Skip to main content

Attack on Gandhi: Where diehard Left and extreme Right appear to meet

 
By Rajiv Shah 
Another Gandhi Jayanti has come and gone. Several of the top comments on this occasion hovered around US president Donald Trump calling Prime Minister Narendra Modi “father of India”. Perhaps things wouldn’t have taken a turn that it did had not Modi’s “diehard” followers like Union minister Jitendra Singh going so far as to say that those who “do not feel proud” of Trump’s comment that Modi is the “father of India”, do not consider themselves Indians.
As this time happened to be the 150th anniversary of Gandhi’s birthday, Modi went global with his oped opinion piece in the “New York Times”, dated October 2. While full of praise for Gandhi, Modi singularly avoided calling him Father of the Nation, something which my friend and journalist colleague Hari Desai, a keen Sangh observer, has told me several times over (I am sure he has written about it too). He says, this is characteristic of all Sangh leaders.
There is nothing new for Sangh people to undermine Gandhi. I know it from my personal experience in 1960s and 1970s in Delhi, where we lived. In school, I used to be very weak in English, as least this is what my Gandhian parents thought. So, they decided to put me under a tutor. The first one (I don’t remember his name) turned out to be a diehard RSS fellow. On the very first day, he asked me whether we keep Ganga jal in our house. I had no knowledge what that meant.
The next day, he started criticizing Gandhi, blaming him for creating Pakistan, and praising Nathuram Godse for killing the Mahatma, calling Godse a “great revolutionary.” I mentioned this to my parents, who showed this tutor the door on the very third day. Yet another interaction was with a far off relative, who lived in the Chandni Chowk area in Delhi. A young boy who would regularly attend RSS shakhas, he would tell me range stories about Gandhi’s personal life, telling me, he was a debauch, and ending by stating that Godse did the right thing by killing the Mahatma.
I wasn’t really a great fan of Gandhi, but I always took criticism of the Mahatma with a pinch of salt. Frankly, I was never impressed with what all my parents told me about Gandhi, whom they appeared to venerate as some kind of a superhuman. But when someone criticized Gandhi, I looked around for another answer. During my college days, being part of the CPI-M’s student wing, Students Federation of India (SFI), I used to be a regular attendant to its study circles, where we were "introduced" with some bit of history, apart from why India should go communist.
Nehru, Rajendra Prasad, Ambedkar
The first book that I read on Gandhi was CPI-M leader EMS Namboodiripad’s “Gandhi and the Ism”. It was a relatively more balanced view of Gandhi, providing all of Mahatma’s pluses and minuses. The book, as far as I can remember, didn’t go so far those study circles, where, the Mahatma almost characterized an “imperialist agent”.
We were bluntly told, he was a representative of the big bourgeoisie in alliance with imperialism! “See with whom he allied! Birla”, we were told. Gandhi’s mindset, we were told, was “feudal”, and characterized the state power – bourgeois landlord government led by big bourgeoisie. Thankfully, however, no one in the CPI-M made any personal attack on Gandhi, as those in the RSS did.
Decades later, I am puzzled: Have things changed? CPI-M general secretary Sitaram Yechury, inaugurating a new party office in Delhi, calling it Surjeet Bhawan, tweeted, “Today, as we inaugurate #SurjeetBhawan, it is Gandhi’s 150th birth anniversary. Gandhi’s India and our Constitution are under severe attack. In the serious rightward shift in India, it is only the Left which can provide answers.” Gandhi’s India? Wow, what a great change, was my first reaction!
Yechury has posted a few photographs of the new office, where they are going to train cadres. One of the replies on the Twitter to Yechury, however, tells him: “But we have heard there is not even a single photograph of Bapu in that office.” I have no means to know whether CPI-M has changed its view on Gandhi internally, as it seems at least in the open they have stopped criticizing the Mahatma. I also don’t know whether, like Sangh Parivar, CPI-M recognizes Gandhi as the Father of the Nation.
However, clearly, the CPI-M’s dislike for Gandhi has now been taken over by other sections of the Left. The Ambedkarite Dalits are as critical, if not more. One of them is Arundhati Roy, well-known author of “The God of Small Things”, for which she was awarded Booker Prize, She once called Naxalites “Gandhians with guns in hand”, but two years ago she started calling Gandhi “racist”, citing some of the Mahatma’s utterances in South Africa. She is, strangely, quiet now, refusing to attack Gandhi, something that she would virulently do only two years ago.
However, on his 150th birth anniversary, social media is full of Left-wingers who continue attacking Gandhi as before. One of them is Bhaskar Sur, a Facebook friend, who, on the occasion of Gandhi Jayanti wrote, “Gandhi's pseudo non-violence only led to the orgy of violence”, adding, “Gandhi was one of great masters of self-fashioning, repackaging and salesmanship in the political mart.” What you read here is nothing but bad things about Gandhi, though, unlike Sangh men, who are making personal attacks on Gandhi, he avoids doing it.
Sur, who lives in Kolkata, in his 1,000-odd word Facebook post, says, points to how Gandhi was “convinced of the beauty of the caste system and patriarchy”, and was “against democracy, women's voting rights and technology”, adding, “He fought democracy with his nebulous 'swaraj ' and 'Ramrajya' and his 'ahimsa’ based on vegetarianism had far wider reach than the tame reformist discourse of the moderates.”
Yechury inaugurating Surjeet Bhawan
Worse, Sur says, without any reference, “In South Africa he was the stretcher bearer of the racist white government and during the World War-l he became a recruiting agent of the British army and almost worked himself to death procuring canon fodders. In personal life he often thrashed his wife. Her tears, he writes, had an edifying effect on him.”
The comments on the post from Dalit activists like Kamal Kumar Niyogi, who is general secretary of the Bahujan Communist Party (I didn’t know if such a party existed), who agrees with Sur, and says, Gandhi’s was a “strong believer and practitioner of Varnashram theory of Manusmriti”, was a “defender of Brahmanical patriarchy and believer of superiority of Brahman/Sanatan Dharma in contrast to Islam and Christianity.”
Niyogi continues, Gandhi’s 'Hind Swaraj' was “nothing but the typical manifesto of Brahman-Baniya-Raj. He was against the reasoning, scientific temperament, equality, fraternity and liberation of subaltern castes, classes and nationalities. He was against the unity and assertion of oppressed, exploited and demeaned castes, classes, genders, religions and nationalities as the distinct political force.”
The hatred for Gandhi among a big section of Dalits, whatever I have learned, appears to stem from Ambedkar’s long-standing disagreements with Gandhi, even though, I think, what this section seems to forgets, both cooperated with each other in every possible manner. Some of my Dalit friends who have tried to praise Gandhi are known to have been reprimanded for doing it.
My friend and journalist colleague Nachiketa Desai, who has access to lot of yet to be published works of his grandfather, Mahadev Desai, personal secretary of Gandhi, tells me, “One should remember, it was Gandhi who ensured that Ambedkar to be chairman of the Constituent Assembly, which framed the Constitution. Also, while Nehru was reluctant to take Ambedkar in the first Cabinet, Gandhi told him, it has to be national Cabinet, not of Congress, and Ambedkar was included.”
Did Gandhi believe in varnashram dharma, or caste system? I once posed this question to Tridip Suhrud, a top Gandhi expert, who is architect of digitizing most of the Gandhi and Gandhi-related works, bringing them under a single website, available free of charge to anyone. He told me, “Granted, Gandhi’s views on caste had its limitations. But he was a great learner, and changed his views on caste at the end of his life.”
Suhrud also told me, “Tell me, apart from Gandhi, which other national leader during the freedom struggle fought untouchability and manual scavenging? Neither Nehru, nor Sardar, nor Bose… none. Gandhi called manual scavenging a national shame. He stood by the Valmikis like no others did. He interacted with Ambedkar to understand the latter’s anger, and understood it…”

Comments

TRENDING

Modi’s Israel visit strengthened Pakistan’s hand in US–Iran truce: Ex-Indian diplomat

By Jag Jivan   M. K. Bhadrakumar , a career diplomat with three decades of service in postings across the former Soviet Union, Pakistan, Iran, Afghanistan, South Korea, Sri Lanka, Germany, and Turkey, has warned that the current truce in the US–Iran war is “fragile and ridden with contradictions.” Writing in his blog India Punchline , Bhadrakumar argues that while Pakistan has emerged as a surprising broker of dialogue, the durability of the ceasefire remains uncertain.

Manufacturing, services: India's low-skill, middle-skill labour remains underemployed

By Francis Kuriakose* The Indian economy was in a state of deceleration well before Covid-19 made its impact in early 2020. This can be inferred from the declining trends of four important macroeconomic variables that indicate the health of the economy in the last quarter of 2019.

Incarceration of Prof Saibaba 'revives' the question: What is crime, who is criminal?

By Kunal Pant* In 2016, a Supreme Court Judge asked the state of Maharashtra, “Do you want to extract a pound of flesh?” The statement was directed against the state for contesting the bail plea of Delhi University Professor GN Saibaba. Saibaba was arrested in 2014, a justification for which was to prevent him from committing what the police called “anti-national activities.”

Why Indo-Pak relations have been on 'knife’s edge' , hostilities may remain for long

By Utkarsh Bajpai*  The past few decades have seen strides being made in all aspects of life – from sticks and stones to weaponry. The extreme case of this phenomenon has been nuclear weapons. The menace caused by nuclear weapons in the past is unforgettable. Images of Hiroshima and Nagasaki from 1945 come to mind, after the United States dropped two atomic bombs on the cities.

Food security? Gujarat govt puts more than 5 lakh ration cards in the 'silent' category

By Pankti Jog* A new statistical report uploaded by the Gujarat government on the national food security portal shows that ensuring food security for the marginalized community is still not a priority of the state. The statistical report, uploaded on December 24, highlights many weaknesses in implementing the National Food Security Act (NFSA) in state.

The soundtrack of resistance: How 'Sada Sada Ya Nabi' is fueling the Iran war

​ By Syed Ali Mujtaba*  ​The Persian track “ Sada Sada Ya Nabi ye ” by Hossein Sotoodeh has taken the world by storm. This viral media has cut across linguistic barriers to achieve cult status, reaching over 10 million views. The electrifying music and passionate rendition by the Iranian singer have resonated across the globe, particularly as the high-intensity military conflict involving Iran entered its second month in March 2026.

Lata Mangeshkar, a Dalit from Devdasi family, 'refused to sing a song' about Ambedkar

By Pramod Ranjan*  An artist is known and respected for her art. But she is equally, or even more so known and respected for her social concerns. An artist's social concerns or in other words, her worldview, give a direction and purpose to her art. History remembers only such artists whose social concerns are deep, reasoned and of durable importance. Lata Mangeshkar (28 September 1929 – 6 February 2022) was a celebrated playback singer of the Hindi film industry. She was the uncrowned queen of Indian music for over seven decades. Her popularity was unmatched. Her songs were heard and admired not only in India but also in Pakistan, Bangladesh and many other South Asian countries. In this article, we will focus on her social concerns. Lata lived for 92 long years. Music ran in her blood. Her father also belonged to the world of music. Her two sisters, Asha Bhonsle and Usha Mangeshkar, are well-known singers. Lata might have been born in Indore but the blood of a famous Devdasi family...

'Batteries now cheap enough for solar to meet India's 90% demand': Expert quotes Ember study

By A Representative   Shankar Sharma, Power & Climate Policy Analyst, has urged India’s top policymakers to reconsider the financial and ecological implications of the country’s energy transition strategy in light of recent global developments. In a letter dated April 10, 2026, addressed to the Union Ministers of Finance, Power, New & Renewable Energy, Environment, Forest & Climate Change, and the Vice Chair of NITI Aayog, with a copy to the Prime Minister, Sharma highlighted concerns over India’s ambitious plans for coal gasification and the Prototype Fast Breeder Reactor (PFBR).

Labour unrest in Manesar trigger tensions: Recently enacted labour codes blamed

By A Representative   A civil rights coalition has expressed concern over recent developments in the industrial hub of Manesar in Haryana, where a series of labour actions and police responses have drawn attention. A statement, released by the Campaign Against State Repression (CASR), said it stood in solidarity with workers in IMT Manesar and other parts of the country, while also alleging instances of police excess during ongoing unrest.