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Hindu Muslim Unity
— Mahatma Gandhi
But much more yet
remains to be done. It is essentially the work of the Hindus.
Wherever the Mussalmans are still found to be apathetic, they
should be invited to come in. One often hears from Hindu quarters
the complaint that Mussalmans do not join the Congress
organisations or do not pay to the Swaraj Fund. The natural
question is, have they been invited? In every district Hindus must
make special efforts to draw out their Mussalman neighbours. There
will never be real equality so long as one feels inferior or
superior to the other. There is no room for patronage among
equals. Mussalmans must not feel the lack of education or numbers
where they are in a minority. Deficiency in education must be
corrected by taking edu My main purpose is to think of the immediate task lying before us. Bakr-i-Id will be soon upon us. What are we to do to frustrate the attempts that will then be made to foment quarrels between us — Hindus and Mussalmans? Though the situation has improved considerably in Bihar, it is not yet free from anxiety. Over-zealous and impatient Hindus are trying to force matters. They lend themselves an easy prey to the machinations of mischief-makers not always prompted by the Government side. Protection of the cow is the nearest to the Hindu heart. We are therefore apt to lose our heads over it, and thus be unconsciously instrumental in doing an injury to the very cause we seek to spouse. Let us recognise that our Mussalman brethren have made great efforts to save the cow for the sake of their Hindu brethren. It would be a grave mistake to undertake them. But immediately we become assertive, we make all effort on their part nugatory. We have throughout all these many years put up with cow slaughter either without a murmur of under ineffective and violent protest. We have never tried to deserve self-imposed restraint on the part of our Mussalman countrymen by going out of our way to cultivate friendly relations with them. We have more or less gratuitously assumed the impossibility of the task. But we are now making
a deliberate and conscious attempt in standing by their side in
the hour of their need. Let us not spoil the good effect by making
our free offering a matter of bargain. Friendship can now be a
contract. It is a status carrying no consideration with it.
Service is a duty, and duty is a debt which it is a sin not to
discharge. If we would prove our friendship, we must help our
brethren whether they save the cow or not. We throw the
responsibility for their conduct towards us on their own
shoulders. We dare not dictate it to them as consideration for our
help. Such help will be hired service, which the Mussalmans can
not be blamed if they summarily reject. I hope, therefore, that
the Hindus of Bihar and indeed all the parts of India will realise
the importance of observing the strictest forbearance, no matter
what the Musslamans do on Bakr-i-Id. We must leave them to take
what course they chose. What Hakim Ajmal Khan did in one hour at
Amritsar, Hindus could not have done by years of effort. The cows
that Messrs Chhotas and Khatri saved last Bakr-i-Id day, the Hindu
millionaires of Bombay could not have saved if they had given the The way to save the
cow is not to kill or quarrel with the Mussalmans; the way to save
the cow is to die in the act of saving the Khilafat without
mentioning the cow. Cow protection is a process of purification.
It is tapasya, i.e.., self-suffering. When we suffer voluntarily,
and, therefore, without expectation of reward, the cry of
suffering (one might say) literally ascends to heaven, and God
above hears it and responds. There is the path of religion, and it
has answered even if one man has adopted it in its entirety. I
make bold to assert without fear of contradiction that it is not
Hinduism to kill a fellowman even to save the cow. Hinduism
requires its votaries to immolate themselves for the sake of their
religion, i.e. for the sake of saving the cow. The question is how
many Hindus are ready without bargaining with the Mussalmans to
die for them and for their religion? If the Hindus can answer it
in the religious spirit, they will not only have secured Mussalman
friendship for eternity, but they will have saved the cow for all
time from the Mussalmans. Let us not swear even by the greatest
among them. They can but help. They cannot undertake to change the
hearts of millions of men who have hitherto given no thought to
the feelings of their Hindu neighbours when they slaughter the
cow. But God Almighty can in a moment change them and move them to
pity. Prayer accompanied by adequate suffering is a prayer of the
heart. That alone counts with God. To my Mussalman friends I would
but say one word. They must not be irritated by the acts of
irresponsible or ignorant but fanatical Hindus. He — July 28, 1921. |
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