Visions
of Peace: Arun Gandhi
by Alan Davidson
The
grandson of Mahatma Gandhi talks about
how the principles of nonviolence apply
to the struggle for gay rightsand
how all of us are a vital part of the
pursuit for truth
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One
of the signs of Mahatma Gandhis profound
influence was how many people have followed in
his footsteps, from Martin Luther King Jr. to
Archbishop Desmond Tutu to the Dali Lama. In a
very direct hands-on way, Gandhis work has
been continued by his own grandson, Arun Gandhi,
who has opened a center in this country dedicated
to teaching Gandhis principles.
Another
of Gandhis followers has been the Rev. Mel
White, who has used Gandhis teachings about
civil disobedience to organize nonviolent protests
of the "spiritual violence" against
gays preached by the Methodists, Baptists, Catholics,
and many of this countrys mainstream denominations.
To learn more about Gandhi, Rev. White sought
out Arun Gandhis help, even traveling to
India with him. In return, Arun Gandhi has joined
Mel White for six of his civil disobediences.
Arun
Gandhi was born in the Phoenix Ashram in South
Africa, which Mahatma Gandhi founded in 1903 when
he was first testing his ideas about nonviolence.
Aruns parents carried on the work of the
ashram, and Arun felt the centers efforts
probably contributed to the fall of apartheid.
While
a young boy, Arun went to live with his grandfather
in India for 18 months, during which time the
elder Gandhi set aside time every day to be with
the boy, despite his demanding schedule. "He
thought it was very important to give proper training
and proper guidance to young people," Arun
says. "He just found the time for them. He
was so disciplined in everything that he did that
he was able to allot an hour for me and he did
it."
In
working for gay rights and for that which is human
in all of us, we felt we could learn a lot from
the man continuing Gandhis work. Arun Gandhi
was happy to talk to OutSmart, and share
some of his vision about the ongoing and everchanging
search for truth.
Alan
Davidson: The M. K. Gandhi Institute for Nonviolence
in Memphis ... how did it come to be in Tennessee?
Thats a far cry from South Africa and India.
Arun
Gandhi: I moved from South Africa to India in
1956. I lived there for 30 years with my wife
and family. My wife and I were really involved
with the "low-caste, untouchable people."
We did some work with them using Gandhis
philosophy of nonviolence. It was a very successful
program. We were able to change the lives of many
thousands of people.
During
that work, it occurred to me that it would be
interesting to do a comparative study of prejudices.
Why do we as human beings have so many prejudices?
I had experienced color prejudice in South Africa.
Then I saw the caste prejudice in India. I had
read about the race prejudice in the United States.
So I wanted to do a comparative study of these
three prejudices and write a book. I got a fellowship,
to come here to Mississippi and study the race
question in 1987.
In
1988 my mother suddenly became very ill in South
Africa and she subsequently died. I had to go
there for her funeral. That was the first time
I saw the total destruction of the institute that
grandfather had started in 1903, where my parents
had worked their whole life to promote the institute
and its philosophy. It pained me to see a lifes
work gone down the drain. I felt I needed to do
something about it. I spoke to a lot of people
to start an institute there again and continue,
but I didnt get very much response. People
at that time in 1988 in South Africa were not
yet ready for change.
So I came back to the U.S. to finish my study
and I spoke to a lot of people about this idea.
Everybody felt that if I couldnt do it in
South Africa, why not do it here in the United
States? And so we started the institute in Memphis.
The reason why we chose Memphis was that the Christian
Brothers University gave us hospitality on the
campus and I thought it was a very good deal.
So I accepted it and, of course, its turned
out to be appropriate, because Dr. King was assassinated
in this city. So its the right place to
do this work.
You
mentioned your parents lifetime work in
South Africa. I believe a piece of that was with
the Phoenix Ashram that your grandfather had started.
It was burned and destroyed at some point.
Phoenix
was where I was born. It was a living institute.
So it was very painful for me to see the whole
thing totally destroyed and almost wiped off the
face of the earth.
Do
you feel the principles that your grandfather
began in 1903 and that your parents worked toward
contributed to the fall of apartheid?
Yes.
I think all of this work that had been done for
many years by various people ultimately contributed
to the dismantling of apartheid.
Working
for Gay & Lesbian Rights
Lets
talk about Reverend Mel White. How did you meet
Reverend White?
I
first received a letter from him when he was in
Dallas. He said he had a small church there for
the gay and lesbian community and he wanted to
train them in nonviolent techniques. Would I come
there and do some workshops? I had the opportunity
to go to Dallas for another engagement and he
came to my lectures. And we discussed the possibility
again. He had to suddenly give up that place and
move back to California, and weve maintained
the friendship. Then I took a group to India to
visit Gandhis India; Reverend Mel White
joined that group and we spent three weeks together
on that tour. We became very close friends. He
was very interested in Gandhi and his techniques.
Our friendship just grew from that.
In
terms of what your grandfather started and then
Martin Luther King Jr. coming and doing his work
in the 60s with the race prejudice, it seems
Mel White is a new incarnation working againwith
a different slant on prejudice, but using the
very same principles.
Yes.
I think hes done a wonderful job. He has
really studied the techniques and is doing a marvelous
job of bringing about a change through love and
understanding.
And
you found yourself demonstrating in Cleveland
at the annual United Methodist Church convention
and were arrested on behalf of gay and lesbian
rights.
Yes,
in fact last night I was here in Memphis at a
gay and lesbian function. Matthew Shepards
mother came and spoke to the group.
She
seems to be another person who has taken a tragedy
in her life and turned it to compassion.
She
did. I was just marveling as I was listening to
her speak. Grandfather came out of hate. Martin
Luther King came out of a hateful atmosphere.
Hate has given rise to some very important people
and important theories. Not that I am speaking
for hate, but you know its just a coincidence
that another hateful incident has given rise to
another wonderful person like Judy Shepard, who
has made it her lifes mission to go out
and change the world.
The
MTV awards were broadcasting live. Eminem is one
of the rappers who is known for his antigay, antiwomen,
and antirace remarks. Immediately after his performance,
MTV ran a promotional spot with Judy Shepard about
stopping the hate and stopping the violence. I
thought that was a nice way that the broadcasting
system could counter-balance that message from
the rapper.
Are
you involved in other things with Reverend White
and gay and lesbian issues?
I
did receive an invitation from Mel White asking
me to come to Washington, D.C., in November. They
are having a big demonstration there. [On November
14, Mel Whites Soulforce gathered 250 people
at the National Shrine in D.C. to protest the
exclusion of GLBT Catholics by the Catholic Church;
104 people were arrested.] We need to work together
to get rid of all this hate and prejudice. Its
not right to hate people because of the color
of their skin or their race or their religion
or their habits.
Satyagraha
& Ahisma:
In Pursuit of Truth and Nonviolence
I
would like to discuss some of the primary principles
that you work with. One of the first problems
of teaching these principles is the difficulty
of translating them into English. Satyagraha comes
from the Sanskrit, I believe.
Its
a combination of two words, truth and force. And
it can be translated to mean various things. [Some
translate satyagraha as "soulforce,"
from which Rev. Mel White got the name of his
group, Soulforce.] I usually translate it to mean
pursuit of truth. I feel this is closest to what
grandfather was practicing when he said we are
constantly in search of truth. If we have an open
mind and we sincerely pursue that truth, then
the likelihood of our finding it would be good.
But
the western philosophy comes from the possession
of truth. In the west, people feel they have the
truth and theres no pursuit of truth. You
know there is a very big difference between the
two. When you feel that you possess the truth,
then you dont change or you dont search
for anything, you just hold on to your antiquated
ideas in the belief that that is the truth. Whereas,
truth, nobody really has the truth, and so we
have to search for it. And so I consider grandfathers
philosophy a pursuit of truth.
Thats
one of the things that scares me about fundamentalism,
whether it is Christian or Islam, or Hinduism,
is that possession of the truth. The belief that
I have been given the law. And anything outside
of that is to be destroyed or disrespected or
hated. They dont look at the scriptures
as a text that illuminates the truth.
Thats
the tragedy today. Much of the violence and the
hate and the prejudices in the world are by people
who believe they possess the truth.
There
is a quote that Ram Dass is fond of using that
comes from your grandfathers book, "Experiments
in Truth." Its something like this,
" I am a human being and the truth is ever-changing
and evolving, and as a human being I must commit
to the truth and not to consistency." I think
it illuminates what you were saying. We as human
beings are fallible and the truth is evolving
and changing. And that we must commit to that
evolutionary process as opposed to appearing to
be right or appearing to be consistent.
As
I remember it, it was during an interview with
some correspondent that he mentioned it. The journalists
were perturbed by what they called his inconsistency.
He would say one thing today and then a week later
he would change. They said, "How do we keep
up with you if you are so inconsistent?"
And thats when he made this remark, that
the truth is ever-changing. I see new versions
of it every day. How can I be wedded to consistency
when I am pursuing truth?
One
of the things that I respect so much about your
grandfather is how he used his life as a laboratory.
Even in regards to diet and nutrition, he was
tinkering and changing and evolving the effect
of food on his spiritual practices and the quality
of his life. It takes a lot of courage to experiment
in that way all the time.
Lets
talk about ahimsa, which is a real difficult
word to translate.
Yes,
it is. Most people have translated ahimsa
to mean nonviolence, but grandfather translated
it to mean love. The reason behind that is, he
says when you say nonviolence, then you become
sort of dogmatic because there are certain times
in life when some violence becomes inevitable.
And if you are wedded to nonviolence, then you
wont do anything, you wont do the
right thing.
For
instance, the controversy in 1916, when he set
up his ashram. At that time the Jains controlled
the city. There were many stray dogs and many
of them became rabid. They threatened the human
population. So the mayor of the city wanted to
catch these dogs and put them to sleep because
there was no other treatment that they could think
of. The Jains felt this was violence and they
objected to it. So the mayor came and asked grandfather,
What should I do? and grandfather said,
Of course you have to catch the dogs and put
them to sleep, put them out of their misery.
And so this whole thing between the Jains and
grandfather went on for several months.
That
is when grandfather said there is much violence
in nonviolence and nonviolence in violence. If
we are wedded to nonviolence, we cant let
the dogs suffer and we cant let the people
be threatened by these dogs. Its more nonviolent
to put them to sleep than to let them live and
threaten the world.
That
brings to mind a quote from the founder of Aikido,
the Japanese martial arts. He says the ultimate
goal of war is love. I know people who practice
Aikido. They call it the Dance of the Tao, the
expression of love in action. How it is really
about conflict resolution as opposed to overthrowing
or defeating your opponent. It sounds like they
are saying the similar thing you described with
the dogs.
One
of the things I appreciate about ahimsa
is that nonviolence, or love, must be in thought,
word, and deed ... how it has to infuse your whole
being and personality.
This
is not something that you can put on and off at
will, its something that has to be a part
of your nature. You have to live it. You have
to live what you want others to learn. That is
one of the reasons why grandfather became so successful
in teaching people, because he lived it. He showed
by his lifestyle, the importance of what he was
talking about.
One
of the books about your grandfather that I have
found so inspirational is "Gandhi, The Man"
by Eknath Eswarren. Its a very simple book,
but really brings out the qualities and the principles.
And he talks fundamentally about the Bhagavad-Gita
and how that was an influence on your grandfather
and his thinking.
Actually,
he was influenced by all the religions. One of
the most important statements that he made was
that a friendly study of all the scriptures is
the sacred duty of every individual. He emphasized
the word friendly. A lot of people have made critical
studies, but not so many have made friendly studies.
If we make a friendly study of all the scriptures,
we will find the wisdom in all of them. We would
then be able to take that wisdom and incorporate
it in our lives. And thereby enhance our own beliefs
and not diminish our beliefs. So thats what
he did, he studied all the scriptures and he took
from every religion what he found important and
incorporated it in his lifestyle. He was impressed
with the Bhagavad-Gita. He said the Sermon on
the Mount was also just as important as the Gita
to him. He found tremendous similarities between
the Sermon on the Mount and the Bhagavad-Gita.
Your
grandfather also read Thoreau and his treatise
on civil disobedience. And that was one of his
inspirations in South Africa.
He
had started his civil disobedience campaign in
South Africa before he read Thoreau. It was in
prison he came across this book and he started
reading it. He was so happy and jubilant to know
that a scholar like Thoreau was writing about
the same thing he was already practicing. He just
felt that it was an endorsement of what he was
doing and he got more inspiration from that.
Ignorance
Is the Enemy
Your
grandfather said, "Evil and injustice and
hatred exist only insofar as we support them."
This comes back to the definition of Satyagraha
and Ahimsa being love. Its this belief that
love is all that there is and that evil is an
illusion.
Yes,
its an illusion. Its a sort of mental
state. You know, if we believe that some people
are evil, or some people are born evil, then we
will believe in that kind of thing. But theres
no truth behind it, and the truth is people are
not born evil, people are made evil by circumstances.
So yes, these illusions that we live with, they
have no scientific basis.
So
its the belief that no matter who you are
dealing with, that you can call forth the love
thats at the very core of their being.
Thats
exactly what its based on. That you appeal
to the goodness in the person and every person
has that goodness in him or her. And its
just a question of appealing to that.
Your
grandfather said that we have a moral obligation
to not cooperate with evil just as we have an
obligation to cooperate with all that is good.
I heard that used by Germans who opposed the Nazis.
One of the important distinctions that I repeatedly
hear your grandfather made about the British is
that they are not our enemy, its the untruth,
it is the ignorance that is the enemy.
Right.
The whole nonviolence concept is to attack the
wrongnot the person, but the problem. Generally
in violence we attack the person and we forget
about the problem. And we think that by eliminating
the person, we can do away with the problem. After
killing each other, we realize we havent
really achieved anything at all. One of the examples
that I use is Nazism. We fought WWII and we lost
68 million human lives in order to get rid of
Nazism. But what we succeeded in doing was getting
rid of the Nazis, but Nazism still lives and thrives
and threatens the whole world. The hate and the
prejudice, that philosophy of Nazis is still there,
so what did we achieve with the sacrifice of 68
million human lives if we were not able to get
rid of that problem? That is the distinction.
In nonviolence you focus on the problem and eliminate
the problem instead of focusing on the individual
and eliminating the individual.
We
Are Violent Every Day
You
have done a really good job of mapping out the
different kinds of violence, physical versus passive.
For all the physical violence that there is in
our society, in our world, it seems that the passive
is much more pervasive.
Yes,
in fact I would say for every physical act, there
is at least one hundred passive acts of violence
that we commit today. Many of these we do without
even knowing it, and that is what creates all
this violence in the world. The thing that we
need to do, each one of us, is to acknowledge
our own violenceand we can acknowledge that
only when we learn about it and do some introspection.
Mel
White points out that in the gay and lesbian community
its so easy to think about the hate that
is generated by the fundamentalist Christians
toward homosexuals. He also points out how many
times we have responded with anger and
resentment and hate toward fundamentalist Christians.
Even though we are often oppressed, we can be
just as oppressive in our own views and attitudes
and behavior.
Right,
its the whole question of an eye for an
eye only makes the whole world blind. So if somebody
hates something and we hate them back, its
not going to solve the problem.
I
think weve come back to the quote that you
often use, "Be the change you wish to see."
How we begin to look within ourselves and make
the changes within our own inner-self and personality
so that we can make a change in the world.
I
was very happy, Judy Shepard yesterday concluded
a lecture with that quote, "We must be the
change we wish to see."
Satyagraha
and Alcoholism
In
modern psychological parlance, I hear a lot about
the word "boundaries." Particularly
in situations like tragic alcoholism, drug abuse,
or violent behaviorhow you have to "exercise
your boundaries" or use "tough love"
to work with somebody who is suffering in that
way. How would you suggest using the principles
of ahimsa or satyagraha in working
with people who are chemically dependent or abusive
in different ways?
First
of all, not cooperating with them in their evil,
whatever evil they are doing. At the same time,
teaching them better ways of taking them out of
it and reforming them to love and understanding.
By condemning them because of what they are doing,
we wont bring about any change. We will
only reinforce their beliefs and push then lower
down in whatever they are doing.
Judging
them in a sense.
Yes.
If we respond with understanding and love and
yet be very clear that we are not going to support
their bad habits.
Well,
its a fine line of finding that place of
noncooperation and yet patiently offering that
love and support at the same time.
In
grandfathers case, he had to deal with his
eldest son, who got into bad company and became
alcoholic and all kinds of bad habits. Then he
needed money to support those bad habits and he
went around the country taking loans from people
on the basis of his fathers reputation.
His father then had to make a public statement
and ask people not to give him any support in
spite of the fact that he was his son. He said,
"I disown him because of his bad habits.
I would like him to come back and live with me
and I would support him and take care of him,
but not his bad habits."
Anger
You
talk about anger and how it is the initial source
of so much of the other violence that we see.
You make the analogy about electricity and anger
being similar.
Our
responses to people are conditioned by anger.
We get angry because somebody said something or
did something to us, and we respond or retaliate
immediately. When we do that in anger, we are
being violent; whether passively violent or physically
violent. That aggravates the situation and it
escalates from there.
So
the thing that we need to learn is not to respond
in anger. When we are in an angry mood, we are
not in control of our minds. When we are not in
control of our minds, we end up doing the wrong
thing, making the wrong choices. We have got to
learn to take time out and regain control of our
minds and then make the proper response to that
situation.
I
dont advocate walking away and forgetting
about it. I do advocate walking away for a little
while to be able to gain control of your mind.
But we have to come back and face the situation,
once we have control of our mind, and try to find
an adequate solution to the problem. This is something
that we need to work on throughout our lives.
I think that it should be a part of our training
all the time. We have to continuously develop
techniques and control over our minds and not
just do it at the moment of crisis.
Youre
saying its a daily spiritual practice.
Yes,
its a spiritual practice. Its a way
of being able to control our emotions. The analogy
about electricity is that it is a very powerful
source of energy. Its very deadly if we
abuse it, but yet we channel it and bring it into
our life and we use it for all the good things
that we use electricity for. And in the same way,
we ought to be able to channel anger, because
its the same kind of energy. Its very
deadly if we abuse it, but very useful and good
if we can channel it properly and use it effectively.
Your
grandfather suggested that you keep an anger journal.
He
said it is the only way of getting anger out of
your system and it becomes your textbook of your
emotions. The journal then will give you a guide
about what you need to do, what you have done,
and how you have changedthen over the years
you can study your emotions. So it serves two
purposes. It helps you be able to get control
of your mind and get the anger out onto paper,
but he always advocated that we should the journal
with the intention of finding a solution to the
problem and not just pour the anger out. You know
a lot of people have been writing anger journals
and they just simply pour their anger out into
the journal. So that when they went back and read
the journal a few weeks later or a few days later,
they just were reminded of the anger. It all came
back to them. But if you write it with the intention
of finding a solution, then you get into that
mental attitude of trying to work out a solution
to the problem.
In
our psychologically hip society, we are so good
at just dumping. This is a way of vacating and
seeing the end of it.
Making
Time for Children
You
wrote once about living with your grandfather
in India. You said for the 18 months that you
lived with him that he allotted a certain amount
of time for you each day. It is so amazing to
me that with all the demands on his time and his
attention, he would create for you, a young boy,
that time with him.
He
thought it was very important to give proper training
and proper guidance to young peopleyou know,
whoever was living with him at that time. He just
found the time for them. He was so disciplined
in everything that he did, that he was able to
allot an hour for me and he did it.
I
think in our society here in the United States,
how many parents are so busy working and running
and doing, and yet there is so little quality
time with their children.
We
are motivated by selfishness and self-centeredness.
We are always thinking about whats good
for us and what do we need to do and so on. So
we are selfishly motivated. But if we look at
whats good for our children and do whats
right for them, then it would be a very different
kind of situation.
Daily
Spiritual Practices
Would
mind sharing which spiritual practices that you
use in your life right now? Certainly selfless
service is an important part of your spiritual
practice, but what else do you do?
Well,
I do meditation, and of course yoga and selfless
service as you said.
What
form of meditation do you practice?
I
do active meditation. I dont lock myself
in a room or anything like that. Wherever I am,
sometimes even on airplanes when I am travelling
somewhere, I have developed the technique of being
able to turn my gaze inward and be to myself even
in the midst of all the people. I meditate on
some important quotations, important things from
scriptures that Ive taken, important quotations
from grandfathers writings or writings from
other important people. I reflect on them and
see how they can be incorporated in my own life.
I
practice vipassana or mindfulness meditation
and I have found that to be very valuable. Mindfulness
was the first tool that I had in working with
my anger or with my grief that didnt feel
like running away from it. It allowed me to sit
with it and be with it in a way that wasnt
destructive.
"We
Must Be the Change We Wish to See"
Terrence
McKenna paraphrases your grandfather as saying,
"In the big picture of things, Im not
sure if what I do is important, but I do know
that it is vitally important that I do it."
It impressed me. Somebody like your grandfather
who has had such an incredible contribution to
this last century and to the quality of life,
to say it might be insignificant of what I do,
but its vitally important that I do it.
A
lot of us have this big picture before us and
we want to change the whole world. Yet none of
us have the capacity to do that. Because we dont
have that capacity, we get so disillusioned and
we dont do anything at all. We realize and
bring about a change by doing little things. And
those little things add up and we make the change
happen.
Youre
saying we are crippled by our own fears and inadequacies
.
We
get disillusioned because we want to change the
whole world, and then we realize we dont
have the power to do that, so then we dont
do anything at all. But if we can change one person
at a time or one thing at a time, that little
change then adds up and contributes to the eventual
change of the world.
The
ripple effect, and I think we come back to changing
ourselves.
Exactly,
that is where the old quotation of, "We must
be the change we wish to see" in the world.
Conflict
resolution is getting a lot of attention these
days and how do we constructively do that in a
business situation or in our personal lives. And
I was wondering if the institute offers programs
around that?
What
we really focus on more is not just conflict resolution
but how do we avoid conflict. Being able to resolve
a conflict after it occurs is one thing, but how
do we avoid conflict all together. That is another
thing that we need to focus on. We seem to ignore
that aspect of it very much.
Sometimes
I use the analogy of a smoker who goes on smoking.
And then develops cancer and goes to the doctor
and says, "Cure me of this cancer."
And the doctor says, "You have to give up
smoking and change your lifestyle." And he
says, "Nope. Im not going to do that.
Im going to continue the way I am, but youve
got to cure me." Conflict resolution is somewhat
like that. If we continue to do all the things
that generate conflicts and then we try to find
ways of resolving that peacefully. And sometimes
we succeed and sometimes we dont because
we are contributing to fueling the fire so we
cant put out the fire.
In
closing, if there were anything you would like
to offer to our gay and lesbian readers that we
could do to continue to heal the prejudice and
ignorance around us?
Well,
I would just like to say, dont feel that
you are alone in the world. There are many millions
of people who are being hated and discriminated
against because of other reasons. We all need
to come together to change the world and get rid
of all the hate and the prejudice and hopefully
create a world where we can all live in peace
and harmony with each other. This we can do only
through love and respect for each other. Not through
violence and counter-hate.
One
of the unfortunate things that I see in the gay
and lesbian community, even though we are often
subjected to great violence and oppression and
suppression, we can be just as hateful to other
members of our own community.
Last
night I saw that. Some gays and lesbians had written
some poems and they were reading them (at the
benefit with Judy Shepard). Some of them had some
very harsh things to say about the rest of the
community. I thought that was sort of eye-for-an-eye
kind of attitude. Which is not going to get anybody
anywhere.
Alan
Davidson is a registered massage therapist and
director of Essential Touch Therapies in Houston.
He has practiced touch and energy medicine since
1985, and teaches classes in massage, meditation,
aroma-therapy, and yoga.
If you have any comments about this article,
please email them to letters@outsmartmagazine.com.
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