Gandhi - the Brahmacharya

October 10, 2019


Gandhi is one of those personalities whom people completely adore or completely hate. Most of the times, these extreme feelings are a result of ignorance about the man, the myth and the legend. His core principles as known by everybody is pluralism and non-violence. Although these core ideas brought many contemporaries and critics of Gandhi against him-even murdered him for the former, the most controversial of MKG’s principles is his adherence to and practice of brahmacharyam or celibacy.

During his early years in India i.e. before the brief, albeit eventful, stint in South Africa, he was no exception to the erstwhile Gujarati society. Due to his early marriage and patriarchal mindset, he gave into his pleasures and hence the episode of lustful sex during his father’s funeral. He has also confessed his disability to control his sexual passion quite frankly in his autobiography which he wrote after becoming the Mahatma.

While in his thirties, due to continuous self-introspection and introduction to varied schools of thought- from Gita to Bible and his favorite Tolstoy, he made a vow of celibacy in 1906. He thought it necessary for the work he just started doing- being the Messiah.  He thought of abstinence from passion (for anything) as ammunition for his nonviolent struggle against oppressors. He stopped dressing up, reduced his food intake and declared to his wife that he will have no physical passion for her anymore. As one of Gandhi’s admirers, Nirmal Bose asserted ‘he represented a hard puritanical form of self-discipline, something we usually associate with medieval Christian ascetics or Jain recluses’.

Gandhi imposed his vow of celibacy on all who lived with him in his ashram. It was for him a mark of sacrifice and of moral purity. He believed with full conviction that these sacrifices are necessary for a life of service and struggle. His fetish for abstinence made him evangelical that he imposed strict restrictions on inter-sex communication in his ashram school. He gave sermons on the importance of being a brahmacharya, mainly to boys.

“As days pass I realize with increasing clearness that preservation of the vital fluid is imperative if one is to serve the country.”

“I appeal to all parents and guardians present here to help their boys in every way to conserve the vital fluid

 Gandhi had numerous female friends, at the ashram and in political life. He did not show aversion to women like Buddhist monks did, but was even in a way harmlessly flirtatious. He also used to stay in homes of women colleagues while on the road. One such time, in Lahore, was when he met this Bengali woman, striking-looking, with a lush head of black hair that hung down to her shoulders- it was Sarala Chaudhurani, daughter of one of Rabindranath Tagore’s sisters. She was a well-born, well-read lady with an interesting aptitude for non-violent struggle and women’s rights. He had met her earlier once but staying together under the same roof provided sufficient time for them to get to know each other.

As things always do, one led to another and they both found themselves enchanted by each other. Even after he left her house, they had frequent correspondence through letters
.
You still continue to haunt me even in my sleep. No wonder Panditji (her husband) calls you the greatest shakthi of India. You may have cast that spell over him. You are performing the trick over me now

The feeling was mutual and the letters continued for a long time. Gandhi even went on to declare her his “Spiritual Wife”, whatever that means. He started to yearn for her letters like a teenage boy with pumping hormones.

I was certain of a letter from you yesterday. But none came. Today too there is a blank. I wonder, however. I know you have not failed me, it is the wretched post” 

It is a pity that none of her replies lasted as Gandhi’s family had it destroyed later. All things considered and to be fair, there was nothing physical about their relationship, at least not yet. He even thought of making their relationship public but was stopped by another patriarch whom Gandhi called his keeper of conscience - it was Rajaji, his future sambandhi. Rajaji, a rational man, warned his colleague to stop this nonsense and to focus on the struggle for independence. Although Gandhi respected Rajaji a great deal, he would not stop his correspondence with his new found love for a long time until it broke down for various other reasons. Other reasons included restraint from his marvelous secretary Mahadev (who is also a rational man), difference in lifestyles of loin-cloth Gandhi and lavish Sarala and also political differences which grew over time. Gandhi reflecting on this time later, confesses that he ‘almost slipped’ from his path of celibacy and brahmacharya.  


During the late 1930s, Hindu-Muslim harmony, one of Gandhi’s core principles, was strained beyond redemption. As the largest proponent of inter-religious harmony, he was asked my many well minded citizens to control the widening of the gap between Hindus and Muslims. To one such letter he replied that it was ‘unfair’ to put the whole ‘burden’ on him and that he was trying hard to work on that direction, but deep down, he took the burden and blamed himself for the derailment of Hindu- Muslim relations.

He pleaded for communal harmony through his newspaper with a strange preface admitting to personal weakness.

I seem to have detected a flaw in me which is unworthy of a votary of truth and ahimsa. I am going through a process of self-introspection, the results of which I cannot foresee. I find myself for the first time in the past 50 years in a slough of despond”

This sense of sudden frailty of the self was not because of political swamps but because of his personal ‘slip’ of the physical body. Turns out, one morning in April 1938, he awoke with an erection; and despite efforts to control his excitement, had a masturbatory experience. Explaining his despair to a fellow ashramite, he wrote

I was in such a wretched and pitiable condition that inspite of my utmost efforts I could not stop the discharge even though I was fully awake”

He continued

Where am I, where is my place and how can a person subject to passion represent non-violence and truth?”

These letters provide valuable insight into how serious he took celibacy. He genuinely believed the Christian myths of the celibate messiah and Indian ascetics who withdrew from being householders to enter the path of dharma towards global good. He deemed suppression and eventually indifference towards lustful passion as one of the important traits of a servant in the service of God and mankind. He even thought of explaining the whole ‘saddening’ experience on his newspaper but was stopped right in time by, again, Rajaji. He was also most straightforward and brutally honest about his private life so much that an English Quaker who had interacted with Gandhi for a period of twenty years pointed out, “Gandhi had no private life, as we Westerners understand the expression”.

Tagore criticizing Gandhi on an entirely different topic suggested that Gandhi “is growing enamored of his own doctrines- a dangerous form of egotism that even great people suffer from at times”. This comment holds good for all of Gandhi’s doctrines, including celibacy. Sometimes such extreme adherence to a dogma might prove to be disastrous, at least to the outside world. His many fasts were expressions of such extreme dictates of his doctrines.


The strangest of his ‘Experiments with Truth’ was very late in his life when religious violence increased manifold and spirits for unity declined steadily. During late December 1946, Gandhi asked his grand-niece Manu to join him in bed every night. Manu was in her late teens while the grand old patriarch was approaching eighty. Some of his close confidantes died, including his wife Kastur Ba and secretary Mahadev, his spirits were low, so he gave in to one of his irrational beliefs that his declining influence on the Hindu-Muslim problem was, he doubted, that he was not brahmacharya enough.

Manu had lost her mother in a very young age so it was Kastur Ba who brought her up. She grew up in the ashram and had been schooled in the ashram school. It is safe to assume that she would have been indoctrinated on the teachings of ahimsa and of brahmacharya. It is said that Pyarelal, Gandhi’s new secretary had proposed marriage to Manu to which she had out rightly rejected, as a perfect ashramite would do. So Manu was also motivated to go through the “severe test” which her master Gandhi- whom she refers to as mother (ma Bapu), put before her.

The true Brahmachari, claimed Gandhi, would ‘remain passionless’ even when faced with ‘the most beautiful damsel on earth’. He was clear on his objective of this severe test, testing his brahmacharyam thereby using his powers to control the religious violence which massacred the streets on Bengal and Punjab. It just shows the desperate efforts to, one may argue to be back on the public eye as the messiah, or to really stop the violence which he abhorred truly. Whichever may be the case, it is not fair to justify the irrational beliefs the Mahatma held to satisfy his vanity.

He wrote to his learned colleagues like Vinoba Bhave among others and everyone advised against it with Sardar Patel being ‘very angry’, understandably so- considering his political stature. At no point in time did he actually force or compel her to undergo the tests, this is clear from his letter to Vinoba Bhave telling that the practice had ended because she stopped coming after a ‘pathetic’ letter from her father.

To quote himself on the meaning of brahmacharya, he said:

one who never has any lustful intention, who by constant attendance upon God has become proof against conscious and unconscious emissions, who is capable of lying naked with naked women, however beautiful they may be, without being in any manner whatsoever sexually excited. Such a person should be incapable of lying, of intending or doing harm to a single man or woman, is free from anger and malice and detached in the sense of the Bhagavad Gita. Such a person is a Brahmachari.”


Gandhi has been criticized widely on the question of celibacy, in a way, his critics are justified, yes. But he did not do anything that he felt was immoral, in fact, he pushed himself to the extremes of his doctrines as far as he could during his lifetime. Morality is a hued prism with each angle reflecting and refracting varied wavelengths of light changing frequently with place and time. As an admirer of Gandhi myself, I am glad that he was there when he was, not early not late. Although a major obsession for him, his other works towards self-rule, eradication of untouchability and village rehabilitation eclipses this small peck on the large scheme of things.

The more we learn about the man, we will learn to accept the myth as it is with all his shortcomings and contradictions in creation of the legend, the most important personality in the history of modern India.   





Reference: Gandhi: The years that changed the World- Ramachandra Guha


By Benolin 

  



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