Why terror?
29/04/2004
- Opinión
If he were alive today, how might Mahatma Gandhi, the greatest
apostle of non-violence, challenge Osama bin Laden's worldview?
Bhikhu Parekh's preface
Like millions around the world, I found the atrocities of 9/11
abhorrent and utterly condemn such acts of terror. Despite the war
against terror, we continue to see more horrors such as that in
Madrid. What drives the bombers? How do they live with their
deeds? Is there no alternative to the cycle of violence? No one is
better qualified to advise on this than Mahatma Gandhi, the great
apostle of non-violence.
My imaginary exchange between him and Bin Laden tries to do two
things: to comprehend at least part of the twisted worldview that
inspires Bin Laden, for we cannot defeat it without understanding
it; and second, to explore a neglected alternative. My Bin Laden
is an intellectual construct, a metaphor, referring not so much to
the real man as to a more generic pro-terror radical Islamist.
__________________________________________________________
Dear Mahatma Gandhi
2nd October 2003
Ever since my followers attacked the American embassy in Kenya,
the USS Cole in Yemen, and later the World Trade Centre in New
York and the Pentagon in Washington DC, they and I have been
declared enemies of the civilised world who can be hunted,
tortured and killed like wild animals. I was not surprised by the
American reaction, but I was dismayed by the hostile reactions of
some of my fellow Muslims. I owe it to them to explain why we did
what we did, why we remain unmoved by the calumnies heaped upon us
and why we might do it again. Since every political act is
unintelligible outside its historical context, I must begin with
some history.
Islam is a great religion, continuous with and completing the
other two Abrahamic religions. It accepts them as genuine and true
religions, reveres their prophets and has always been tolerant and
respectful of them. Thanks to the moral and spiritual force of its
profound truths, Islam, a late historical arrival, was quickly
able to win over the willing allegiance of millions of people in
different parts of the world. It inspired its followers with such
zeal and fervour that their armies chalked up conquests against
all odds, making it the second most powerful world religion.
Christians, who have long been jealous of its appeal and resentful
of its power, tried to discredit and undermine it by mocking its
beliefs, vilifying its prophet and mounting crusades against it.
Islam survived all these and built up large empires, the great
Ottoman empire being the last.
With the rise of the modern world, Britain, France and other
European countries began to industrialise. Driven by the lust for
power and profit on which capitalism and imperialism is based,
they conquered large parts of the world and set about reshaping
their colonies in their image. Since Muslim societies had betrayed
their religious principles and become corrupt and degenerate, they
were easy prey. Being better armed, the British and French
overwhelmed the Ottoman empire, broke it up into artificial
political units, set up corrupt rulers, kept them weak and
divided, and used them to perpetuate their power. After the 1939-
1945 war, they deprived the Palestinians of their homeland, handed
over a large part to the Jews, and created a festering source of
injustice in the shape of Israel. Muslim societies have always
included large Jewish communities and have been more protective of
them than European societies. But giving the Jews their own state,
at Palestinian expense, and in the heart of the Arab world, was
provocative and unjust.
As the US replaced the weakened Europeans in the 1950s, it
continued this project and designed a more subtle empire of its
own. In the name of defending the west against the Soviet threat,
it set up and supported puppet regimes in many parts of the world,
especially the Muslim societies of the middle east upon whose oil
it had come to depend for its prosperity. It was even more partial
to Israel than the Europeans were, devoting much of its foreign
aid budget to it, arming it, and encouraging its expansionist
ambitions. The collapse of the Soviet Union gave the US an
illusion of omnipotence and removed all restraints on its hubris.
The US today is determined to Americanise the world and
restructure every society along secular, capitalist, liberal and
consumerist lines. Its troops are stationed in 120 countries, and
pressure their governments to do its bidding. It controls major
international economic and political institutions and uses them to
pursue its interests. When that does not work, it resorts to
bribery and blackmail to get its way. And when even that fails, it
acts unilaterally in disregard of international law and
institutions. No government is beyond its reach. Although the
current Republican administration is unashamed in its imperialist
designs, the previous Clinton administrations were no better. They
followed the same policy, albeit relying more on economic and
political pressure than on the threat of military might.
Although the American empire must be fought in every part of the
world, I am mainly concerned to liberate Muslim societies, not
only because I belong to them but also because they constitute the
weakest link in the imperial chain and my success there will set
an example and inspire others. My goal is fourfold: to get the
Americans out of Muslim societies, to destroy Israel as a separate
Jewish state and create a free Palestine in which Jews can live as
a protected minority, to remove corrupt American stooges in Muslim
societies and restructure the latter along truly Islamic
principles, and finally to restore the earlier glory of Islam by
uniting the umma and ensuring Muslim rule in such erstwhile Muslim
countries as Palestine, Bukhara, Lebanon, Pakistan, Bang-ladesh,
Chad, Eritrea, Somalia, the Philippines, Burma, South Yemen,
Tashkent and Andalucia.
Violence is the only way to achieve these goals because this is
the only language the US understands. Our violence has to be based
on terror because ill-equipped Muslims can never match American
might in open combat. Although our terrorist violence is primarily
directed against the "icons of US military and economic power,"
one cannot be so fastidious as to exclude civilians. The US itself
has never spared civilians in its wars on us: nearly 500,000 Iraqi
children died as a result of US-inspired sanctions. US citizens
have freely elected their governments, often supported their
policies (or at least failed to protest against and dissociate
themselves from them in large numbers), and are directly or
indirectly complicit in their government's deeds.
I should make two additional points. First, our terror is
reactive. We are only responding to the terrorist violence of the
US. Americans rob us of our wealth and oil, attack our religion,
trample upon our dignity, treat us as pawns in their global chess
game, and have the moral impertinence to call us terrorists when
we are only defending ourselves against their terrorism.
Second, I distinguish between "commendable" and "reprehensible"
terrorism. Terrorism to abolish tyranny, external domination,
corrupt rulers and traitors belongs to the first, and one that
imposes or perpetuates these evils belongs to the second. My
followers neither kill like cowards nor make personal gains from
their actions. They give up the ordinary pleasures-careers,
families, even their lives-and show by their self-sacrifice that
they are guided by the highest of motives. Our terrorism is moral
and religious, not criminal in nature as our western critics
claim. Our consciences are clear, and I say to my fellow Muslims
that to kill the Americans and their allies - civilians and
military - is an individual duty for every Muslim.
Yours
Osama
___________________________________________________________
Dear Osama
1st November 2003
Listening to you, my brother Osama, I was strongly reminded of my
dialogue with my terrorist countrymen, which began in London in
1909 and continued almost until my death. As in their case, so in
yours, I find your reasoning perverse and your glorification of
violence utterly abhorrent.
Whether you realise it or not, you think and talk like an
imperialist. You present a sanitised picture of Islamic history.
All conquests and empires involve bloodshed, oppression and
injustice, and yours was no different. Muslim rulers in India
destroyed Hindu temples, looted Hindu property and converted vast
masses by a combination of inducement and force. They also
destroyed traditional African cultures and social structures and
sought to obliterate memories of their pre-Islamic past. And
although they treated Christians and Jews better, they never
granted them equal citizenship. Since all this occurred a long
time ago, there is no point in lamenting it and apportioning
blame, but we do have a duty to acknowledge the full truth of the
past and resolve never to repeat it. You do not do this, and are
even determined to revive Muslim rule in the countries you
mention. You attack European imperialism because it ended yours,
and you attack Americans because they are preventing you from
reviving it. An imperialist yourself, you have no moral right to
attack the imperialist designs of others.
You keep talking about the truly Islamic society whose glory you
want to revive. I do not find it at all appealing, and nor do most
of your fellow Muslims. You want to combine a centralised state,
an industrialised economy and nuclear weapons with a set of
Islamic values and practices. This is an incoherent enterprise.
Once you opt for the economic, political and other institutions of
modernity, you cannot escape their logic. You would become more
and more like a western society and get sucked into a process of
globalisation and thus into the American empire, precisely what
you say you do not want. Furthermore, these institutions cannot be
sustained without creating an appropriate culture, radically
transforming social, educational and other institutions, and
undermining the very religious and moral values you cherish. You
want to create powerful Muslim societies that are capable of
standing up to the west. But if you are really serious about
creating a good society, you should stop measuring yourself
against the west. You should start instead with the great values
of Islam, relate them to the circumstances and aspirations of your
people, and assimilate those western values and institutions that
will enrich your societies.
As you admit, Muslim societies have become degenerate, but your
explanation for this is wrong. They are degenerate because they
are static, inegalitarian, patriarchal, averse to change, and
lacking the spirit of scientific inquiry, individual freedom and
the capacity for collective and co-operative action. In these
areas we have much to learn from the west. I have myself been a
grateful student of the west, learning much from its liberal,
Christian and socialist traditions and suitably integrating it
into Indian ways of life and thought. A crude division of the
world into west and east is unhelpful because it homogenises each
and obstructs a mutually beneficial dialogue.
You say that the west is spiritually empty and call its citizens
infidels. Although the west is consumerist and militarist, many of
its citizens have a strong social conscience. The concern for the
poor, the welfare state, the desire to create a just society and
the pressures for global justice and humanitarian intervention are
all examples of this. Religion matters a great deal to many in the
west, and some of them are keen to enter into a dialogue with and
borrow from non-Christian religions. You are wrong to think that
Muslims have a monopoly on spirituality. Spirituality is not about
how often you pray, fast and visit the mosque, but about serving
your fellow humans and living by the great virtues of humility,
benevolence, tolerance and universal love. I see little evidence
of this in you.
You seem to believe that Islam is perfect. But all religions
contain truths and errors. Moreover, you, Osama, claim to know the
true principles of Islam better than anyone else, and brook no
dissent. You rule out the creative adaptation of these principles
to a world vastly different to the one in which they were first
articulated. And by asking the Islamic state to impose them on its
subjects, you deny the latter their basic religious freedom. This
is the surest way to corrupt both your religion and the state and
to arrest the moral and spiritual growth of your people. A truly
religious person wants to live by the values and beliefs of his
religion. If the state has to enforce them on him, then clearly
his religion has ceased to have any meaning for him. A religiously
based state is a sacrilege, an insult to God and to the human
soul.
You blame the Europeans or Americans and never Islam for your sad
predicament. You forget the simple truth that no outsider can get
a direct or indirect foothold in a society unless it is itself
rotten, just as no human body succumbs to a disease unless it has
lost its regenerative resources. Stop blaming others, and
concentrate your energies on rebuilding and revitalising your
societies by educating and organising the masses. You are right to
say that many Muslim rulers are corrupt stooges of external
powers, but you forget that our rulers are not an alien species
but a magnified version of ourselves. We create them in our image
and are responsible for what they are and do. You, Osama, have no
patience, no plan of social regeneration, no desire to deal with
the deeper causes of social decay. You rely on a tightly knit
group of religious activists to transform society. But once in
power, they too will become corrupt, arrogant and dictatorial.
While repeatedly attacking the Americans, you also keep attacking
the Jews and have often expressed not only anti-Zionist but
offensive antisemitic sentiments. I could not disagree more.
Unlike you, I have lived and worked with Jews, admire their
intellectual and moral qualities, and know them and their history
well. Some Jews became my closest friends in South Africa, and one
of them bought a farm where we set up an experiment in communal
living. I call the Jews the "untouchables of Christianity."
Although they are an integral part of the Judeo-Christian
tradition, they were for centuries ostracised, shunned, humiliated
and subjected by Christians to degrading treatment, of which the
Nazi atrocity was only the most horrendous example.
I well know that the victims of yesterday can easily become the
oppressors of tomorrow, and use their past suffering to excuse and
even legitimise their brutal treatment of others. Israel has in
recent years behaved in an unjust manner with the support of the
US. Its misdeeds must be challenged, but you must not be
insensitive to the effect of their past suffering on the Jews.
They are naturally haunted by their bitter historical memories,
feel profoundly insecure and sometimes find it difficult to trust
even well-meaning outsiders. They have at last found a home and
understandably feel intensely possessive about it. Their new home
rendered the Palestinians homeless and caused them immense
suffering. We need to find ways of doing justice to both. I was
keen on a bi-national state of Jews and Arabs just as I would have
liked a united India. In spite of all my efforts to stop it, India
was partitioned. I accepted it in the hope that once the two
quarrelling brothers set up their separate homes and got their
hostilities out of their systems, they would not only learn to
coexist in peace but even perhaps revive their deeper bonds and
draw closer. You, Osama, must accept the existence of Israel, give
it the sense of security it needs, and work patiently towards
getting it to appreciate the justice of the Palestinian cause. As
long as you threaten it, you frighten its people and drive them
into the arms of its most reactionary and militarist leaders.
Sensible Israelis know that they have to live in the midst of Arab
societies, and that the latter will not remain backward and
divided for ever.
Finally I must turn to your terrorist methods. I find them
unacceptable on pragmatic and moral grounds. They will not help
you achieve your goals. They cannot drive away the Americans who
will use their might to smash your terrorist camps and networks,
as they have done in Afghanistan and elsewhere. They do not mind
disregarding international law and even their own constitutional
procedures, and you have no hope against such a determined
opponent. Even if they were to go, your methods would not be able
to defeat their indigenous collaborators, let alone revitalise
Muslim societies. There is not a single example in history of
terrorists creating a humane and healthy society. Today, Osama,
you use terrorism against the Americans and Muslim rulers;
tomorrow your own people will use it against you and claim the
same justification for it. When will this vicious circle end?
I also have moral objections to your method. Human life is sacred,
and taking it is inherently evil. Besides, however fallen a human
being might be, he is never so degenerate that he cannot be won
over or neutralised by organised moral pressure. Human beings do
evil deeds because they are in the grip of evil ideas, or are
driven by hatred, or because of the compulsions of their wider
society which disposes them to do things they might personally
disapprove of. Violence does not address any of these
circumstances.
As I have shown by example, organised non-violent resistance is
the only moral and effective way to fight evil. It appeals to the
opponent's sense of shared humanity, awakens his conscience,
reassures him that he need fear no harm, and mobilises the power
of public opinion. It also allows time for tempers to cool and
reason to work, lifts both parties to a higher level of
relationship, teases out what they share in common, avoids false
polarisation, and leaves behind no lasting legacy of mutual
hatred.
Don't play your opponent's game and remain trapped in the chain of
action and reaction. Take upon yourself the burden of his evil,
become his conscience and transform the context of your conflict.
I call this the surgery of the soul, purging the poison of hatred
and mobilising the moral energies of the opponent for a common
cause.
Take the case of the Palestinians. They have used violence. Israel
has countered it with greater violence. The result is an
increasing brutalisation of the two societies. Now consider what
would happen if the Palestinians were to follow my advice. They
would eschew all threats to Israeli citizens, acknowledge them as
their brothers, appeal to their sense of justice and long history
of humiliation, and get them to appreciate both the suffering they
are causing to the Palestinians and the considerable damage they
are doing to their own psyche and society. If necessary, they
would mount well organised acts of non-violent resistance and
civil disobedience to highlight their injustices and dare the
Israeli government to do its worst.
I cannot imagine that any Israeli government, not even that of
Ariel Sharon, would kill unarmed and peaceful protesters with the
world watching. If it did, it would not only incur universal
condemnation, including that of diaspora Jews, but also divide its
own people. I am convinced too that some Israeli soldiers would
disobey government orders, as some are already doing. Unlike the
current wave of violence, peaceful protests would have the
advantage of delegitimising Israeli violence, raising the morale
and moral stature of Palestinians and mobilising world opinion in
their favour.
You might say, as some of your associates have done, that non-
violence comes easily to us Hindus and is alien to the Islamic
tradition. This is not true. Hindus have a long tradition of
violence, and are by temperament as violent a people as any other.
It was only after a long campaign and examples of successful non-
violence that I was able to bring them round to accepting it. As
for Muslims, you should know that they too have a long tradition
of non-violent resistance. The ferocious Pathans of the northwest
frontier provinces of what is now Pakistan embraced it with great
success under the guidance of my friend Abdul Gaffar Khan. No
religion is inherently for or against violence. It is up to its
leaders to interpret it appropriately and guide its followers
accordingly.
With blessings and love
MK Gandhi
___________________________________________________________
Dear Mahatma Gandhi
1st January 2004
I must confess that I had never before had a reason to read your
writings or follow your life. You are not as well known in Muslim
countries as you are in the west, and all I had heard was that you
were a Hindu leader of India who could not command the loyalty of
the Muslims and fought against the British by a passive and rather
feminine method. But I was sufficiently interested by some of the
things you said to go and read and reflect on your life and work.
While I now see the situation a little differently, I remain
unpersuaded.
You misrepresent your Indian experience and, like all moralists,
extend it to societies where it does not apply. Since British
forces did not occupy your country, they had to depend on local
support, which naturally placed considerable constraints on them.
The British people were ambivalent about the empire, and some were
opposed to it. You could therefore always count on a sympathetic
body of British opinion to press your case for independence. By
the time you came to dominate the Indian political scene, the
British were exhausted, initially by the 1914-1918 war and then by
the great depression. The events leading up to the 1939-1945 war
and that war itself debilitated them further. You were therefore
in the fortunate position of confronting a weak opponent who had
neither the will nor the means to continue to rule over your
country. You should also recall that you lived at a time when
there were several centres of power, each regulating the others,
and none, not even the British empire, enjoyed complete mastery.
The historical context in which I have to operate could not be
more different. It is dominated by a single power with a global
reach, which feels triumphant after its victory in the cold war,
and thinks that it can now do what it likes. Its economy is driven
by an enormous appetite for profits and the consequent desire to
turn the whole world into a safe market for American goods. Its
political system is dominated by money and selfish pressure
groups, it incarcerates more people than any other rich country,
it has a larger class of the poor than any other rich country, it
has launched more clandestine, proxy and open wars than any other-
yet the US considers its form of government to be the best in the
world, and insists without the slightest embarrassment that it has
a right and a duty to export it to other countries. This
formidable combination of self-righteousness, missionary spirit,
national self-interest, moral myopia and overwhelming power in a
single country has radically transformed the world. Your ideas, Mr
Gandhi, belong to a world that is dead, and are of no help to
those fighting against current injustices.
The Americans have to be checked in the interest of global peace,
stability and justice. This requires not just military power but a
superior vision of man and society that satisfies the deepest
urges and aspirations of the human soul. Europe cannot provide
this because it is part of the same western civilisation and
because it is all too keen to share the spoils of the American
empire. Only Islam offers an alternative. It has the vision of a
truly good society and the will to realise it. It is also endowed
with the requisite wealth, strength of numbers, and long
historical experience of ruling over a multi-ethnic and multi-
religious world. It is therefore vital that Muslim countries
should unite, acquire nuclear weapons, take control of their oil
wealth and lead the world in a better direction. You call this
imperialism. I understand your fears and assure you that we do not
seek to impose our views on others, let alone run their societies.
We want to restore Islamic civilisation in the erstwhile Muslim
countries, and are confident that its moral and spiritual vision
will win over the allegiance of the rest of the world over time.
The cold war was dominated by a clash between the two materialist
ideologies of capitalism and communism. Islam provides a superior
alternative to both, the future belongs to us.
You reject modernity, I don't. The modern world is here to stay,
has much to be said for it, and anyone opting out of it is doomed
to impotence. I do not want an alternative to modernity as you do,
but an alternative modernity, a society that draws on modern
technology and places it in the service of Islam. I want nuclear
weapons, the modern state, industrialisation and so on, without
which my people would remain at the mercy of the west, but I do
not want the modern secular, egalitarian and liberal culture with
all its attendant evils of atheism, confused gender roles,
promiscuity, homosexuality, selfishness, consumerism, and so on.
Such a cultural synthesis, which gives modernity an Islamic soul,
is possible and worth fighting for.
Unlike you I don't consider violence inherently evil. I judge it
on the basis of its goals and its ability to realise them. Your
non-violent struggle was constantly shadowed by terrorist
activities, which frightened and weakened the British and must be
given as much credit for achieving Indian independence as your
non-violence. Every method of struggle requires certain conditions
for its success. Non-violence requires a decent opponent, freedom
to mount protests, and a reasonably impartial media. You had all
three; I don't. We do not have the civil liberties you enjoyed. If
we resorted to non-violent protests, the Americans and their
stooges would infiltrate our ranks, create divisions, spread false
stories, and, if all this failed, use force to maul us down. They
would then use the pliant global media to manipulate public
opinion in their favour.
If you need further proof, look at the ways in which the Americans
and the British justified and continue to justify the recent war
on Iraq. They solemnly announced that they had incontrovertible
proof that Iraq had weapons of mass destruction, and they still
can't find them. When Hans Blix introduced a note of caution, he
was vilified. Cautious reports of British and American
intelligence services were deliberately doctored by politicians,
who proved more dishonourable than their spies. We are not even
told exactly how many Iraqi civilians died in the war. And as for
the military casualties, no one is bothered-as if an Iraqi
soldier's life had no value. We are told little about the daily
atrocities committed against Iraqi civilians by US soldiers, and
none of the latter has so far been tried let alone punished. In
the light of all this, there is absolutely no chance of success
for non-violent protests. The world won't even know what
humiliations and atrocities were inflicted upon us, let alone
exert pressure on our behalf. You, Mr Gandhi, had no answer when
Martin Buber asked what advice you would give to the Jewish
victims of Hitler's camps. As he pointed out, where there is no
witness, there is no martyrdom, only a pointless waste of life.
Unlike Hinduism, Islam takes a more charitable view of violence
and sanctions and even enjoins it under certain circumstances. The
prophet himself used violence, and so did his followers and other
great Muslim religious and political leaders. Even if I were to
plead for non-violence, it would not be accepted by my fellow-
Muslims. The Pathan followers of Abdul Gaffar Khan used it only
for a while, and then abandoned it in favour of violence. I see no
other way to shake the might of the Americans.
Violence is how we got rid of the Soviets in Afghanistan. America
understood this and gave us all the help we needed. And it is
because of this that they are now scared of the same methods being
used against them. As I have said on several occasions, the
struggle against the Soviets was a profound "spiritual experience"
for me and my fellow-fighters, and represented a decisive turning
point in our way of thinking. It gave us enormous self-confidence,
expanded our political horizon, helped us build a global network
and enabled us to move beyond narrow, largely ethnic, Arab
nationalism to the vision of a wider Islamic unity. I would rather
stick to the method I and my followers have found successful than
try yours. You keep telling me that I should not lower myself to
the level of my opponent and should act on higher principles. Why?
If others hit me, I hit back. If they harm me or my people, I harm
them. Why should I endure the suffering involved in being my
opponent's redeemer? I am a follower of Prophet Muhammad, not
Jesus Christ.
Yours
Osama
__________________________________________________________
Dear Osama
30th January 2004
You advance the following propositions. First, Americans are
embarked on an imperialist project to dominate the world. Second,
Muslim societies should be reconstructed on the basis of the true
principles of Islam. Third, this cannot be done without getting
the Americans out of your societies and overthrowing their native
collaborators. Fourth, only terrorist violence can achieve these
goals.
As for the first argument, you are wrong to generalise about
Americans. Some groups there fit your description, others don't.
Many Americans are deeply troubled by and critical of what their
government is doing in their name, and have protested against the
recent war in Iraq. Some of those who support the present
administration do so because they are fearful after the events of
9/11. Their belief that their country was invulnerable to foreign
attack has been shattered, and they live in fear of future
attacks. Bush reassures them that his global war on terrorism will
give them the security they crave, so they go along with him. As
long as you keep talking the way you do, you reinforce their
paranoia and support for Bush's policy. If you had talked the
language of peace and linked up with the progressive forces in
America, you would have had a better chance of success.
As for your second argument, I could not disagree more. All past
and present experience confirms my view that identifying religion
with the state corrupts both. Religion has a legitimate place in
public life and is an important source of people's commitments and
motivations. But that is wholly different from saying that the
state should be based on, enforce, or be guided by religious
principles. The state is based on coercion, religion on freedom,
and the two simply cannot go together. In your case the situation
is made worse by the fact that you take not an open, tolerant and
dynamic view of religion, but a static, self-righteous and
dogmatic one. This commits you to a tightly knit politico-
religious party supervising all areas of individual and social
life, the surest way to destroy religion, create a terrorist
state, and turn human beings into soulless automata. Have you
learned nothing from the disastrous experiences of Iran and your
own "land of the two holy mosques," as you call Saudi Arabia, both
of which are beginning to appreciate the need to separate religion
and state?
Your third proposition is only partially true. Following our
earlier discussion, I looked more closely at the history of US
interference in the affairs of Muslim societies. I appreciate
better your view that you can't achieve significant changes in
your society without ending US influence. However, removing them
physically does not mean that you will be able to banish American
values and views of life if your people remain enamoured of them.
You can only fight ideas with ideas, and need a more clearly
developed alternative. Furthermore, as long as your society
remains deeply divided, unjust, and devoid of a strong sense of
freedom and cohesion, it will remain too weak to resist external
manipulation and domination. Terrorist attacks on outsiders or
their domestic representatives may give you a febrile feeling of
elation and satisfy your ego, but they achieve nothing lasting.
You need to build a cadre of reformers and activists, work among
the masses, open up spaces for action by judicious acts of
protest, and create a broad-based movement with the power to
reconstitute your society. Once your society develops a collective
sense of identity and a strong spirit of independence, America
would not be able to dominate it.
Finally, you make a serious mistake in rejecting non-violence.
Braving the brutality of America's southern states, Martin Luther
King used non-violence to achieve civil rights for black Americans
and gave them a sense of pride and self-confidence. Iranians, too,
successfully used it against the Shah. The more his troops killed
innocent protestors, the more rapidly his regime dissolved, with
even some of his troops deserting him. You say that my own
countrymen used violence and that I sanctioned it. Some of my
countrymen did resort to violence when provoked beyond endurance.
Although I said that it was understandable, I continued to condemn
it, fasted in a spirit of atonement and even apologised to the
colonial rulers for it. To condone isolated acts of violence by
desperate individuals is one thing; to make violence the central
principle of struggle is totally different.
You rightly say that martyrdom requires witness and that the role
of the media is crucial to its success. Some sections of the media
are biased and all too ready to oblige their governments; others
are not. There is also no reason why you can't start your own
publications to present your views as I did and as Al-Jazeera has
done. You should not exaggerate the power of the media in
pluralistic societies. They cannot ignore non-violent protests
altogether, for this would discredit them. Ordinary men and women
know that the media are often biased, and make appropriate
allowances for that. Had this not been the case, the scale of the
opposition to the war on Iraq in a country like Britain would be
inexplicable. I would go so far as to say that by exaggerating the
power of the media, you fall into the trap set by your opponents.
If your cause is just and is pursued in a peaceful and humane
manner, it will command attention. My experience bears this out.
Even if you do not believe in non-violence, you should know by now
that your methods have done an incalculable harm to your people:
you have discredited a great religion. Millions now instinctively
associate Islam with violence and destruction. You have also
deeply divided the umma, subjected your followers to torture and
degradation, and rendered miserable the lives of many innocent
diaspora Muslims. You have given the Bush administration an excuse
to unleash extensive violence and pursue a project of global
assertiveness. It is time you grew out of your infantile obsession
with death and destruction, abandoned your messianic zeal, and
showed a bit of humility and good sense. But my religion forbids
me to give up on any human being, not even on you.
Yours
MK Gandhi
This dialogue is based on a lecture first delivered at Boston
University. A longer version will appear later this year in "The
Stranger's Religion: Fascination and Fear" edited by Anna
Lannstrom (University of Notre Dame Press)
* Bhikhu Parekh is a professor of political philosophy, a Labour
peer, and the author of three books on Gandhi.
https://www.alainet.org/en/articulo/109866
Del mismo autor
- Why terror? 29/04/2004
