Mahatma Gandhi
Mohandas Karamchand
Gandhi, commonly known as Mahatma Gandhi, was the preeminent leader of Indian
nationalism in British-ruled India.
Born : October 2,1969,Porbandar,Gujarat,India.
Assassinated : January 30,1948.Birla House.
Education : University College-London
University Of London.
Alfred High School.
Children: Harilal Gandhi,Devdas Gandhi,Manilal Gandhi,Ramdas Gandhi
"Just an old man in a loincloth in distant India:
Yet when he died, humanity wept." This was the observation of a newspaper
correspondent at the death of Mahatma Gandhi. The tragedy occurred in New Delhi
as the gaunt old man walked to a prayer-meeting and was engulfed by one of
history's great ironies - a life-long pacifist and promoter of non-violence
struck down by an assassin's bullet.
Gandhi's violent death
came just months after the realization of his long sought-after goal -
the
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independence of India
from Great Britain. It was a bittersweet victory for Gandhi because along with
India's independence came the partitioning of the sub-continent into two
separate states - Muslim-based Pakistan and Hindu-based India - an action he
thoroughly opposed. Gandhi did not take part in the celebration of India's
independence.
Death of the Mahatma
Vincent Sheean was an
American reporter and author who had covered trouble spots around the world in
the years prior to and during World War II. In 1947, Sheean traveled to India
and became a disciple of Gandhi in an attempt to find meaning in the violent
and disruptive events he had witnessed during his years of reporting. We join
his account as he rushes to join a prayer-meeting with Gandhi in the heart of
New Delhi in the early evening hours of January 30, 1948:
"I got a taxi and
went out to Birla House in time for the prayer-meeting. This time I was alone.
I stationed my taxi under a tree opposite the gate of Birla House and walked
down the drive to the prayer-ground. It was not yet five o'clock and people
were still streaming in on foot, in cars and with tongas. As I came on to the
prayer-ground at the end of the garden I ran into Bob Stimson, the Delhi correspondent
of the B.B.C. We fell into talk and I told him about the journey to Amritsar
and what had taken place there. It was unusual to see any representatives of
the press at the prayer-meeting; Bob explained that he had submitted some
questions to the Mahatma for the B.B.C. and thought he might as well stay for
the prayers since he was on the premises. He looked at his watch and said:
'Well, this is strange. Gandhi's late. He's practically never late.'
We both looked at our
watches again. It was 5:12 by my watch when Bob said: 'There he is.' We stood
near the corner of the wall, on the side of the garden where he was coming, and
watched the evening light fall on his shining dark-brown head. He did not walk
under the arbor this evening but across the grass, in the open lawn on the
other side of the flower-beds. (There was the arbored walk, and a strip of
lawn, and a long strip of flower-bed, and then the open lawn.)
It was one of those
shining Delhi evenings, not at all warm but alight with the promise of spring.
I felt well and happy and grateful to be here. Bob and I stood idly talking, I
do not remember about what, and watching the Mahatma advance toward us over the
grass, leaning lightly on two of 'the girls,' with two or three other members
of his 'family' (family or followers) behind them. I read afterward that he had
sandals on his feet but I did not see them. To me it looked as if he walked
barefoot on the grass. It was not a warm evening and he was wrapped in homespun
shawls. He passed by us on the other side and turned to ascend the four or five
brick steps which led to the terrace or prayer-ground.
Here, as usual, there
was a clump of people, some of whom were standing and some of whom had gone on
their knees or bent low before him. Bob and I turned to watch - we were perhaps
ten feet away from the steps-but the clump of people cut off our view of the
Mahatma now; he was so small. Then I heard four small, dull, dark explosions.
'What's that?' I said to Bob in sudden horror. 'I don't know,' he said. I
remember that he grew pale in an instant. 'Not the Mahatma!' I said, and then I
knew.
Inside my own head there
occurred a wavelike disturbance which I can only compare to a storm at sea -
wind and wave surging tremendously back and forth. I remember all this
distinctly; I do not believe that I lost consciousness even for a moment,
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although there may have
been an instant or two of half-consciousness. I recoiled upon the brick wall
and leaned against it, bent almost in two. I felt the consciousness of the
Mahatma leave me then-I know of no other way of expressing this: he left me.
...The storm inside my head continued for some little time-minutes, perhaps; I
have no way of reckoning.
...lt was during this
time, apparently, that many things happened: a whole external series of events
took place in my immediate neighborhood - a few yards away - and I was unaware
of them. A doctor was found; the police took charge; the body of the Mahatma
was, carried away; the crowd melted, perhaps urged to do so by the police. I
saw none of this. The last I saw of the Mahatma he was advancing over the grass
in the evening light, approaching the steps. When I finally took my fingers out
of my mouth and stood up, dry-eyed, there were police and soldiers and not many
people, and there was Bob Stimson. He was rather breathless; he had gone
somewhere to telephone to the B.B.C. He came with me down the steps to the
lawn, where we walked up and down beside the flower-bed for a while. The room
with the glass doors and windows, by the rose garden at the end of the arbor,
had a crowd of people around it. Many were weeping. The police were endeavoring
to make them leave. Bob could not tell me anything except that the Mahatma had
been taken inside that room. On the following day he told me that he had seen
him carried away and that the khadi which he wore was heavily stained with
blood."
References:
Vincent Sheean's account appears in: Sheean, Vincent, Lead,
Kindly Light (1949); Ashe, Geoffrey, Gandhi (1968).
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