32. THAT MEMORABLE WEEK!—II
So I went to the Commissioner
Mr. Griffith's office. All about the staircase leading to the office I
saw soldiers armed from top to toe, as though for military action. The
verandah was all astir. When I was admitted to the office, I saw Mr. Bowring
sitting with Mr. Griffith.
I described to the Commissioner
the scenes I had witnessed. He replied briefly. 'I did not want the procession
to proceed to the Fort, as a disturbance was inevitable there. And as I
saw that the people would not listen to persuasion, I could not help ordering
the mounted police to charge through the crowd.'
'But,' said I, 'you knew what
the consequences must be. The horses were bound to trample on the people.
I think it was quite unnecessary to send that contingent of mounted men.'
'You cannot judge that,' said
Mr Griffith. 'We police officers know better than you the effect of your
teaching on the people. If we did not start with drastic measures, the
situation would pass out of our hands. I tell you that the people are sure
to go out of your control. Disobedience of law will quickly appeal to them;
it is beyond them to understand the duty of keeping peaceful. I have no
doubt about your intentions, but the people will not understand them. They
will follow their natural instinct.'
'It is there that I join issue
with you,' I replied. 'The people are not by nature violent, but peaceful.'
And thus we argued at length.
Ultimately Mr. Griffith said, 'But suppose you were convinced that your
teaching had been lost on the people, what would you do?'
'I should suspend civil disobedience,
if I were so convinced.'
'What do you mean? You told
Mr. Bowring that you would proceed to the Punjab the moment you were released.'
'Yes, I wanted to do so by the
next available train. But it is out of the question today.'
'If you will be patient, the
conviction is sure to grow on you. Do you know what is happening in Ahmedabad?
And what has happened in Amritsar? People have everywhere gone nearly mad.
I am not yet in possession of all the facts. The telegraph wires have been
cut in some places. I put it to you that the responsibility for all these
disturbances lies on you.'
'I assure you I should readily
take it upon myself wherever I discovered it. But I should be deeply pained
and surprised, if I found that there were disturbances in Ahmedabad. I
cannot answer for Amritsar. I have never been there, no one knows me there.
But even about the Punjab I am certain of this much, that had not the Punjab
Government prevented my entry into the Punjab, I should have been considerably
helpful in keeping the peace there. By preventing me they gave the people
unnecessary provocation.'
And so we argued on and on.
It was impossible for us to agree. I told him that I intended to address
a meeting on Chowpati and to ask the people to keep the peace, and took
leave of him. The meeting was held on the Chowpati sands. I spoke at length
on the duty of non-violence and on the limitations of Satyagraha, and said:
'Satyagraha is essentially a weapon of the truthful. A Satyagrahi is pledged
to non-violence, and unless people observe it in thought, word and deed,
I cannot offer mass Satyagraha.'
Anasuyabehn, too, had received
news of disturbances in Ahmedabad. Someone had spread a rumour that she
also had been arrested. The mill-hands had gone mad over her rumoured arrest,
struck work, and committed acts of violence, and a sergeant had been done
to death.
I proceeded to Ahmedabad. I
learnt that an attempts had been made to pull up the rails near the Nadiad
railway station, that a Government officer had been murdered in Viramgam,
and that Ahmedabad was under martial law. The people were terror-stricken.
They had indulged in acts of violence and were being made to pay for them
with interest.
A police officer was waiting
at the station to escort me to Mr. Pratt, the Commissioner. I found him
in a state of rage. I spoke to him gently, and expressed my regret for
the disturbances. I suggested that martial law was unnecessary, and declared
my readiness to co-operate in all efforts to restore peace. I asked for
permission to hold a public meeting on the grounds of the Sabarmati Ashram.
The proposal appealed to him, and the meeting was held, I think, on Sunday,
the 13th of April, and martial law was withdrawn the same day or the day
after. Addressing the meeting, I tried to bring home to the people the
sense of their wrong, declared a penitential fast of three days for myself,
appealed to the people to go on a similar fast for a day, and suggested
to those who had been guilty of acts of violence to confess their guilt.
I saw my duty as clear as daylight.
It was unbearable for me to find that the labourers, amongst whom I had
spent a good deal of my time, whom I had served, and from whom I had expected
better things, had taken part in the riots, and I felt I was a sharer in
their guilt.
Just as I suggested to the people
to confess their guilt, I suggested to the Government to condone the crimes.
Neither accepted my suggestion.
The late Sir Ramanbhai and other
citizens of Ahmedabad came to me with an appeal to suspend Satyagraha.
The appeal was needless, for I had already made up my mind to suspend Satyagraha
so long as people had not learnt the lesson of peace. The friends went
away happy.
There were, however, others
who were unhappy over the decision. They felt that if I expected peace
everywhere, and regarded it as a condition precedent to launching Satyagraha,
mass Satyagraha would be an impossibility. I was sorry to disagree with
them. If those amongst whom I worked, and whom I expected to be prepared
for non-violence and self-suffering, could not be non-violent, Satyagraha
was certainly impossible. I was firmly of opinion that those who wanted
to lead the people to Satyagraha ought to be able to keep the people within
the limited non-violence expected of them. I hold the same opinion even
today.