Gita Press and the Making of Hindu India (8 page)

BOOK: Gita Press and the Making of Hindu India
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Bride-to-be Lakshmi, who eventually had to wait a long time for marriage, would also inquire about Devdas, writing to Poddar in chaste Hindi. She would be coy in her approach to the subject of her fiancé’s health, often asking about Devdas only in the last paragraph of her postcards sent from Coimbatore or Tiruchangadu. Poddar also received requests for updates on Devdas’s health from G.D. Birla, Narandas Gandhi (brother of Maganlal Gandhi singled out by the Mahatma as his heir),
42
Jamnalal Bajaj (then in London), Brij Krishna (Gandhi’s close aide in Delhi), Madan Mohan Malaviya and others.

Poddar did his best. The inspector general of prisons based in Nainital was requested to grant a ‘daily interview’ with Devdas.
43
Poddar’s request stated that Devdas—‘laid up with fever since the last 12 days’—was the son of Mahatma Gandhi. ‘I am very intimately connected with his family, and as such it is but natural if I feel anxious for him . . . I am here in Gorakhpur and can be of some service to Mr Devdas as well as to the jail authorities in the treatment of his ailments.’ Aware that his past political record could be a deterrent to his meeting Devdas in jail, Poddar assured the authorities in a wire to the IG (prisons): ‘Self (Poddar) detached from politics known to authorities.’ But the request was rejected in a terse four-word wire from the authorities: ‘Daily interview not permissible.’ Eventually, Poddar managed to meet Devdas twice in jail, and sent out a press communique to Malaviya’s daily
The Leader
,
Aaj
and the Associated Press.
44
Devdas’s condition, Poddar said, was ‘quite satisfactory’; he was merely suspected of typhoid, but sixteen days of fever had resulted in weight loss of 15 pounds (over 6 kg).
The Leader
carried the news prominently, quoting Poddar extensively.

Gandhi thanked Poddar profusely for taking care of Devdas. ‘I shall not feel anxious about Devdas since you are there. Moreover, Devdas had written to me that you treated him in a very loving manner. The doctor is really a good man. I shall always expect to receive letters from you time to time.’
45
After Devdas was released, Gandhi again wrote to Poddar expressing his affection: ‘You are finally free from worrying about Devdas. I have received all your letters. Why should I feel obliged? The civilised way is to seek such help in silence. Only God can reward for such selfless service, a human being cannot. I think such help should be taken in silence.’
46
A letter from Narandas Gandhi followed, with more explicit gratitude to Poddar: ‘The kind of interest you have shown in our family matters and sense of urgency you have displayed is praise- worthy. Your hard work and anxiety did not fail. Devdas has been released. He must have met you.’
47

The year 1932, however, proved to be a watershed in the Gandhi– Poddar relationship. On 2 August 1932 Gandhi wrote from Yerwada jail to Poddar amidst growing fear that the British government would accept the demand for separate electorates for untouchables, passionately advocated by Bhim Rao Ambedkar at the Round Table Conference. Gandhi was still in Yerwada when British prime minister Ramsay McDonald announced acceptance of separate electorate for untouchables. Determined to ‘resist the decision with my life’, Gandhi decided to go on a ‘fast without food save water with or without salt and soda’.
48
The decision to fast had an immediate impact. On the one hand, orthodox elements within the Congress like Malaviya, Rajagopalachari and Hindu Mahasabha’s B.S. Moonje sat at the negotiating table with leaders of the untouchable class such as B.R. Ambedkar, M.C. Rajah and P.N. Rajbhoj, resulting in the Poona Pact of 1932. On the other, news of Gandhi’s fast caused a huge moral upsurge throughout the country. From conservative Allahabad to cosmopolitan Bombay, temple after temple opened its doors to untouchables. In an unprecedented move, six temples of Bombay took a poll on the issue by placing a box at the entrance, and those in favour of entry by untouchables won by a thumping majority—to be precise 24,979 people were in favour against a hopeless 445 who opposed the move. While Padmaja Naidu called it a ‘catharsis’ that would cleanse Hinduism of the ‘accumulated corruption of centuries’, Rabindranath Tagore, who had rushed to see Gandhi after the news of his fast unto death, called it a ‘wonder’.
49

G.D. Birla conveyed news of Gandhi’s fast and the subsequent Poona Pact to Poddar who was in his native Ratangarh. For a shocked Poddar, at the helm of a flourishing publishing house propagating a ritualistic form of Hinduism with strong emphasis on the fourfold varna system, the change was far too sweeping, and a huge threat to the existing social order. He immediately wrote to Gandhi, beginning by chiding the Mahatma for thanking him for taking care of Devdas in Gorakhpur jail. ‘I do not know why you thought of writing these words. Maybe I am the one feeling too proud of what I have done and wanted to make you feel obliged. Fact is I could not take much care of Devdas. Whatever I could do is nothing more than love and affection for him.’
50
Poddar reminded Gandhi of an incident in Bombay, many years ago, when the Mahatma was unwell in Juhu and
Navjivan
had made a public announcement that no one should come to meet him. Unaware of the statement in
Navjivan
, Poddar had gone to meet Gandhi and was being turned away when Gandhi himself sent for him and made it clear that the newspaper announcement was not meant for family members. ‘I still remember your affectionate words . . . From that day I consider myself your family member. In such a context what I did for Devdas is neither unique nor worth talking (about) . . .’

Niceties over, Poddar now raised the issue that had been troubling him. He was careful to tell Gandhi that after much deliberation he had decided to speak out, like a child, and requested Gandhi to read the letter and advise him.

Poddar then came to his point: ‘These days a big agitation by dalits is going on in the country that has intensified due to your fast. At various places, people are dining with dalits and they are being allowed inside temples. Outcome only god knows. Just like those believing in god and shastras are accused of blind faith I find that this movement has not only become a victim of blind faith but also there is lack of discernment. Even those in favour of dining with dalits agree (though I do not equate dining with them as a mark of equality) that they cannot be considered pure until they have a pure bath, wear fresh clothes, give up alcohol and meat or at least stop feasting on dead cattle. Only then co-dining makes sense. But your common dining and temple-entry movement is not even checking if they have fulfilled these norms. What is taking place is mere eating together, letting them inside temples, and allowing them to participate in rituals. No one is talking of upliftment of dalits but only reiterating their untouchable status. Is this lack of restraint or reform? Is this enrichment of purity or its destruction? Have you thought of the repercussions of this unbridled disrespect to our body and soul?

‘With due respect I would like to reiterate that dining together and equal rights in everything would not lead to love for dalits. That would happen only with pure heart and good behaviour. Even Pandavas and Kauravas used to dine together but it led to a big battle.’

Not sure if his arguments would convince Gandhi, Poddar resorted to the ultimate ploy of holding up a mirror to Gandhi, reminding him that his reformist zeal was out of sync with his past. He extracted a series of Gandhi’s writings on caste and untouchability in
Navjivan
in the early 1920s, and made it part of his letter. In these articles Gandhi had said that to remove untouchability it was not important to dine with antyaj (untouchables) or give daughters in marriage: ‘I do not ask that you drink from their lota (pots) without cleaning them up’;
51
‘If eating together results in friendship then Europe would not have witnessed the great war’;
52
‘How can untouchables be allowed in all temples?’
53
Not only does Gandhi’s ambiguous position on caste come to the fore in these extracts, they also explain his less-than-enthusiastic follow-up of the Poona Pact.

Poddar was unrelenting in his letter, upbraiding Gandhi, the liberals within Congress and the intelligentsia. ‘Today if someone who respects you wants to criticize you or your views and would like to show infirmities of your opinion, then he is attacked and abused. He is called obscurantist, sanatan dharmi, traitor and what not. Recently, in Kashi (Banaras) there was an incident of stone pelting in a meeting. In such a situation many people have suspicion about the state of future swarajya (self- rule).’

Poddar then asked Gandhi a set of questions. ‘I know you do not believe in changing someone’s view or belief system through force. You have said so many times that an individual should have the freedom of religion. But what is happening? Letting all kinds of people enter places of worship against the wishes of those who run these institutions is against the spirit of freedom of religion or not? It would destroy our temple system. Have we asked if those being let inside the temples even want to go there or not? If they want, why not build separate temples for them. After all, Rama went to the hut of Sabri. But I guess the entire issue is about rights.’
54
Lamenting the role of Ambedkar, who was at the receiving end of severe criticism in
Kalyan
, Poddar told Gandhi that the Dalit leader had already said their movement was not about God but was a fight for social equality and strong presence in government jobs. Finally, Poddar repeated that he was Gandhi’s ‘partial bhakt’: ‘I am not your follower but part of your family. I request you to put an end to this unrestrained behaviour of your followers. I have merely given you a glimpse of what is happening. In reality a lot more is taking place. It is an attack on an individual’s freedom of religion.’

Gandhi was quick to respond. He stood by every word in
Navjivan
that Poddar had cited. ‘To understand what I say one needs to understand my conduct for I try to avoid saying anything that contradicts my conduct and doing anything contrary to what I say. And I admit my own weakness whenever my conduct is inconsistent with the opinions I express.’
55

Refuting Poddar’s allegations, Gandhi said, ‘I do not see any inconsistency between my profession and my conduct.’ Distancing himself from ‘those who taint and slander sanatanists’, Gandhi said that ‘himsa’ or violence would ‘undoubtedly injure the cause of the removal of untouchability’, and that ‘cleanliness and some code of conduct are always desirable’. He continued, ‘It is a sin to use coercion in this matter or despise those who refuse to inter-dine. Similarly to force one’s way into temples against the wishes of the trustees is an act of sin.’ For Gandhi it was clear that ‘rather than witness such reform I would prefer death because I am convinced that compulsions can neither remove untouchability nor safeguard Hinduism’.

However, in the same letter Gandhi blamed the followers of sanatan dharma for social ailments like untouchability and barring Dalits from entering temples: ‘The caste Hindus having created a class of outcastes, have up to the present day been treating them in a most irreligious and brutal manner. This has caused uncleanliness and other vices to creep in among them. Sooner or later the Hindus have to atone for it.’ Gandhi told Poddar he wanted to ‘satisfy’ him, ‘from self-interest, for I expect a great deal of work from you in this cause’.

Gandhi’s best efforts to change Poddar’s views on untouchability failed. Poddar’s diatribe against Gandhi continued in the pages of
Kalyan
till 1948. Thus a relationship that had begun as hero worship on Poddar’s part took a stormy turn during the intense phase of the national movement from the 1930s when Gandhi was reformulating his position on various social issues and when the competing interests of Muslims, Dalits and the strong Hindu right were challenging the position of Congress as the sole voice against the British government. As late as 1956, Poddar maintained that ‘practising untouchability does not mean hatred for anyone’ and ‘untouchability is scientific and has the sanction of the shastras’.
56

Even before 1932, Poddar’s reverence for Gandhi had begun to show signs of weakening. Writing to his friend Prabhashankar Gupt in 1931, Poddar said he considered Gandhi ‘a western sadhu in Indian dress whose many views I do not agree with and some I even find unacceptable’.
57
The man whose simplicity, self-service, spirituality and love for swadeshi had drawn Poddar so intensely was no longer his hero but the biggest stumbling block and challenge to the traditional Hindu order.

Still, the relationship between Poddar and Gandhi was marked by occasional warmth. In 1937, Poddar wrote to Gandhi about an early- morning dream he had in which someone told him ‘Gandhi is not going to live for too long. He should spend rest of his life in praying to god.’
58
Poddar said he rarely had such dreams, but hoped this one would turn out to be false. ‘I debated for long whether to write to you or not. Please tear off this letter after reading so that others do not get to know about my insolent behaviour.’ Gandhi chose to call Poddar’s dream a ‘sign of love’.
59
‘As for death, it is a companion of birth and a very faithful one. It never fails. Why should one worship god only when nearing death? What I regard as worship goes on every moment.’ Gandhi also asked Poddar why he wanted his dream to be false. ‘Even if I live to be a hundred, it will seem too short to my friends. Then what does today or tomorrow matter?’

Again in 1940 when Gandhi set up the Goseva Sangh, Jamnalal Bajaj wrote to Poddar seeking his views on the constitution of the new body. Bajaj requested Poddar to become an ordinary member of the Sangh and shoulder some of its responsibility. Bajaj said the idea to involve Poddar had come directly from Gandhi.
60
Though Poddar opposed Gandhi through
Kalyan
, privately he respected the Mahatma. Writing to Bajaj from Gorakhpur, he said, ‘I cannot understand many of Bapu’s ideas and works. In many cases my heart openly opposes them. They create problems for me. But then Bapu is Bapu. After all, what has [one’s opinion on] Mahatma Gandhi’s views to do with bhakti to Bapu.’
61

BOOK: Gita Press and the Making of Hindu India
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