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FRONTIER GANDHI
Nonviolent action
has been used by groups which have been famous for their
very aggressive behaviour and violence. A case in point
are the Pathans in the North-West Frontier Province of
British India. Pathans were known for their cruelty--
they were bloodthirsty and highly vindictive. They led
wild, free, active lives in the rugged mountain
fortresses. War was their traditional business. The
Pathans were Muslims, a religion widely regarded as
approving of war for a good cause. Among these Pathans
was Khan Abdul Gaffar Khan "the Frontier
Gandhi" who organized a powerful movement of the
Khudai Khidmatgars or True Servants of God, which was
pledged to complete nonviolence and whose members became
some of the bravest and most daring and reliable
nonviolent resisters ofd Indias struggle for
independence. Their aggressiveness, bravery and daring
found new nonviolent expressions through nonviolent
techniques.
Ghaffar Khan wrote :"
I have one great desire :
I want to rescue these gentle, brave patriotic, people
from the tyranny of the foreigners who have disgraced and
dishonoured them.
I want to create for them a world of freedom, where they
can live in peace, where they can laugh and be happy.
I want to kiss the ground where their ruined homes once
stood, before they were destroyed by savage strangers.
I want to take a broom and sweep the alleys and the
lanes, and I want to clean their houses with my own
hands.
I want to wash away the stains of blood from their
garments.
I want to show the world how beautiful they are, these
people from the hills and then I want to reclaim:
"Show me, if you can, any gentler, more courteous,
more cultured people than these."
"The genius of
Badshah Khan saw Pathan violence for what it was--a
consequence not of bloodlust but of ignorance,
superstition, and the crushing weight of custom. Beneath
the violence and ignorance; Khan saw men and women
capable of extraordinary self-effacement, endurance, and
courage. He knew his task: to educate, to enlighten, to
lift up, to inspire. With understanding, he saw the
violenceand venality would fall from the Pathan character
like dead limbs from a tree. It was his job to weild the
axe."
The Northwest Frontier Province was the gateway to India
and the people revered Abdul Ghaffar Khan as a saint and
called him Badshah Khan, the "King of Khans".
The British had reason to fear him. The Northwest
Frontier Province was the only part of the British Empire
never to be fully subjugated. This was inspite of
shelling, burning,bombing, beating, jailing, and
attempting to bribe them into submission. But nothing
worked for long. It is no wonder then, that during the
Indian freedom struggle, Khan and his 100,000 -man
nonviolent army, were the target of severe and savage
repression. Pathans had to endure mass shootings,
torture, the destructionof their fields and homes, jail,
flogging, and humiliations, but they remained nonviolent
- suffering and dying in large numbers to win their
freedom. The British were baffled by this change in the
Pathans, from violence to nonviolence, they couldnt
understandit -- or believe it, often in solitary
confinement. He said :
"There is nothing
surprising in a muslim or a Pathan like me subscribing to
the creed of nonviolence. It is not a new creed. It was
followed fourteen hundred years ago by the Prophet all
the time he was in Mecca, and it has since been followed
by all those who wanted to throw off an oppressors
yoke. But we had so far forgotten it that when Gandhiji
placed it before us, we thought he was sponsoring a novel
creed."
In organising the
non-violent army there were three phases: first Khan set
up Azad Schools, then formed Pakhtun Jirga, youth League,
and then came the Khudai Khidmatgars.
With the Youth League he launched a new Program of
educational, social and political reforms. This readied
people for his next step which was nonviolent action.
One of his first concerns was the role of women. Badshah
Khan had long lamented the traditional system of purdah,
which restricts Muslim womenfrom participating fully in
society. He encouraged them to come out behind the veil,
as the women in his own family had done. His sisters
became increasingly active in his movement, until by 1930
they were touring the districts of the Frontier and
giving speeches--activities which would have required
courage even in the cosmopolitan capitals of Islam, but
which in the conservative Frontier showed truly
extraordinary daring......
To help spread these ideas, Khan had been thinking for
some time about starting a journal written in Pakhtu. He
knew that Pathans who emigrated to other parts of the
world were quick to adopt the local language and drop
their mother tongue, and even in the Frontier, educated
Pathans had abandoned Pakhtu in favour of English and
Urdu. This saddened Khan. He loved the rolling rythms of
his language and its body of folklore, epics, and lyrics,
which included some of the finest mystical poetry on the
subcontinent.
A journal in Pakhtu could restore the Pathans pride
in their own language, and at the same time carry the
message of reform to all Pathans.
"The Pathan." was an instand success, not only
in the Frontier but elsewhere -- even as far away as the
United States, where many Pathans still live. Educated
Pathans were delighted to find their
"Pathanness" celebrated : they were a noble,
daring, effervescent race.
This journal was also a help in preparing the Pathans for
the change from violence to nonviolence.
The next step was the Khidmatgars.
Their motto was freedom, their aim, service. Since God
himself needed no service, they would serve his people.
Khudai
Khimatgars
The Khudai Khidmatgars, under the leadership of Abdul
Ghaffar Khan, became historys first professional
nonviolent army -- and its most improbable. Any Pathan
could join, provided he took the armys oath :
I am a Khudai
Khidmatgar, and as God needs no service, but serving
his creation is serving him, I promise to serve
humanity inthe name of God.
I promise to refrain from violence and from taking
revenge. I promise to forgive those who oppress me or
treat me with cruelty.
I promise to refrain from taking part in feuds and
quarrels and from creating enmity.
I promise to treat every Pathan as my brother and
friend.
I promise to refrain from antisocial customs and
practices.
I promise to live a simple life, to practice virtue
and to refrain from evil.
I promise to practice good manners and good behaviour
and not to lead a life of idleness. I promise to
devote at least two hours a day to social work......
They began by wearing a
simple white oveshirt, but the white was soon dirtied. A
couple of men had their shirts dyed at the local tannery,
and the brick-red colour proved a breakthrough. It did
not dirty easily, the dye was cheap, and - best of luck
-- it had style. Villagers dropped their plows to see who
these glowing figures were.
Recruits didnot come easily, but Khan and his five
hundred volunteers persisted. Within a few months they
had five hundred recruits -- not enough for a
Raj-shattering holy war, but a beginning. Volunteers who
took the oath formed platoons wih commanding officers and
learned basic army discipline--everything that did not
require the use of arms. They had drills, hadges, a
tricolor flag, the entire military hierarchy of mark--and
a bagpipe crops......
Volunteers went to the villages and opened schools, held
work projects, and maintained order at public gatherings.
From time to time they drilled in work camps and took
long military-style marches into the hills. As they
marched they sang :
We are the army of
God,
By death or wealth unmoved,
We march, our leader and we,
Ready to die.
We serve and we love
Our people and our cause.
Freedom is our goal,
Our lives the price we pay.
Watching the narrow
columns threading a curving mountain pass, one could
easily imagine that some angry mullah was unleashing
another holy war against the foreigners. But these
Pathans, who for years had carried rifles and tucked
small armories of revolvers and knives inside their
waistbands, now carried only a stick for walking. They
armed themselves only with their discipline, their faith,
and their native mentle.
Under the leadership of the towering "Red
Gandhi", Ghaffar Khan, the satyagrahis took over he
city of Kabul, induced crack British units to lay down
their arms and proved to the world that martial men, in
fact, may make the best satyagrahis.
Gandhi spent two months with them in autumn of 1938. At
that time they had over 100,000 members of the Khudai
Khaidmatgars. They were pledged to nonviolence in
thought, word and deed. Badshah Khan, as he as
affectionately called among his Pathan people, was a
devout and loyal Muslim who never missed a namaz or a
fast; but Islam for him meant amal, yakeen, muhabhat
(work, faith, love), and he deplored the communal tension
which prevailed in so many places. " At the back of
our quarrels", he said, " is the failure to
recognize that all faiths contain enough inspiration for
their adherents. The Holy Quran says in so many words
that God sends messengers for all peoples, and these
messengers are their prophets. Details differ, because
each faith takes the flavour of the soil from which it
springs".
Because of this Frontier Gandhi the formerly warlike
Frontier Province, home of the Pathans became one of the
most peaceful safest centres on the campaign, in spite of
the Government atrocities there.
Suffering
For the Cause
At Peshawar, the capital of the North-West Frontier
Province on April 23rd, 1931, the most brutal and most
controversial tragedy took place. The All India Congress
Committee had gone there to enquire into the working of
the North-West Frontier regulations. They were stopped
and the leaders were arrested and a spontaneous hartal
was observed all over the city. As the crowds were
returning from the jail after the leaders arrest,
two armoured cars full of soldiers came from behind.
People were brutally run over. In spite of people killed
and wounded, they remained peaceful, but when one
armoured car caught fire, the English soldiers fired at
the crowd in which there were women and children. Still
the crowd did not panic even though there were hepas of
wounded and dying lying about.
At one point the government ordered its crack Garhwal
Rifles to fire on the crowds. Faced with unarmed men,
women and children lying down to be slaughtered, the
Garhwalis refused. "You may blow us from your
guns,if you like", they told their officers.
(Indians in the Great Mutiny of 1857 had been shot from
cannon as punishment.) "We shall not shoot our
unarmed brethren."
When word of the Garhwalis heroism got out, it
moved all India. The soldiers paid a high price for it.
The whole platoon was arrested, and seventeen men were
court-martialed and sentenced: one to banishment in an
overseas penal colony for life, another to fiteen
years imprisonment, and the rest to rigorous prison
terms.
This was one of the most famous regiments in the world,
known for their loyalty as well as their courage, and
their refusal to obey orders gave the British a chilling
reminder of the Great Mutiny. They were determined to
check it. Even after an eventual truce freed all of the
one hudred thousand political prisoners of the Salt
Satyagraha, the Garhwalis were exempted from the general
amnesty and served their full terms.
Peshawar itself fell into chaos, as the troops and police
tried to quell the demonstrations. One of their first act
was to declare the Khudai Khidmatgars illegal and close
down their office, scattering all their papers and
removing their cash. The Pukhtoon was declared illegal
and its publication ceased.
On October 27, 1934, Khan told the Indian Christian
Association the story of the savage repression unfolded,
Khans emotions surged and he unveiled his deepest
feelings. "What is our fault?", he asked
rhetorically :
Our fault is that our
province is the gateway of India. Because we live there,
the government calls us the gatekeepers and openly tells
us, "How can we give reforms to the gatekeeps?"
The Britishers regard it as dangerous and think that they
will not be able to rule India if the gatekeepers join
hands with the Indians. It was for this very reason that
our movement was crushed at that very outset....We
started our own schools, but the government,under some
pretext or other, cleverly ruined the educational
institutions of our little children
We were born in the Frontier Province and this is why we
were doomed. This is our great crime, that we wanted to
see the people of the villages civilized in that very
Frontier Province which is called the gateway of India,
while they wanted that these people should go on fighting
among themselves and remain in need of them and remain in
a ruined and destoyed condition so that they might rule
our country without feeling any anxiety.
What alarmed the British--
and stunned Indians-- was the nonviolence of the Pathans.
No one expected it, and the British were clearly
unnerved. "The British feared a non-violent Pathan
more than a violent one", Khan wrote later.
"all the horrors the British perpetrated on the
Pathans had only one purpose: to provoke them to
violence". Much of the governments extreme
behavior during the months that followed can be
understood only as attempts to goad the Pathans into
breaking their nonviolent vow. If they broke down and
retaliated, the British would be back on familiar ground.
The government tried other methods. Martial law was
declared in August and the province was placed completely
in the hands of the military. Khudai Khidmatgars were
stripped and flogged and made to run the gauntlet through
cordons of soldiers and proded them with rifles and
bayonets as they passed. One enterprising assistant
superintendent, a Mr. Jameson, had volunteers stripped
and physically humiliated in public, then thrown into
nearby cesspools. For some the strain was too great. They
chose sucide rather than break their vow of nonviolence.
The Brtish also tried to subvert the movement by
insinuating a Bolshevik influence among the red shirts.
An order was sent from the British commissioner to all
the village chiefs :
You must prevent Congress volunteers wearing red jackets
from entering your villages. The call themselves Khudai
Khidmatgars (Servants of God). But in reality they are
servants of Gandhi. They were the dress of Bolsheviks.
They will create the same atmosphere as you have heard of
in the Boshevik dominion.
" The two years that followed", says a Pathan
writer,Mohammed Yunnus : formed an astounding period of
darkness for the province. Shootings, beatings and other
acts of provocation were perpetrated against these
people, who had never suffered before without avenging
themselves. "Gunning the Red Shirts" was a
popular sport and pasttime of the British forces in the
province, observed an American tourist.
At Kohat, in the bitter cold of the winter, our men
beaten up and later thrown into the icy stream running
through the city. It was the same story at Bannu (where
the British made an unsuccessful blockade to starve the
villagers into submission) and Dera Ismail Khan. The
residents of Swabi saw their fields destroyed, their
wheat stocks ruined by oil poured upon them.
But the Pathans, notwithstanding the fact that they had
been brought up in an atmosphere of violence and
bloodshed, stood unmoved by such provocations and died
peacefully in large numbers for the attainment of their
goal.
" Throwing away ones weapons is not
enough," Gandhi empbhasised, "Nonviolence is an
active principle of the highest order. It is soul force,
the power of Godhead within us." He stepped quickly
across the furrows of the cotton field. "We become
Godlike to the extent we realise nonviolence. Even a tiny
grain of true nonviolence acts in a silent, subtle and
unseen way, and leavens the whole society."
Gandhi said of Badhshah Khan :
Whatever the Khudai Khidmatgars may ultimately turn out
to be, there can be no doubt about what their leader is.
He is unquestionably a man of God. He believes in His
living presence and knows that his movement will prosper
only if God wills it. Having put his whole soul into his
cause, he remins indifferent as to what happens.
When we parted at Taxila, our eyes were wet. The Frontier
Province must remain a place of frequent pilgrimage for
me. For though the rest of India may fail toshow true
nonviolence, there seems to be good ground for hoping
that the Frontier Province will pass through the fiery
ordeal.
The reason is simple. Badshah Khan commands willing
obedience fom his adberents. He has but to say the word,
and it is carried out. His nonviolence is no lip service.
His whole heart is in it. Let the doubters live with him
as I have all these precious five weeks and their doubt
will be dissolved like mist before the morning sun.
He never saw a unified India. His Frontier Province was
made a part of Pakistan, all his lifes efforts
ended in abandonment by India.
Gandhi confessed later that he could not bear to see
Khans grief. "His inner agony wrings my heart.
But, if I gave way to tears, it would be cowardly, and
stalwart Pathan as he is, he would break down. So I go
about my business unmoved. That is no small thing."
The two Gandhis said goodbye: " The two aging
warriors stood for a long time on the platform and looked
at each other: the Hindu Mahatma and the Muslim Fakir
wedded in a union of sacrifice and service.
What needed to be said? The understanding had long ago
passed beyond words. Their spirits met far above
language. They did not knwo when they would meet
again--they did not need tro know. They were Khudai
Khidmatgars, servants of God. They would serve and God
would decide where and how.
Khan watched the express pull out of the station in a
burst of steam and clatter. Hundreds of robbed and saried
figures swirled around and past him toward the door of
the big terminal--and toward freedom. And his Pathans?
They would prevail. If they could find out their true
strength, it would not matter whether they were part of
India or Pakistan.
As for himself, Khan was at peace. His surrender long ago
to the will of God shielded him like armour from these
setbacks. He had not looked for rest in his life, and he
would not start looking now. There was work to do.
Khan glanced up at the large board near the top of the
terminal: the days arrivals and departures. He
smiled. An express left for the Frontier in two hours. It
was time he got back to his people.
He stepped through the rush of travellers toward the
ticket window. The plum orchard behind the farmhouse
would have exploded in pink by now, he thought. Its
splendor would not last much longer. It was time to go
home.
The world mourned the death of this great freedom fighter
and India said goodbye to one of the last of these
stalwart men who brought Indias Independence.
See Appendix 5 for Prerequisite for Satyagraha, Rules for
a Satyagrahi, Requisite qualifications for a Satyagrahi,
and Qualifications of a Peace Brigade. These points on
Satyagraha were formulated by Gandhi for his time. Today
we see activists keeping to the spirit of Gandhi but
adapting some of the principles to suit or reality.
Spinning, amber charkha as a home industry doesnt
give a living daily wage, also if you buy the quality of
khadi available to ordinary people, it doesnt last as
long as synthetic material at comparable prices. So pure
Satyagraha today need not include spinning, weaving, or
wearing only khadi cloth.
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