When Gandhi Became Mahatma
When Gandhi Became Mahatma
When Gandhi Became Mahatma
Sunday, 18 November 2018
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Champaran of Bihar and Raj Kumar Shukla were integral parts of turning Mahatma
Gandhi from man to legend. The place was where all the major movements began DELHI , BHOPAL , BHUBANESWAR , RANCHI ,
and where rumours still run wild of Gandhi’s sainthood and his miracles, carrying LUCKNOW , CHANDIGARH , DEHRADUN , RAIPUR
the lathi
The most potent anti imperialist weapon of Satyagraha was experimented and SUNDAY EDITION
field-tested in Champaran district of Bihar, by Mahatma Gandhi exactly 100 years ‘There’s diversity in indie cinema’
ago in April, 1917. It was this Satyagraha which immensely contributed to Gandhi, 18 November 2018 | Shalini Saksena | Sunday Pioneer
becoming the Mahatma in later years.
Champaran in north Bihar, bordering Nepal on one side and eastern Uttar Pradesh
on the other, is one geographical area which Gandhi himself admitted in his
autobiography — The Story of My Experiments with Truth — that he had never heard
of, before visiting the place.
He did come with his prominent lieutenants Rajendra Prasad, Anugrah Narayan
Sinha, JB Kripalani and others to oppose the exploitation of the farmers under the
Tinkathia system and other cess and taxes imposed by the then Government. In
the exploitative Tinkathia system, farmers had been forced to plant Indigo in a part
of their land (in 3/20 part of a land) compulsorily for almost 60 years. They had to
clean the plant which consumed a lot of time, dry it and then finally pack it for use
in industrialised Europe. All this, was done practically for free, as forced labour.
Though the farmers had protested twice earlier against this exploitative system,
they were suppressed by the police.
Two things happened at the same time. Gandhi’s Satyagraha forced the British
rulers to relent and end the Tinkathia system. At the same time, industrial coloring
agent, which was cheaper and did not involve exploitation of the peasants, started
being used on a much wider scale by the industrialised west. Indigo plantation
finally ended in Champaran in 1922-23 when the demand died down completely
and nine sugar mills were opened by the British to keep happy the ‘White’ farmers
who had settled in the area through what were called kothis (bungalows) as a
headquarter, specifically to control Indigo cultivation. Each kothi had a British
owner with retinues, supported by the local police and hundreds of acres of land in
their possession. When commercial sugarcane farming started, Indigo cultivation
ended.
During his April 1917 visit to Champaran, Gandhi built the Bhitiharwa ashram, ran a
campaign against the prevailing practice of untouchability, emphasised on
education, cleanliness and health. Helped by wife Kasturba Gandhi, Mahatma
Gandhi opened several basic teaching schools. In fact, it was here, that the basic
schools, imparting skills for livelihood, were opened for the first time on land
donated by the prosperous farmers.
When Gandhiji was charged with “creating unrest”, following his on the spot
assessments of peasant exploitation, talks with the farmers and their mobilisation,
there was a massive show of strength in his support which forced the judicial
officer to withdraw the case against him in Motihari. By word of mouth, the
message had spread that the British were about to jail Gandhiji, triggering an
outflow of farmers from the district to the district court. In a nutshell, the
Champaran Satyagraha, even though the word Satyagraha came to be used more
frequently during the protest against the Rowlatt Act agitation, triggering the first
non-violent struggle, anywhere in the world, on such a large scale.
Raj Kumar Shukla, the man who brought Gandhi to Champaran, continued with his
efforts of mobilisation of people against the British regime even after he left.
Shukla participated in the agitation against the Rowlatt Act in 1919 and in the non-
cooperation movement of 1922. He died at the relatively young age of 54 in 1929,
leaving behind a rich legacy for Champaran which the people of the district still
remember fondly. However, much after Gandhi left Champaran after a successful
Satyagraha against the British Indigo planters of the district, the oral tradition
glorifying what he did continued for years. He was seen as a messiah whose
presence brought a paradigm shift in the politics of the district.
The role of rumour and oral history were extremely important in the making of the
Mahatma Gandhi, over a period of time. It is important in any social movement and
it was this which helped people of Champaran galvanise themselves in the anti-
British struggle whole heartedly. All the subsequent protests by Congress and
Gandhiji — be it the non-cooperation movement in 1922, or the Civil Disobedience
Movement in 1932 and the Quit India Movement in 1942 found great traction in
Champaran and saw maximum arrests.
Postscript: As I hail from Champaran, some of the oral tradition which I have
narrated, belongs to my great grandfather Pandit Bhola Shukla and grandfather PUBLISH
Satya Narayan Shukla who narratedS u n d a ythis
, 1 8 to
N ome
v e min
b emy
r 2 0childhood.
18 My great
grandfather bought a 60 bigha plot (90 acres of land) from a British named Benson
around the year 1940 in village Sabeya of Champaran district. Benson was engaged
in the cultivation of Indigo before the Satyagraha of Gandhi and later sugarcane
when the first mill was set up. When farming was no longer profitable according to
British standards, he gave up and shifted to England after selling his land to
different people. I still own five acres of that land after several family partitions
and the original papers of those period still have Bensons’s name; the indigo
cultivator.
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