28. KASTURBAI'S COURAGE
Thrice in her life my
wife narrowly escaped death through serious illness. The cures were due
to household remedies. At the time of her first attack Satyagraha was going
on or was about to commence. She had frequent haemorrhage. A medical friend
advised a surgical operation, to which she agreed after some hesitation.
She was extremely emaciated, and the doctor had to perform the operation
without chloroform. It was successful, but she had to suffer much pain.
She, however, went through it with wondeful bravery. The doctor and his
wife who nursed her were all attention. This was in Durban. The doctor
gave me leave to go to Johannesburg, and told me not to have any anxiety
about the patient.
In a few days, however, I received
a letter to the effect that Kasturbai was worse, too weak to sit up in
bed, and had once become unconscious. The doctor knew that he might not,
without my consent, give her wines or meat. So he telephoned to me at Johannesburg
for permission to give her beef tea. I replied saying I could not grant
the permission, but that if she was in a condition to express her wish
in the matter, she might be consulted, and she was free to do as she liked.
'But,' said the doctor, 'I refuse to consult the patient's wishes in the
matter. You must come yourself. If you do not leave me free to prescribe
whatever diet I like, I will not hold myself responsible for your wife's
life.'
I took the train for Durban
the same day, and met the doctor, who quietly broke this news to me: 'I
had already given Mrs. Gandhi beef tea when I telephoned to you.'
'Now, doctor, I call this a
fraud,' said I.
'No question of fraud in prescribing
medicine or diet for a patient. In fact we doctors consider it a virtue
to deceive patients or their relatives, if thereby we can save our patients,'
said the doctor with determination.
I was deeply pained, but kept
cool. The doctor was a good man and a personal friend. He and his wife
had laid me under a debt of gratitude, but I was not prepared to put up
with his medical morals.
'Doctor, tell me what you propose
to do now. I would never allow my wife to be given meat or beef, even if
the denial meant her death, unless of course she desired to take it.'
'You are welcome to your philosophy.
I tell you that so long as you keep your wife under my treatment, I must
have the option to give her anything I wish. If you don't like this, I
must regretfully ask you to remove her. I can't see her die under my roof.'
'Do you mean to say that I must
remove her at once?'
'Whenever did I ask you to remove
her? I only want to be left entirely free. If you do so, my wife and I
will do all that is possible for her, and you may go back without the least
anxiety on her score. But if you will not understand this simple thing,
you will compel me to ask you to remove your wife from my place.'
I think one of my sons was with
me. He entirely agreed with me, and said his mother should not be given
beef tea. I next spoke to Kasturbai herself. She was really too weak to
be consulted in this matter. But I thought it my painful duty to do so.
I told her what had passed between the doctor and myself. She gave a resolute
reply: 'I will not take beef tea. It is a rare thing in this world to be
born as a human being, and I would far rather die in your arms than pollute
my body with such abominations.'
I pleaded with her. I told her
that she was not bound to follow me. I cited to her the instances of Hindu
friends and acquaintances who had no scruples about taking meat or wine
as medicine. But she was adamant. 'No,' said she, 'pray remove me at once.'
I was delighted. Not without
some agitation I decided to take her away. I informed the doctor of her
resolve. He exclaimed in a rage: 'What a callous man you are! You should
have been ashamed to broach the matter to her in her present condition.
I tell you your wife is not in a fit state to be removed. She cannot stand
the least little hustling. I shouldn't be surprised if she were to die
on the way. But if you must persist, you are free to do so. If you will
not give her beef tea, I will not take the risk of keeping her under my
roof even for a single day.'
So we decided to leave the place
at once. It was drizzling and the station was some distance. We had to
take the train from Durban for Phoenix, whence our Settlement was reached
by a road of two miles and a half. I was undoubtedly taking a very great
risk, but I trusted in God, and proceeded with my task. I sent a messenger
to Phoenix in advance, with a message to West to receive us at the station
with a hammock, a bottle of hot milk and one of hot water, and six men
to carry Kasturbai in the hammock. I got a rickshaw to enable me to take
her by the next available train, put her into it in that dangerous condition,
and marched away.
Kasturbai needed no cheering
up. On the contrary, she comforted me, saying: 'Nothing will happen to
me. Don't worry.'
She was mere skin and bone,
having had no nourishment for days. The station platform was very large,
and as the rickshaw could not be taken inside, one had to walk some distance
before one could reach the train. So I carried her in my arms and put her
into the compartment. From Phoenix we carried her in the hammock, and there
she slowly picked up strength under hydropathic treatment.
In two or three days of our
arrival at Phoenix a Swami came to our place. He had heard of the resolute
way in which we had rejected the doctor's advice, and he had, out of sympathy,
come to plead with us. My second and third sons Manilal and Ramdas were,
so far as I can recollect, present when the Swami came. He held forth on
the religious harmlessness of taking meat, citing authorities from Manu.
I did not like his carrying on this disputation in the presence of my wife,
but I suffered him to do so out of courtesy. I knew the verses from the
Manusmriti,
I did not need them for my conviction. I knew also that there was a school
which regarded these verses as interpolations: but even if they were not,
I held my views on vegetarianism independently of religious texts, and
Kasturbai's faith was unshakable. To her the scriptural texts were a sealed
book, but the traditional religion of her forefathers was enough for her.
The children swore by their father's creed, and so they made light of the
Swami's discourse. But Kasturbai put an end to the dialogue at once. 'Swamiji,'
she said, 'whatever you may say, I do not want to recover by means of beef
tea. Pray don't worry me any more. You may discuss the thing with my husband
and children if you like. But my mind is made up.'