The body of Mahatma Gandhi, his fatal wounds clearly visible, lays on the funeral beir transporting it to his cremation. |
On
January 30, 1948 Mohandas Karamchand
Gandhi was shot and killed while on a nightly public walk in Delhi by Nathuram Godse, a Hindu
nationalist enraged that the Mahatma
had promoted communal peace
between India and Muslim Pakistan by fasting until the
Indian government made a 550 million Rupee
payment to Pakistan and paid reparations to Indian Muslims whose homes had been
destroyed in the civil unrest
following Independence and Partition. It was the last great non-violent protest of Gandhi’s long life.
One
would think that the accomplishments of a man who since returning to India in
triumph following campaigns on behalf of Indian laborers in South Africa, had worked tirelessly for
independence since joining the Indian Congress Party in 1915 and whose
famous Salt March in 1930 was the
opening of a long campaign of non-violent
struggle and passive resistance which
led ultimately to independence in 1947 would have been honored by nationalists. You would, of course, be wrong. Fanaticism, particularly that inflamed by religious righteousness, is incapable
of gratitude and intolerant of the
slightest perceived attempt to bridge divisions.
And
Gandhi had been doing that his whole life. In the 1920’s he reached out to Indian Muslims becoming the first Indian
leader to be truly national rather than sectarian. He had opposed outbreaks of inter-communal violence, and had
repeatedly reached out to Muslim victims of Hindu rioters. When the British
Raj finally agreed to independence based on a partition into two states—India and Muslim Pakistan, Gandhi personally rejected the terms and refused to
either celebrate Independence or recognize it on those terms. He refused to take any official part in the
new Indian government which his leadership of the Congress Party would have
entitled him to.
Upon
Partition horrific inter-communal violence broke out across the Indian Sub-Continent, particularly in
the Punjab and Bengal. As many as half a
million people were killed and 12 million Hindus, Muslims, and Sikhs were displaced from their homes
creating waves of refugees and
abject misery.
Gandhi
launched a series of “fasts unto death” to protest the Partition and violence
and to try and bring about peace and reconciliation between Hindus and Muslims
who he considered to be one Indian people.
The last of these fasts was launched on January 12, 1948 and lasted
until the 27th which was three days after the Indian Parliament had reversed a previous stand and released the money to
Pakistan promised in a division of the former
colony’s assets and the recompense to Muslim victims of the sectarian
violence.
The
assassin, Nathuram Godse, was no lone wolf.
He was a member of the extremist Hindu Mahasabha and had several collaborators and accomplices. And Godse’s hatred to Gandhi went far back—he
was involved in the last four of five previous assassination attempts dating
back to the 1930’s. Just days before on
January 20 Godse and his group had bungled an attempt at Birla House in Delhi
that involved a bomb which exploded
at a podium from which Gandhi was
scheduled to speak.
Godse
and another of the plotters Narayan Apte
escaped to Godse’s native Pune via Bombay by rail. Determined to make another attempt Godse
obtained a Beretta 38 caliber
semi-automatic pistol with the assistance of other members of the
group. Godse and Apte returned to Delhi
on January 29 and checked into a room at the Delhi Railway Station.
On
the evening of the 30th Gandhi was walking in the garden toward Birla House to
take part in a prayer meeting. As usual
he was unaccompanied by any security.
Escorting him were young women including his nieces. At 78 years of age
the Mahatma was still recovering from his fast and somewhat feeble.
At
5:17 that evening Godse approached Gandhi and bowed. The old leader paused to acknowledge the
greeting, as was his custom. One of the
young women with him, Abha Chattopadhyay,
tugged at his arm and told Godse, “Brother, Bapu is already late,” but the assassin
shoved her aside, raised his pistol and pumped three shots into Gandhi’s chest at close range.
Gandhi
reportedly cried out Hey Rama!—O Lord!—as he
collapsed. The phrase became a rallying
cry for remembering the martyred leader in the days and weeks following his
death.
Godse
himself called out—“Police! Police!” and waited to be arrested. He was ready—eager to be a martyr for his
cause. He later told investigators that
he knew he would be hated for his act in the short run but that eventually his “removal
of Gandhi from Indian politics” would prove such a blessing that he would be
honored for his “sacrifice.”
Gandhi
was taken to a hospital where he was officially pronounced dead two hours
later. In fact, he had probably died at
the scene but the time allowed government and Congress Party leaders time to be
informed and prepare for the public reaction that was sure to follow.
Later
that evening Prime Minister Jawaharlal
Nehru, one of Gandhi’s oldest and closest associate from whom he had become
estranged for agreeing to form a
Congress Party government on the basis of Partition, addressed the nation by radio:
Friends and
comrades, the light has gone out of our lives, and there is darkness
everywhere, and I do not quite know what to tell you or how to say it. Our
beloved leader, Bapu as we called him, the father of the nation, is no more.
Perhaps I am wrong to say that; nevertheless, we will not see him again, as we
have seen him for these many years, we will not run to him for advice or seek
solace from him, and that is a terrible blow, not only for me, but for millions
and millions in this country.
The
shocked nation went into deep mourning.
Communal violence once again broke out until the Government assured the
nation that it had arrested the murderer and his associates and that they were
not Muslim. The Mahasabha and other
Indian religious parties, Hindu, Muslim, and Sikh were outlawed upward of 20,000 secularist
militants were taken into custody.
The Congress Party draped itself in the memory of Gandhi and built
loyalty across India from the poor who had little previous allegiance to the
new government. Nehru was, for the time
being, able to still calls for an invasion of Pakistan.
The Memorial at the Raj Ghat cremation site. |
Over
two million people joined the five-mile long funeral procession that took over
five hours to reach Raj Ghat on the
banks of the Yamuna River in Delhi
from Birla House. Gandhi’s body was
elevated on platform atop an artillery caisson
pulled through the streets by fifty men.
At the site overlooking the river, his body was cremated on an open pyre. Some of the ashes were scattered immediately in
the river. The rest were divided and
placed in small urn distributed
across India to be scattered in local rivers and bodies of water to unite the
country in participation of the final Hindu ritual. Some of those urns were misplaced or for
other reasons not immediately scattered.
Over the last 25 years or so a few have been discovered and ashes
scattered at other Indian holy sites, the Headwaters
of the Nile, and even near the Los
Angeles Self-Realization Fellowship Lake Shrine. The cremation site at Raj Ghat is now a
national memorial and still attracts
hundreds of thousands of pilgrims
every year.
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