Hind Swaraj or Indian Home Rule
Hind Swaraj or Indian Home Rule is a book written by Mohandas K. Gandhi in 1909.[1] In it he expresses his views on Swaraj, modern civilization, mechanisation, among other matters.[2] In the book, Gandhi repudiates European civilization while expressing loyalty to higher ideals of empire ("moral empire").[1] The book was banned in 1910 by the British government in India as a seditious text.
Background[edit]
Mohandas Gandhi wrote this book in his native language, Gujarati, while traveling from London to South Africa on board SS Kildonan Castle. It has also been translated to French.[3]
Key arguments[edit]
Gandhi's Hind Swaraj takes the form of a dialogue between two characters, The Reader and The Editor. The Reader (specifically identified by the historian S. R. Mehrotra as Dr Pranjivan Mehta) essentially serves as the typical Indian countryman whom Gandhi would have been addressing with Hind Swaraj. The Reader voices the common beliefs and arguments of the time concerning Indian Independence. Gandhi, The Editor, explains why those arguments are flawed and interject his own arguments. As 'The Editor' Gandhi puts it, "it is my duty patiently to try to remove your prejudice."
In the dialogue that follows, Gandhi outlines four themes that structure his arguments.
- First, Gandhi argues that ‘Home Rule is Self Rule’. He argues that it is not enough for the British to leave only for Indians to adopt a British-styled society. As he puts it, some "want English rule without the Englishman ... that is to say, [they] would make India English. And when it becomes English, it will be called not Hindustan but Englishtan. This is not the Swaraj I want.”
- Gandhi also argues that Indian independence is only possible through passive resistance. In fact, more than denouncing violence, Gandhi argues that it is counter-productive; instead, he believes, “The force of love and pity is infinitely greater than the force of arms. There is the harm in the exercise of brute force, never in that of pity.” This is essential throughout Hind Swaraj.
- To exert passive resistance, Gandhi reasons that Swadeshi (self-reliance) be exercised by Indians, meaning the refusal of all trade and dealings with the British. He addresses the English when he states, “If you do not concede our demand, we shall be no longer your petitioners. You can govern us only so long as we remain the governed; we shall no longer have any dealings with you." Gandhi makes an intriguing argument here: if the British want India for trade, remove trade from the equation.
- Finally, Gandhi argues that India will never be free unless it rejects Western civilization itself. In the text he is deeply critical of western civilization, claiming, “India is being ground down, not under the English heel, but under that of modern civilization." He speaks about civilization not just in relation to India, though. He argues that “Western civilization is such that one has only to be patient and it will be self-destroyed." It is a profound repudiation. Not only is western civilization unhealthy for India, but western civilization is by its own virtue unhealthy.
Censorship[edit]
The Gujarati translation of Hind Swaraj was banned by the British authorities, on its publication in India.[4]
Reception[edit]
In September 1938, the philosophical magazine The Aryan Path published a symposium on Hind Swaraj.[5][6] The contributors were several noted writers: Frederick Soddy, Claude Houghton, G. D. H. Cole, C. Delisle Burns, John Middleton Murry, J. D. Beresford, Hugh Fausset, Gerald Heard and Irene Rathbone.[7] Their responses to Hind Swaraj varied from "enthusiasm to respectful criticism".[5]
See also[edit]
References[edit]
- ^ ab Sultan, Nazmul S. (2022). "Moral Empire and the Global Meaning of Gandhi's Anti-imperialism". The Review of Politics. doi:10.1017/S0034670522000560. ISSN 0034-6705.
- ^ "Hind Swaraj or Indian Home Rule (Complete Book Online)". Archived from the original on 2008-05-22. Retrieved 2008-05-15.
- ^ Hind Swaraj Text in French
- ^ Arvind Krishna Mehrotra, A History of Indian Literature in English. C. Hurst & Co. Publishers, 2003. ISBN 9781850656814 (p.139)
- ^ ab Anthony J. Parel, "Introduction" to Gandhi: 'Hind Swaraj' and Other Writings. Cambridge University Press, 1997, ISBN 0521574315 (p. lix).
- ^ Bhabani Bhattacharya, Mahatma Gandhi Arnold Heinemann Publishers, India (p. 176).
- ^ Chandran David Srinivasagam Devanesen, The Making of the Mahatma. Orient Longmans, 1969 (p. 392).
External links[edit]
- Indian Home Rule or Hind Swaraj by Mohandas K. Gandhi
- Hind Swaraj or Indian Home Rule public domain audiobook at LibriVox
Have you read Mahatma Gandhi's 'Hind Swaraj'?
Hind Swaraj is a small booklet that carries wisdom beyond its size and its time Sandeep Anirudhan, AUG 14 2022, 23:04 ISTUPDATED: AUG 15 2022, 00:21 IST Hind Swaraj. Credit: DH Photo As we celebrate 75 ...
Read more at: https://www.deccanherald.com/opinion/in-perspective/have-you-read-mahatma-gandhis-hind-swaraj-1136156.html
Have you read Mahatma Gandhi's 'Hind Swaraj'?
Hind Swaraj is a small booklet that carries wisdom beyond its size and its time
Sandeep Anirudhan, AUG 14 2022, 23:04 IST
UPDATED: AUG 15 2022, 00:21 IST
Hind Swaraj. Credit: DH Photo
As we celebrate 75 years of independence, it is a good time to review whether we have been true to the vision of our freedom fighters. But how do we do that if we don’t even know what the vision of the leader of the freedom movement was? Most Indians do not know that Gandhiji had in fact presented one as early as 1909 and that it remains perhaps his most important piece of writing. It is called Hind Swaraj. Without studying it, one understands neither Gandhiji nor the freedom movement. Sadly, however, most Indians haven’t read it. Quite typically, we called him the ‘father of the nation’, and entirely forgot his vision for it.
Hind Swaraj was, in fact, the most influential vision of a Free India. This seminal work inspired an entire generation to join the freedom struggle and to strive for the revival of the civilisational idea of India. It established Gandhiji as the leader of the freedom struggle and guided the movement.
Hind Swaraj is a small booklet that carries wisdom beyond its size and its time. It is a manifesto for civilisational recovery and renewal and shows Gandhiji’s true genius. It is of relevance not just for India, but for the world.
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It expresses the vision of a country that is independent not purely in political status, but in its culture, its self-belief, its relationship with nature, citizens and violence, its idea of governance, its economics, a vision of planetary sustainability, of universal fairness and equality. It is a definitive piece on decolonisation, striking deep at the building blocks that enable exploitation, extraction and subjugation of peoples and nations. Gandhiji believed that an India from which the British leave but in which Britishness stays, is not a free India at all; that if we brown-skins took over the administration, but the colonial administrative structure, laws and outlook remained, then our nation is not free at all. It is time to examine whether that is not, in fact, what we have done to ourselves.
Gandhiji championed decentralisation and devolution, in fact making it the defining aspect of true independence -- that communities may govern themselves, and their commons. This aspect of governance was ignored by the writers of our Constitution and is still struggling to find space in our governing structures.
However, it is on the greatest, and perhaps existentialist, challenge our generation faces – the climate change emergency -- that his thoughts are most pertinent. Hind Swaraj questioned the pursuit of the western notion of modernity based on ‘reductionism’, where progress is determined by material growth and externalisation of the planet itself. He stated in no uncertain terms that unlimited factory production and urbanisation would destroy our planet. He backed sustainable and distributed forms of production and habitation that would not put stress on the ecological balance.
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When this book (available at: https://www.mkgandhi.org/ hindswaraj/hindswaraj.htm) holds the key to what our freedom struggle aimed to establish as modern India, how is it that the average citizen is not even aware of this book?
Hind Swaraj should be declared the ‘national book’ so that every citizen can read it and evaluate whether we have steered our country in the direction of those lofty goals, set out long before we gained freedom.
Even a quick perusal of the book will reveal that as a nation, we seem to have lost our way. Pretty much every policy that independent India has adopted is at loggerheads with what Gandhiji would have liked to see us pursue. Almost in a textbook manner, Gandhiji articulated the path that India needed to avoid and the ones it should take to be able to lead the world out of the disastrous course it was on.
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As we stare at the consequences of unbridled capitalism, of planetary destruction, of worsening divides and widespread poverty, wars and destruction, of global warming and climate change, and hurtle towards possible mass extinction, we must wonder why we didn’t hear Gandhiji’s warnings.
Perhaps understanding the ideas contained in this book will lead us all toward new freedom of intellectual discussion, a culture of dialogue and tolerance, mutual respect, engagement rather than conflict, replacing competition with cooperation, and a movement towards true self-determination, respect for nature, and introspection of our ideas of progress and economic growth -- an exploration toward a sustainable future based on alternative models of economics and development.
It is time to restore Hind Swaraj to our national consciousness and correct our trajectory, away from neo-colonialism.
(The writer is founder of
Citizens’ Agenda for
Bengaluru)