Mahatma
Gandhi. 'Father of the Nation' for a country with a billion people. The
Mahatma was assassinated by religious zealots more than half a decade
ago but his legacy continues in the concepts he pioneered and in the
social reforms he initiated. The bespectacled, Khadi-clad image of
Mahatma Ghandi is indelibly engraved on the conscience of every Indian
and on October 2 every year, on the eve of his birth anniversary, a
grateful nation pays homage to this frail-bodied man who had the vision
and courage to take on the might of the British Empire.
Over the years, Mahatma's principles of Satyagraha and nonviolence have
transcended geographical boundaries and they have been employed by
activists elsewhere in the world fighting oppressive regimes. Dr. Martin
Luther King Jr. used nonviolent civil disobedience while fighting the
Civil Rights Movement for African Americans in the United States. The
Nelson Mandela-led African National Congress overthrew the minority
white South African government after decades of peaceful non cooperation
movement.
While the Mahatma's ideology has inspired such epoch-making movements
in different corners of the world, unfortunately Gandhi's tenets have
been largely consigned to textbooks in his homeland. The younger
generation by and large has been oblivious to Bapu's principles and the
entire country is torn apart by violent separatist movements. Our
politicians may have taken to wearing immaculate white khadi kurtas, but
their inner souls are very much stained by blots of corruption. It is
about time people embraced the principles of Gandhiji in letter and
spirit so as to usher in a vibrant, peaceful world.