4. QUICKENED SPIRIT OF SACRIFICE
Before I narrate the struggle
for the Indian settlers' rights in the Transvaal and their dealings with
the Asiatic Department, I must turn to some other aspects of my life.
Up to now there had been in
me a mixed desire. The spirit of self-sacrifice was tempered by the desire
to lay by something for the future.
About the time I took up chambers
in Bombay, an American insurance agent had come there--a man with a pleasing
countenance and a sweet tongue. As though we were old friends, he discussed
my future welfare. 'All men of your status in America have their lives
insured. Should you not also insure yourself against the future? Life is
uncertain. We in America regard it as a religious obligation to get insured.
Can I not tempt you to take out a small policy?'
Up to this time I had given
the cold shoulder to all the agents I had met in South Africa and India,
for I had thought that life assurance implied fear and want of faith in
God. But now I succumbed to the temptation of the American agent. As he
proceeded with his argument, I had before my mind's eye a picture of my
wife and children. 'Man, you have sold almost all the ornaments of your
wife,' I said to myself. 'If something were to happen to you, the burden
of supporting her and the children would fall on your poor brother, who
has so nobly filled the place of father. How would that become you?' With
these and similar arguments I persuaded myself to take out a policy for
Rs. 10,000.
But when my mode of life changed
in South Africa, my outlook changed too. All the steps I took at this time
of trial were taken in the name of God and for His service. I did not know
how long I should have to stay in South Africa. I had a fear that I might
never be able to get back to India; so I decided to keep my wife and children
with me and earn enough to support them. This plan made me deplore the
life policy and feel ashamed of having been caught in the net of the insurance
agent. If, I said to myself, my brother is really in the position of my
father, surely he would not consider it too much of a burden to support
my widow, if it came to that. And what reason had I to assume that death
would claim me earlier than the others? After all the real protector was
neither I nor my brother, but the Almighty. In getting my life insured,
I had robbed my wife and children of their self-reliance. Why should they
not be expected to take care of themselves? What happened to the families
of the numberless poor in the world? Why should I not count myself as one
of them?
A multitude of such thoughts
passed through my mind, but I did not immediately act upon them. I recollect
having paid at least one insurance premium in South Africa.
Outward circumstances too supported
this train of thought. During my first sojourn in South Africa, it was
Christian influence that had kept alive in me the religious sense. Now
it was theosophical influence that added strength to it. Mr. Ritch was
a theosophist, and put me in touch with the society at Johannesburg. I
never became a member, as I had my differences, but I came in close contact
with almost every theosophist. I had religious discussions with them every
day. There used to be readings from theosophical books, and sometimes I
had occasion to address their meetings. The chief thing about theosophy
is to cultivate and promote the idea of brotherhood. We had considerable
discussion over this, and I criticized the members where their conduct
did not appear to me to square with their ideal. The criticism was not
without its wholesome effect on me. It led to introspection.