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Indigo

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Louis Fischer
INDIGO (1896- 1970)
When I first visited Gandhi in 1942 at his ashram in Sevagram, in central India, he
said, ‚I will tell you how it happened that I decided to urge the departure of the
British. It was in 1917.‛ He had gone to the December 1916 annual convention of the
Indian National Congress party in Lucknow. There were 2,301 delegates and many
visitors. During the proceedings, Gandhi recounted, ‚a peasant came up to me
looking like any other peasant in India, poor and emaciated, and said, ‘I am
Rajkumar Shukla. I am from Champaran, and I want you to come to my
district’!’’ Gandhi had never heard of the place. It was in the foothills of the towering
Himalayas, near the kingdom of Nepal.
Under an ancient arrangement, the Champaran peasants were sharecroppers.
Rajkumar Shukla was one of them. He was illiterate but resolute(determined). He
had come to the Congress session to complain about the injustice of the landlord
system in Bihar, and somebody had probably said, ‚Speak to Gandhi.‛ Gandhi told
Shukla he had an appointment in Cawnpore and was also committed to go to other
parts of India. Shukla accompanied him everywhere. Then Gandhi returned to his
ashram near Ahmedabad. Shukla followed him to the ashram. For weeks he never
left Gandhi’s side. 1 ‚Fix a date,‛ he begged. Impressed by the sharecropper’s
tenacity and story Gandhi said, ‘‘I have to be in Calcutta on such-and-such a date.
Come and meet me and take me from there.
Months passed. Shukla was sitting on his haunches at the appointed spot in Calcutta
when Gandhi arrived; he waited till Gandhi was free. Then the two of them boarded
a train for the city of Patna in Bihar. There Shukla led him to the house of a lawyer
named Rajendra Prasad who later became President of the Congress party and of
India. Rajendra Prasad was out of town, but the servants knew Shukla as a poor
yeoman who pestered ( tormented) their master to help the indigo sharecroppers. So
they let him stay on the grounds with his companion, Gandhi, whom they took to be
another peasant. But Gandhi was not permitted to draw water from the well lest
some drops from his bucket pollute the entire source; how did they know that he was
not an untouchable?
Gandhi decided to go first to Muzzafarpur, which was en route (on the way) to
Champaran, to obtain more complete information about conditions than Shukla
was capable of imparting. He accordingly sent a telegram to Professor J.B.
Kripalani, of the Arts College in Muzzafarpur, whom he had seen at Tagore’s
Shantiniketan school. The train arrived at midnight, 15 April 1917. Kripalani was
waiting at the station with a large body of students. Gandhi stayed there for two
days in the home of Professor Malkani, a teacher in a government school. It was
an extraordinary thing ‘in those days,’’ Ga‘‘ndhi commented, ‚for a
government professor to harbour a man like me‛. In smaller localities, the Indians
were afraid to show sympathy for advocates of home-rule
The news of Gandhi’s advent (the arrival of a notable person or thing) and of the
nature of his mission spread quickly through Muzzafarpur and to Champaran.
Sharecroppers from Champaran began arriving on foot and by conveyance to see their
champion. Muzzafarpur lawyers called on Gandhi to brief him; they frequently
represented peasant groups in court; they told him about their cases and reported the
size of their fee. Gandhi chided the lawyers for collecting big fee from the
sharecroppers. He said, ‘‘I have come to the conclusion that we should stop going to
law courts. Taking such cases to the courts does litte good. Where the peasants are so
crushed and fear-stricken, law courts are useless. The real relief for them is to be free
from fear.
Most of the arable( fit for cultivation) land in the Champaran district was divided
into large estates owned by Englishmen and worked by Indian tenants. The chief
commercial crop was indigo. The landlords compelled all tenants to plant three
twentieths or 15 per cent of their holdings with indigo and surrender the entire
indigo harvest as rent. This was done by long-term contract. Presently, the landlords
learned that Germany had developed synthetic indigo. They, thereupon, obtained
agreements from the sharecroppers to pay them compensation for being released
from the 15 per cent arrangement. The sharecropping arrangement was
irksome(annoying) to the peasants, and many signed willingly. Those who resisted,
engaged lawyers; the landlords hired thugs( violent criminal). Meanwhile, the
information about synthetic indigo reached the illiterate peasants who had signed,
and they wanted their money back.
At this point Gandhi arrived in Champaran. He began by trying to get the facts. First
he visited the secretary of the British landlord’s association. The secretary told him
that they could give no information to an outsider. Gandhi answered that he was no
outsider. Next, Gandhi called on the British official commissioner of the Tirhut
division in which the Champaran district lay. ‘‘The commissioner,’’ Gandhi reports,
‘‘proceeded to bully me and advised me forthwith to leave Tirhut.’ Gandhi did not
leave. Instead he proceeded to Motihari, the capital of Champaran. Several
lawyers accompanied him. At the railway station, a vast multitude greeted Gandhi.
He went to a house and, using it as headquarters, continued his investigations.
A report came in that a peasant had been maltreated (ill– treated) in a nearby village.
Gandhi decided to go and see; the next morning he started out on the back of an
elephant. He had not proceeded far when the police superintendent’s messenger
overtook him and ordered him to return to town in his carriage. Gandhi complied.
The messenger drove Gandhi home where he served him with an official notice to
quit Champaran immediately. Gandhi signed a receipt for the notice and
wrote on it that he would disobey the order. In consequence, Gandhi
received a summons to appear in court the next day. All night Gandhi remained
awake. He telegraphed Rajendra Prasad to come from Bihar with influential friends.
He sent instructions to the ashram. He wired a full report to the Viceroy.
Morning found the town of Motihari black with peasants. They did not
know Gandhi’s record in South Africa. They had merely heard that a Mahatma who
wanted to help them was in trouble with the authorities. Their spontaneous
demonstration, in thousands, around the courthouse was the beginning of their
liberation from fear of the British. The officials felt powerless without Gandhi’s
cooperation. He helped them regulate the crowd. He was polite and friendly. He was
giving them concrete proof that their might, hitherto dreaded and unquestioned, could
be challenged by Indians. The government was baffled. The prosecutor requested the
judge to postpone the trial. Apparently, the authorities wished to consult their
superiors.
Gandhi protested against the delay. He read a statement pleading guilty. He was
involved, he told the court, in a ‚conflict of duties”— on the one hand, not to
set a bad example as a lawbreaker; on the other hand, to render the
“humanitarian and national service” for which he had come. He disregarded
the order to leave, ‚not for want of respect for lawful authority, but in obedience to the
higher law of our being, the voice of conscience‛. He asked the penalty due. The
magistrate announced that he would pronounce sentence after a two-hour recess and
asked Gandhi to furnish bail for those 120 minutes. Gandhi refused. The judge
released him without bail. When the court reconvened, the judge said he would not
deliver the judgment for several days. Meanwhile he allowed Gandhi to remain at
liberty.
Rajendra Prasad, Brij Kishor Babu, Maulana Mazharul Huq and several other
prominent lawyers had arrived from Bihar. They conferred(discussed)with
Gandhi. What would they do if he was sentenced to prison, Gandhi asked. Why,
the senior lawyer replied, they had come to advise and help him; if he went to jail
there would be nobody to advise and they would go home. What about the
injustice to the sharecroppers, Gandhi demanded. The lawyers withdrew to
consult. Rajendra Prasad has recorded the upshot of their consultations — ‚They
thought, amongst themselves, that Gandhi was totally a stranger, and yet he was
prepared to go to prison for the sake of the peasants; if they, on the other hand,
being not only residents of the adjoining districts but also those who claimed to
have served these peasants, should go home, it would be shameful
desertion
They accordingly went back to Gandhi and told him they were ready to follow him
into jail. „„The battle of Champaran is won,’’ he exclaimed. Then he took a
piece of paper and divided the group into pairs and put down the order in which
each pair was to court arrest Several days later, Gandhi received a written
communication from the magistrate informing him that the Lieutenant-Governor of
the province had ordered the case to be dropped. Civil disobedience had
triumphed, the first time in modern India. Gandhi and the lawyers now
proceeded to conduct a far-flung inquiry into the grievances of the farmers.
Depositions by about ten thousand peasants were written down, and notes made on
other evidence. Documents were collected. The whole area throbbed with the
activity of the investigators and the vehement protests of the landlords.
In June, Gandhi was summoned to Sir Edward Gait, the Lieutenant-Governor. Before
he went he met leading associates and again laid detailed plans for civil disobedience
if he should not return. Gandhi had four protracted( prolonged) interviews
with the Lieutenant Governor who, as a result, appointed an official
commission of inquiry into the indigo sharecroppers’ situation. The commission
consisted of landlords, government officials, and Gandhi as the sole representative of
the peasants. Gandhi remained in Champaran for an initial uninterrupted period of
seven months and then again for several shorter visits. The visit, undertaken casually
on the entreaty of an unlettered peasant in the expectation that it would last a few
days, occupied almost a year of Gandhi’s life.

The commission

Landlords
government officials Gandhi sole
representative
of the peasants
The official inquiry assembled a crushing mountain of evidence against the big
planters, and when they saw this they agreed, in principle, to make refunds to the
peasants. ‚But how much must we pay?‛ they asked Gandhi. They thought he
would demand repayment in full of the money which they had illegally and
deceitfully( dishonestly) extorted(obtain by using force and threats) from the
sharecroppers. He asked only 50 per cent. ‚There he seemed adamant,‛ writes
Reverend J. Z. Hodge, a British missionary in Champaran who observed the entire
episode at close range. ‚Thinking probably that he would not give way, the
representative of the planters offered to refund to the extent of 25 per cent, and to
his amazement Mr. Gandhi took him at his word, thus breaking the deadlock.‛ This
settlement was adopted unanimously(with the agreement of all people involved) by
the commission. Gandhi explained that the amount of the refund was less important
than the fact that the landlords had been obliged to surrender part of the money
and, with it, part of their prestige. Therefore, as far as the peasants were concerned,
the planters had behaved as lords above the law.
Now the peasant saw that he had rights and defenders.
He learned courage.

J. Z. Hodge
Now the peasant saw that he had rights and defenders. He learned courage. Events
justified Gandhi’s position. Within a few years the British planters abandoned their
estates, which reverted to the peasants. Indigo sharecropping disappeared.
Gandhi never contented himself with large political or economic
solutions. He saw the cultural and social backwardness in the Champaran
villages and wanted to do something about it immediately. He appealed
for teachers. Mahadev Desai and Narhari Parikh, two young men who had
just joined Gandhi as disciples, and their wives, volunteered for the work.
Several more came from Bombay, Poona and other distant parts of the
land. Devadas, Gandhi’s youngest son, arrived from the ashram and so
did Mrs. Gandhi. Primary schools were opened in six villages. Kasturbai
taught the ashram rules on personal cleanliness and community
sanitation.

Mahadev Desai Devadas


Health conditions were miserable. Gandhi got a doctor to volunteer his
services for six months. Three medicines were available — castor oil, quinine
and sulphur ointment. Anybody who showed a coated tongue was given a dose of
castor oil; anybody with malaria fever received quinine plus castor oil; anybody
with skin eruptions received ointment plus castor oil. Gandhi noticed the filthy state
of women’s clothes. He asked Kasturbai to talk to them about it. One woman took
Kasturbai into her hut and said, ‘‘Look, there is no box or cupboard here for clothes.
The sari I am wearing is the only one I have.‛ During his long stay in Champaran,
Gandhi kept a long distance watch on the ashram. He sent regular instructions by
mail and asked for financial accounts. Once he wrote to the residents that it was
time to fill in the old latrine trenches and dig new ones otherwise the old ones
would begin to smell bad.

Quinine castor oil sulphur ointment


+ castor oil + castor oil
In in in
Malaria coated tongue skin eruptions
Once he wrote to the residents that it was time to fill in the old latrine trenches and
dig new ones otherwise the old ones would begin to smell bad. The Champaran
episode was a turning-point in Gandhi‟s life. ‘‘What I did,‛ he explained,
‚was a very ordinary thing. I declared that the British could not order me about in
my own country.‛ But Champaran did not begin as an act of defiance( bold
disobedience). It grew out of an attempt to alleviate(to lessen) the distress
(hardship) of large numbers of poor peasants. This was the typical Gandhi pattern
— his politics were intertwined (very closely connected) with the practical, day-to-
day problems of the millions. His was not a loyalty to abstractions; it was a loyalty
to living, human beings. In everything Gandhi did, moreover, he tried to mould a
new free Indian who could stand on his own feet and thus make India free.
Typical Gandhi pattern (his politics)

day-to-day
problems of
the millions loyalty to human beings not a loyalty to
abstractions
Early in the Champaran action, Charles Freer Andrews, the English pacifist (who
believes in peace) who had become a devoted follower of the Mahatma, came to
bid Gandhi farewell before going on a tour of duty to the Fiji Islands. Gandhi’s
lawyer friends thought it would be a good idea for Andrews to stay in Champaran
and help them. Andrews was willing if Gandhi agreed. But Gandhi was
vehemently opposed. He said, ‘‘You think that in this unequal fight it would be
helpful if we have an Englishman on our side. This shows the weakness of your
heart. The cause is just and you must rely upon yourselves to win the battle. You
should not seek a prop in Mr. Andrews because he happens to be an Englishman’’.
‘‘He had read our minds correctly,’’ Rajendra Prasad comments, ‚and we had no
reply… Gandhi in this way taught us a lesson in self-reliance’’. Self-reliance, Indian
independence and help to sharecroppers were all bound together.

Charles Freer Self-reliance


Andrews
with
Gandhiji Indian
Independence

Help to sharecroppers
THANK YOU FOR WATCHING

THANK YOU
NEELU SINGH
BY NEELU SINGH

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