Politics

Answering Calumny-III: Non-Hindu Sources Of Gandhi's Satyagraha?

Aravindan NeelakandanJun 29, 2023, 09:47 PM | Updated Jun 30, 2023, 05:23 PM IST
Mahatma Gandhi (Kanu Gandhi/Wikimedia Commons)

Mahatma Gandhi (Kanu Gandhi/Wikimedia Commons)





Here, the streams flowing into Gandhi's Satyagraha are Christianity and Jainism. Hindu Dharma, mainly the Vaishnava tradition, is absent. In this context, even the argument that the Vaishnavism of Gandhi—Pushtimarga—was actually Jain-influenced, is a demonstrably false.

This perspective is associated with the Ramachandra Guha school of thought, which seeks to de-Hinduize Gandhi. According to this school, any Hindu influence on Gandhi, particularly from the Vedic tradition, is downplayed or disregarded.


Sri Aurobindo's Similar, Superficial Criticism of Gandhi

It's worth noting that Sri Aurobindo had also criticized Gandhi along similar lines.

Sri Aurobindo criticised Gandhi as having a Christian worldview in Hindu garb.

Sri Aurobindo's criticism of Gandhi and the Guha-school's de-Hinduizing depiction may appear similar but have significant differences in context, intention, and content.

Further, Sri Aurobindo's was a critical but contemporary observation and not a definitive statement. Gandhi was then around to refute and respond. In contrast, the Frontline article presents its claims as historical facts about Gandhi without considering his own perspective, disregarding the principle of truth that Gandhi held dear.

Sri Aurobindo criticised Gandhi for the perceived Christian nature of his concepts. But he pointed out that it was more the Russian Christianity that had influenced Gandhi. He also did not hide the fact that Gandhi himself attributed his Ahimsa to Hindu scriptures - particularly the Upanishads and Gita. Yet, he considered Gandhi's interpretation not wholly correct.

For Sri Aurobindo Gandhi's connection was influenced by Russian Christianity (mainly as presented by Tolstoy). However, The Frontline essay falsely portrays Gandhi as continuing the legacy of the Western Reformation-Protestant movement in India.

European Reformation-Protestantism Influenced Gandhi?

The Reformation period in the West, along with the Protestant movement, and the Renaissance, along with the Enlightenment, are distinct but interconnected processes, often mistaken for one another.


Protestantism, in a sense, increasingly reacted against the Enlightenment. Protestantism viewed the Enlightenment as more Pagan than Christian, and this perception was not entirely unfounded.

Over time, narratives emerged that blurred the boundaries between the values of the European Enlightenment and Protestantism, particularly to justify colonial missions.

Within the realm of the European Reformation, violence and massacres were prevalent, rather than a democratic process.

The defining moments of this period were marked by massacres, primarily targeting peasants.

Paradoxically, while Protestantism opposed the power structure of the Catholic Church, it also violently suppressed peasant uprisings. These uprisings, even those with vague Protestant influence, similarly turned violent.

Guru Nanak and Martin Luther were contemporaries. They took exactly opposite stand with respect to the relation of people and the ruler.

The year was 1525 CE in Germany - a year before the First Battle of Panipat in India.


Guru Nanak criticized the officials who imposed taxes and oppressed the people. He used the metaphor of hunters employing a tamed deer to capture others:

During the same time period, Martin Luther utilised the new technology of the printing press to widely publish a pamphlet addressing grievances raised by peasants.

In his writings, Luther expressed that the peasants should know their place and, if necessary, be killed or even massacred, likening them to mad dogs. Luther kept a record of the peasant massacres, occasionally feeling sadness but mostly rejoicing that he had been an instrument of God in prompting the aristocracy to quell the uprising. In a final pamphlet, Luther argued: 'everyone who can must run, uncalled and unbidden and as a true member, help to rescue his ruler by stabbing hewing and killing and risk his life and goods for the sake of the head.'

The Bhakti movement in India and the Reform movement in Europe, both had parallel growth and both took diametrically opposite views with regard to the relation of the people and the rulers.

It is not hard to see to which tradition Gandhi belonged to.

The Explicit Western Influences:


  • Henry David Thoreau (1817-1862);

  • Leo Tolstoy (1828-1910), and;

  • John Ruskin (1819-1900)

  • Of the three, Tolstoy and Thoreau were influenced by Hindu tradition and thought. Of these three, the one who had the main influence on Gandhi's Satyagraha was Thoreau.


    While Tolstoy initially had some criticisms of Hindu concepts, he eventually became more open to them; and Thoreau, profoundly influenced by the Bhagavad Gita, in turn influenced Gandhi's adoption of the term "Civil Disobedience":

    Now coming to the crucial question:

    What did Gandhi himself have to say about the influences on him?


    It is interesting here he did not include Buddha or the Tirthankars.

    In Satyagraha his Indian inspirations were all from Vaishnava tradition.



    According to Gandhi the primacy of Brahmin over Kshatriya in Varna system validates Satyagraha.

    Further, the principle of the superiority of Truth or Satya (and hence Vak) over the sword was derived from his understanding of Varnashrama Dharma in which Brahmin has primacy over Kshatriya and not from Jain concept of non-violence.

    Definitely, his absolute non-violence had Jain influence. But in transforming this into a social form of resistance, it was his Vaishnava tradition that played a crucial role.


    In northern India under Mughal occupation, and even in Deccan, the resistance to both tax tyranny and forced conversions came through the Vaishnava Bhakti movement.

    Chaitanya Bhagavata provides a very Gandhian form of protest and Dharampal had presented pre-Gandhian civil disobedience in 1810-12 CE.


    Renowned historian Dharampal (1922-2006), inspired by Gandhi, shed light on pre-Gandhian civil disobedience movements that took place in early colonial India.

    These movements, although limited in geographical scope, shared striking similarities with the Gandhian movement in terms of their principles and methodologies.


    According to archival reports from the East India Company, they did not involve pre-planned acts of open violence. Instead, their aim was to provoke the government into responding with violence.

    Dharampal emphasized the continuity between these earlier movements and the later Gandhian ones, drawing from a British report to support his assertions:

    It is not hard to see from where Gandhi derived Satyagraha from. It was not from European Reformation and Protestantism, but from his traditional Vaishanava, and hence, Sanatana, tradition.


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