Mainstream, VOL LIII No 41 New Delhi October 3, 2015
M.K.Gandhi and the Founders of African National Congress
Saturday 3 October 2015, by Anil Nauriya
A critic had once remarked of an artist that a painting is not Indian or European simply on account of whether it is painted in India or in Europe. Similarly, one may say that scholarship is not scholarly simply because it is done by academics. Although academic writing ought to advance our knowledge rather than limit our understanding, some academic writing in the last few years appears clearly to be marked by a pursuit of sectarian politics by other means.
A recent trend in writing on M.K. Gandhi (1869-
It is instructive in this context to explore Gandhi’s intellectual and political interface with the African leadership of his time in South Africa, a theme to which the present article is confined. The year 2012 marked the centenary of the African National Congress which was founded in Bloemfontein, South Africa on January 8, 1912. Gandhi was still in South Africa then. Gandhi’s paper, Indian Opinion, welcomed the establishment of the African National Congress (then named the South African Native National Congress) as an “awakening”. [Indian Opinion, February 10, 1912] In fact, six months before the ANC was formed,
Gandhi’s paper carried a report about the likely formation of such an organisation. [Indian Opinion, July 29, 1911] The report cited Pixley Seme (1881-
In his South Africa years, Gandhi became increasingly aware of the reasons for the seething African discontent. His journal reproduced, for example, a lengthy report on the attempt by Sir Gordon Sprigg, a four-
Commenting on Sir Gordon’s meeting and specifically on Dr Rubusana’s questions to the former, Gandhi wrote: “One of the speakers at the meeting rightly reminded him (Sir Gordon— A.N.) that he had done nothing for the natives, and that East London is the only place in the Cape Colony where the natives have not the right to walk on the foot-
In the event, however, not Dr Rubusana, but John Dube (1871-
At least seven years earlier, in 1905, Gandhi had met John Dube and heard him speak. He then praised John Dube and wrote in favour of African land rights. [ Indian Opinion,September 2, 1905] In the following year in 1906 Gandhi’s paper praised a ‘manifesto’ issued by John Dube against colonial policies that worked unfairness towards Africans. [Indian Opinion, November 24, 1906]
Both John Dube and Gandhi had been impressed with the work of Booker T. Washington, the African-
Clearly, Gandhi appreciated the importance of education and industrial training for Africans. There was enough familiarity between Gandhi’s Phoenix institution and John Dube’s Ohlange for developments at the Ohlange institution to be reported in Gandhi’s paper every now and then. For example, the addition of a building at Ohlange was reported. [Indian Opinion, February 2, 1907] So also a musical competition and performance held there in which young Africans from far and wide had participated. [Indian Opinion, June 19, 1909]
The Indian statesman, Gopal Krishna Gokhale (1866-
In an editorial in its issue of November 15, 1912, Ilanga lase Natal affirmed the calibre of leaders like Gokhale and Gandhi. Gandhi’s paper severely condemned the Natives Land Act, 1913 as an “Act of confiscation” and supported John Dube’s criticism of the Act. [Indian Opinion, August 30, 1913]
As early as in 1905, Gandhi had supported the Africans’ rights in land. He and his journal welcomed the Transvaal Supreme Court judgement in the case of Edward Tsewu (b. 1866), another future founder of the African National Congress, upholding the Africans’ right to hold land. [Indian Opinion, April 15, 1905, August 12, 1905]
From Gandhi’s speech at the YMCA in Johannesburg on May 18, 1908, we know that he had moved beyond expressing his concern merely over Indian issues; in his speech he made a forthright rejection of the policy of segregation and envisioned a South Africa in which the various races “commingle”. [Indian Opinion, June 6, 13, 1908]
The Gandhi-
In 1909, when the draft South African Constitution was being debated in the British Parliament in London, delegations representing Africans, Coloured people and Indians went from South Africa to England to present their points of view. Pixley Seme and Alfred Mangena (1879-
Apparently, Pixley Seme and Alfred Mangena were already based in London at the time. In July 1909, at least one future founder of the ANC, Dr Walter Rubusana, had been present together with John Tengo Jabavu, Gandhi and Dr A. Abdurahman in the gallery of the House of Lords in London where the draft South African constitutional legislation was being debated.
At least from 1909 onwards, we find Gandhi commending passive resistance to Coloured and African activists and peoples. [Indian Opinion, June 12, 1909 and January 1, 1910] In 1910 Gandhi criticised the new constitutional set-
Gandhi specifically referred to Dr Rubusana in this context. As we have seen above, years earlier, in 1904, Gandhi had endorsed Dr Rubusana’s interrogation of Sir Gordon Sprigg in East London and Dr Rubusana’s criticism of discriminatory pave-
The personal achievements and activities of some of those who went on, in the future, to found the ANC were reported in Gandhi’s paper. Alfred Mangena’s attendance at a meeting in London to discuss South African affairs, and his being called to the Bar in England were reported in the paper as was the calling to the Bar of George Montsioa (b. 1885), who would be another future founding member of the ANC.[Indian Opinion, May 26, 1906, September 5, 1908, June 18, 1910]
Gandhi’s paper covered in detail the proceedings before the Magistrate in the case concerning the ejection of Sefako Makgatho (1861-
About Gandhi’s links with Dr Pixley Seme, the active force behind the formation of the ANC, we know from multiple sources. Pauline Podlashuk was a future medical doctor active in the suffragette movement in South Africa as the Secretary of the Women’s Enfranchisement League. She had translated Tolstoy’s Russian language letter which the famous writer and thinker had written to Gandhi in 1910. In her memoirs Dr Podlashuk refers to a meeting, to which she was witness, between Gandhi and Pixley Seme at the Tolstoy Farm, near Johannesburg in 1911.
Dr Podlashuk, who was there along with Ms Stewart Sanderson, the Joint Secretary of the League, recalls that Pixley Seme and Gandhi discussed the latter’s passive resistance movement. Gandhi’s friend and associate, Hermann Kallenbach, was also present. [Pauline Podlashuk, Adventure of Life : Reminiscences of Pauline Podlashuk, (eds. Judy Nasatyr and Effie Schultz), London, family published : ehbeitz@ yahoo.com, 2010, pp. 69-
Another founding member of the ANC, Selby Msimang (1886-
Several years later, in 1939, Gandhi would reminisce that he had often advised the African people. It is clear that he had multiple contacts with some of the founders of the ANC, that Gandhi respected them and that they respected him. He backed non-
The same year witnessed the largest movement led by Gandhi in South Africa. This time Indian indentured labour, miners and plantation workers and Indian women as a bloc courted arrest and went to prison. Gandhi’s wife, Kasturba, was imprisoned in Pietermaritzburg and Gandhi himself was sent to prison in Bloemfontein.
This record indicates that by the time the not-
The author, Anil Nauriya, is a writer and an advocate of the Supreme Court.
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