - even in the microcosm of the AlphaMax and the ICC.
One year ago, I advanced the view that great and noble souls like Jesus and Gandhi, the Buddha, Mohammed, St. Francis, Mother Teresa, Gurudev Tagore, Shri Yoganandaji, Dada Lekraj, Bahullah, the list is countless - they do not come to the world to be worshipped. Instead, they come and are sent as examples, Promethean light-bearers pointing the way - illuminating a course for those who follow. While worship may help in the establishing what they espouse, from their enlightened perspective, of greater importance and significance is the recognition that we who follow possess similar potentialities as they do, and therefore, in emulating and follow their examples, we would be agents in helping to establish a stable world order of peace, mutual respect, and enlightened happiness.
And so, the question Mr. Taylor posed last year and this one as well - where have all the Gandhis gone - is a rhetorical question. It is in fact a call to us gathered here this evening to become Gandhi-like - not just on this Jayanthi celebration, but in the living circumstances, however mundane or extraordinary, life presents or confronts us with.
Dear friends, allow me to touch on three aspects of the Mahatma's life that I think are worthy of reflection on this 141st birth anniversary.
The first is that quality that truth-seeking souls manifest in the ascent to lasting freedom and greatness: that is the quality of simplicity. Gandhi was an amazingly simple man - he stripped life down to her utter essentials: be honest and truthful, and take care in your actions - not to harm others. Here was a man who even as he walked with
kings, presidents and princes - he never lost the common touch. 'Harijan' a key Gandhian concept became a foundation pillar in his vision of social uplift. He even lived as one. No one was to be overlooked or excluded; none were to be left behind.

Given his concept of trusteeship, the wealthy or those with considerable means were to function as trustees for those who had little or were underprivileged. Talk about 'affirmative aciton' and 'no child left behind' - he was not someone who merely spoke about it, he walked the talk and made it his business to recruit others in fighting the cause for betterment of not only the middle class but the poorest of the poor. In our world where the divide between the rich and poor have reached epic proportions - the latest scats of Suriname suggest that the wealth of the nation is in the hands of 1% of the people - any child listening must also ask him or herself: Where have all the Gandhis gone?

Even as he debated matters of national significance and sought to find solutions and strategies for India's struggle for freedom and independence, he found time to be in the company of sheep and goats, and in utter simplicity, he even found time to play with clay. He understood the language of children and his consciousness reached down effortlessly to the inanimate realm - where being a vegetarian, drinking goat's milk and understanding his role to be a priest and steward of nature meant as much to him as debating the consequences and virtues of not taking up arms against India's colonial master, the British, during World War II. Here was a man for all seasons: a friend of children, a lover of animals, a clear thinker, a peace-maker, and yet a master strategist when it came to developing and executing a plan of action for national freedom.
The second aspect of the Mahatma Mr. Taylor would like to shine a torch on is Gandhi's unswerving commitment to self-transformation. Gandhi was not born Mahatma Gandhi; he was born Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi, the son of Putlibai and Karamchand. Like you and me, he was an 'atma' - a living soul. However, he became a Mahatma. The honorific title of Mahatma, just like the honorific title of Christ, was bestowed upon Gandhi not at birth; but in Gandhi's case, after he had passed the midpoint of his life. The question, we should ask therefore is how did he receive this title? (As a footnote, perhaps, a congruent line of questioning should be applied to the person of Jesus, on whom the honorific title of the Christ was bestowed more than 2000 years ago.) The honorific title of Mahatma -which Gandhi himself was not very comfortable with - was the result of Gandhi's successful struggle through persistence to push beyond commonly-accepted limits and standards; indeed the title was the reflection of the degree of lustrous excellence he had achieved in personal development, growth, and self-transformation. Here was a man who approached life as a polynomial series of challenges - some noxious and others quite innocuous. And, guess what, he was not willing to give up; he made it his business to persevere and remain undaunted to the bitter, however-bitter end.

Ladies and gentlemen, isn't this supposed to be true of our lives too? Isn't this what life calls each of us to? Like Gandhi, we're all engaged in complex, dynamic processes of struggle amid countless untold challenges. What must be defining for us like him is the spirit and values we bring to the experiences of our life's struggles. What must be defining in this drama called life is the quality of the energies we invest, the quality of the slumbering forces of will we manage to awaken, the quality of our commitment, and the fortitude we demonstrate as we wage the battles of life each step of the way, no matter at what cost.

My friends, it is through an awakening of our slumbering forces of will, an honest awakening of passionate consciences, an honest awakening of genuine soul commitment, an honest awakening of fortitude that we can begin to arouse ourselves to an identity with Gandhi, the man, who became a 'mahatma' after his achievement of lasting self-transformation.

As parents and adults, don't we ask our children to grow up? In fact, given the rhythm of life and just the biological necessity of development, we tell them, "Stop being childish and grow up!" But, doesn't the same principle of development, pushing the limits and going beyond mundane expectations, apply to us, the grown-ups and adults as well? Mr. Taylor constantly tells his colleagues - even in the presence of students: let's not forget, we're also in school - the classroom of life - and in that cadre, successful self-transformation is
an outcome of a life of worthy struggle.
One final aspect of the Mahatma I would like to touch on this evening is Gandhi's deep sense of hope and compassion. With him, there was always room for understanding. As tough as he was with himself and others, condemnation had no permanent role in his universe. In his closing years, we see this amply demonstrated in his struggle to convince Mr. Jinnah to stay in the union. Nonetheless, in this regard, I'd like to project just a few Gandhian aphorisms for reflection on this topic of compassion and hope:
The weak can never forgive. Forgiveness is the attribute of the strong.
The law an eye for an eye makes the whole world blind.
The law of love could be best understood and learned through little children.
I like your Christ, [but]... your Christians are so unlike your Christ.
What is obtained by love is retained for all time.
Earth provides enough to satisfy every man's need, but not every man's greed.
The roots of violence are: Wealth without work, pleasure without conscience, knowledge without character, commerce without morality, science without humanity, worship without sacrifice, politics without principles.
And so, dear friends, even as we each engage ourselves in the battle of life, let's not forget to move with caring, kind, loving, compassionate hearts. You see, in the Gandhian universe, as in the universe of Christ and the Buddha, enthroned in each being, indeed in each of us, is a Mahatma as well. It's just a matter of time before it is apparent - even as the same became eventually manifest in the lives of Jesus the Christ, Gautama Siddhartha, the Buddha, and in the last century, Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi, the Mahatma.

Permit me to remind you of Gandhi's words which last year's guest speaker, Ambassador Pascal Alan Nazareth, has written in his book Gandhi's Outstanding Leadership: "A small body of determined spirits fired by an unquenchable faith in their mission can alter the course of history."

The Gandhian vision did not dim in January 1948 when the lamp of his physical life went out. The vision still shines in the ether; and given the urgency of this time as the shades of climate change loom closer - it shines even brighter - merely awaiting receptive hearts and lives to beam through with renewed, enriched, invigorated brilliance and brightness.
Jai Gandhiji!

Sean Taylor

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