Gandhi: Truth and Non-Violence
Renowned Mahatma Gandhi Scholar, Professor Bindu Puri, recently delivered the Annual Queen’s College Sugden Oration on 27 April 2023 as part of the Institute’s Visiting Fellows Series.
At a time when various parts of the world are experiencing war or the threat of war revisiting the message of Gandhi on non-violence on the 75th anniversary of his death is timely.
In this lecture, Professor Bindu Puri of Jawarharlal Nehru University, New Delhi, explores views on Satya, or truth implying openness, honesty and fairness.
Satya is inseparable from Ahimsa which is an ancient Indian concept best expressed as non-violence. Gandhi made these concepts his own “by moulding tools for nonviolent action to use as a positive force in the search for social and political truths. Gandhi formed Ahimsa into the active social technique, which was to challenge political authorities and religious orthodoxy.”
Gandhi had many heroes in his pursuit of non-violence and drew particularly from the Russian author, Leo Tolstoy. He said of Tolstoy’s, The Kingdom of God Is Within that it overwhelmed him. “Before the independent thinking, profound morality, and the truthfulness of this book,” he wrote, “all books seemed to pale into insignificance.”
Ultimately, while influenced by Tolstoy, Professor Puri will argue that Gandhi’s thinking on non-violence was rooted in ancient Indian philosophy. Gandhi’s relevance for our times is confirmed by the thought that today, seventy five years after his death, the call for ahimsa/non-violence seems both relevant and timely.