Saturday, December 16, 2006

Lending a Hand..

On Tuesday night I watched Lage Raho Munnabhai (Carry on Munnabhai) with Raj and Sunanda from 'Lend-A-Hand-India'. Lots of laughs, as Munna and his bro Circuit race round Mumbai on their scooter. (I don't remember Bombay having that juicy fruity techno glow to it, must have happened when it changed it's name!) After Munna becomes best pals with Bapu (Gandhi) he starts dispensing 'Gandhigiri' over the radio talk show... people learn the power of giving flowers, being truthful, and of peaceful resistance. Is it all hype? or could it be that this light hearted comedy really is influencing people?
I am so grateful that Lend-a-Hand-India have agreed to collaborate with me on this project.Please take the time to check their website (top left corner) They are doing some great work educating rural children with work and life skills, and are based right here in New York.
Towards the end of my trip I will be spending a week in the Mumbai area to visit one of thier projects and make a report for them and at the same time interview some of the different groups of young people they work with about 'Gandhigiri'

Wednesday, December 13, 2006

Satyagraha

'Satyagraha' a name he had coined from his native Gujarati and which, I suspected, meant much more at least in the Hindu consciousness, than civil disobedience, passive resistance, non-cooperation and non-violence, though it encompassed all of these. It seemed to me .... that it had to do also with something more subtle - and fundamental: the search for truth, for the essence of the spirit, for some way of decency in human intercourse, and - all in all - offering to man something very new, something that so far had eluded him, a moral and indeed a practical alternative to oppression, violence, war."
William L. Shirer "Gandhi, a Memoir"

Is there a place for 'Satyagraha' in today's world? How could it work? As India itself moves towards a more prominent role in the global economic markets could it be the torchbearer for this message of non-violence and respect for humanity... a message so aredently preached by the father of their nation that has long been overlooked in our violently divided world.
As the crisis in the Middle East grows more desperate, can we learn from the example of the Mahatma Gandhi? Can his teachings be relevant in today's world? Could they inspire a movement towards more peaceful methods of conflict resolution?

Monday, December 11, 2006

Bombay now and then.

The Gate of India, Mumbai.On my arrival in Bombay in 1982 I remember watching the waves come crashing over the Gate of India in awe. The torrential monsoon-like rain led me to the dry and safe haven of the cinema where I saw the film 'Gandhi' and first became aware of his non-violent tactics, or 'Satyagraha' in his struggle towards Indian independance. With his Civil Disobedience the Mahatma Gandhi wrenched the freedom of his nation from the might of British Colonialism. But it came at a terrible cost, the partition of India, which he so vehemently opposed. It was a price he never wished to pay, a tragedy that haunted him until the end of his days and ultimately cost him his life. He died in 1948 aged 78, at the hands of an assasin, one of his own people. His last words were 'He Ram!', 'Oh God!'