10. A SACRED RECOLLECTION AND PENANCE
A variety of incidents
in my life have conspired to bring me in close contact with people of many
creeds and many communities, and my experience with all of them warrants
the statement that I have known no distinction between relatives and strangers,
countrymen and foreigners, white and coloured, Hindus and Indians of other
faiths, whether Musalmans, Parsis, Christians, or Jews. I may say that
my heart has been incapable of making any such distinctions. I cannot claim
this as a special virtue, as it is in my very nature, rather than a result
of any effort on my part, whereas in the case of ahimsa (non-violence),
brahmacharya
(celibacy), aparigraha (non-possession), and other cardinal virtues,
I am fully conscious of a continuous striving for their cultivation.
When I was practising in Durban,
my office clerks often stayed with me, and there were among them Hindus
and Christians, or to describe them by their provinces, Gujaratis and Tamilians.
I do not recollect having ever regarded them as anything but my kith and
kin. I treated them as members of my family, and had unpleasantness with
my wife if ever she stood in the way of my treating them as such. One of
the clerks was a Christian, born of [untouchable] Panchama parents.
The house was built after the
Western model, and the rooms rightly had no outlets for dirty water. Each
room had therefore chamber-pots. Rather than have these cleaned by a servant
or a sweeper, my wife or I attended to them. The clerks who made themselves
completely at home would naturally clean their own pots, but the Christian
clerk was a newcomer, and it was our duty to attend to his bedroom. My
wife managed the pots of the others, but to clean those used by one who
had been a Panchama seemed to her to be the limit, and we fell out. She
could not bear the pots being cleaned by me, neither did she like doing
it herself. Even today I can recall the picture of her chiding me, her
eyes red with anger, and pearl drops streaming down her cheeks, as she
descended the ladder, pot in hand. But I was a cruelly kind husband. I
regarded myself as her teacher, and so harrassed her out of my blind love
for her.
I was far from being satisfied by
her merely carrying the pot. I would have her do it cheerfully. So I said,
raising my voice: 'I will not stand this nonsense in my house.'
The words pierced her like an
arrow.
She shouted back: 'Keep your
house to yourself and let me go.' I forgot myself, and the spring of compassion
dried up in me. I caught her by the hand, dragged the helpless woman to
the gate, which was just opposite the ladder, and proceeded to open it
with the intention of pushing her out. The tears were running down her
cheeks in torrents, and she cried: 'Have you no sense of shame? Must you
so far forget yourself? Where am I to go? I have no parents or relatives
here to harbour me. Being your wife, you think I must put up with your
cuffs and kicks? For Heaven's sake behave yourself and shut the gate. Let
us not be found making scenes like this!'
I put on a brave face, but was
really ashamed, and shut the gate. If my wife could not leave me, neither
could I leave her. We have had numerous bickerings, but the end has always
been peace between us. The wife, with her matchless powers of endurance,
has always been the victor.
Today I am in a position to
narrate the incident with some detachment, as it belongs to a period out
of which I have fortunately emerged. I am no longer a blind, infatuated
husband, I am no more my wife's teacher. Kasturba can, if she will, be
as unpleasant to me today, as I used to be to her before. We are tried
friends, the one no longer regarding the other as the object of lust. She
has been a faithful nurse throughout my illnesses, serving without any
thought of reward.
The incident in question occured
in 1898, when I had no conception of brahmacharya. It was a time
when I thought that the wife was the object of the husband's lust, born
to do her husband's behest, rather than a helpmate, a comrade and a partner
in the husband's joys and sorrows.
It was in the year 1900 that
these ideas underwent a radical transformation, and in 1906 they took concrete
shape. But of this I propose to speak in its proper place. Suffice it to
say that with the gradual disappearance in me of the carnal appetite, my
domestic life became and is becoming more and more peaceful, sweet, and
happy.
Let no one conclude from this
narrative of a sacred recollection that we are by any means an ideal couple,
or that there is a complete identity of ideals between us. Kasturba herself
does not perhaps know whether she has any ideals independently of me. It
is likely that many of my doings have not her approval even today. We never
discuss them, I see no good in discussing them. For she was educated neither
by her parents, nor by me at the time when I ought to have done it. But
she is blessed with one great quality to a very considerable degree, a
quality which most Hindu wives posses in some measure. And it is this:
willingly or unwillingly, consciously or unconsciously, she has considered
herself blessed in following in my footsteps, and has never stood in the
way of my endeavour to lead a life of restraint. Though, therefore, there
is a wide difference between us intellectually, I have always had the feeling
that ours is a life of contentment, happiness, and progress.