A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
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Thiranjala Weerasinghe sj.- One Island Two Nations
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Thursday, April 9, 2015
Mao and Gandhi: Two Asians - Johan Galtung
Thursday, 09 April 2015
Let us
start by summarizing. We are looking at six major leaders of forces and
movements shaping centuries–Churchill-
Hitler-Stalin-Mao-Gandhi-Mandela–comparing, two at a time. We are
looking for similarities and dissimilarities. Some of them are out in
the open, in their spoken ideologies. But most of them–maybe the most
interesting–are hidden to the untrained eye. There are the similarities
when they are from the same civilization and the dissimilarities when
different– however much they profess to be on the same or very different
lines. The six were themselves hardly aware of this factor.
As Churchill, Hitler and Stalin share the Christian-secular
civilization; we would expect anti-Semitism, racism, and little
hesitation when killing–by war, starvation (the Lord also did it), by
revolution, millions–even with enthusiasm. Deeper down there are
deductive reasonings from axioms about race and class and a final state:
the British Empire, the Aryan Reich, for one thousand years, and
socialism on the way to the final stage, communism forever; run from
London, Berlin, Moscow. So we got the triangular Second World War with
Moscow entering two alliances of convenience.
Enters Mao. He shares the word “communist” with Stalin (they still use
it, long after it disappeared in USSR-Russia). But the Chinese
civilization leaves its indelible imprint on that concept, giving the
word a very different meaning, commune-ism, common-ism, doing things
together, cooperating.
Enters Gandhi. An Asian like Mao, but watch out: there is no Asian
civilization. There are West, Central, South–Hindu; Gandhi is
here!–Southeast, East–Mao is here!–Asia; all very different–and a sixth,
North Asia, Russian Orthodox.
As to ideological differences: Mao used mass violence–power was also
that which came out the barrel of a gun–Gandhi used mass nonviolence,
satyagraha. But watch out again: Mao’s key source of power was
normative, his promise of liberating China from the yoke of imperialism,
and the common people from the yoke of feudalism. Gandhi promised
exactly the same and also saw power as that which comes from the
kshatriyah warrior and turned many of them into nonviolent warriors,
building on their courage and readiness to sacrifice for the cause. And
he added: better violence than cowardice. Mao did not have a military
caste to draw upon in the Chinese structure; the military were roving
gangs, headed by “warlords”. He made his own, later organized as the
People’s Liberation Army.
One changed the military, the other created a military.
Why were the goals so similar? Not because of deep culture but because
of not-so-deep structure. China and India had been impoverished and
pillaged by the West during the 19th century; colonizing India,
imperializing China, indoctrinating themselves and many locals that it
was all to their own best interest. Profit-greedy
colonialism/imperialism hitched on to the upper layers of feudalism and
incipient capitalism. Mao and Gandhi shared with Sun Yatsen and
Rabindranat Tagore the nationalism of this is our land, not yours; but
their practice embraced their firm identity with those downtrodden by
feudalism.
There was a strategic element: this was the overwhelming majority of the
downtrodden, the exploited serfs tilling their masters’ land for a
small portion of the harvest–and in India still do. And they had similar
solutions: the communes for Mao, the sarvodaya villages for Gandhi. The
former were more successful than the latter, Mao changed society,
Gandhi not.
Why not? For that the two deep cultures may provide an explanation. For
Daoism history is an endless succession of holons and dialectics, of
never ending forces/counterforces. Nothing is final. Not so in Hinduism
even if finality is eons away: Hinduism has a nirvana/liberation concept
where everything goes to rest; material energy converted into entropy
after N reincarnations. Daoism would accept this as a holon, but
immediately search for forces and counterforces–maybe some of them want
to go back to material life?
The Daoism in Maoism was the permanent revolution; the nirvana in
Gandhism seems to have been his “oceanic circles of sarvodaya villages”,
connecting the whole world. Maoism could more easily accommodate new,
or old rejuvenated, forces; Gandhism was blind to that possibility,
having found the ideal waiting to be born as the real. Very Western, in a
sense.
We note that Gandhism went beyond India, Maoism stopped at the borders
of China. Hinduism sees itself as universal whereas China sees itself as
unique, reacting strongly when movements in India and Nepal refer to
themselves as “Maoist”.
Deeper down we sense another difference: the tendency to deduce the
ideal from axioms. The two epistemology axioms of Daoism are about
process, not about substance: for Gandhi the horizontal caste system in
villages, related horizontally, was substantial. For Gandhi not
force-counterforce but the unity of humans was the mantra, from which
follows horizontality and circles, encompassing all; “oceanic” meaning
“universal”. Not so, the Daoists would say, nothing is forever. It was
not.
Common structure generated similarities in the giants; deep culture the
differences. What remains from both of them is the fight against
oppression-exploitation, the search for horizontality, and from Gandhi
nonviolent struggle, satyagraha.