THE CENTURY IN REVIEW Y2K Hey, You In That Bunker, You Can Come Out Now! INDICATORS World Population: Six Billion and Counting Indicators of the Century WORKSHEET: Maps and Graphs in Focus PERSON OF THE CENTURY Albert Einstein: Person of the Century Franklin Delano Roosevelt: Runner-Up Mohandas Gandhi: Runner-Up WORKSHEET: Voices of the Century NATION CAMPAIGN 2000 Primary Questions How to Tell Them Apart WORKSHEET: Portrait of a Candidate CONGRESS Mutually Assured Destruction PERSON OF THE YEAR Jeff Bezos: King of the Internet BUSINESS AOL and Time Warner: Happily Ever After? WORLD GLOBAL ECONOMY Rage Against the Machine RUSSIA No Tears for Boris MIDDLE EAST Men At Work EAST TIMOR On The Razor's Edge WORKSHEET: East Timor's Independence Struggle JAPAN The Japan Syndrome PANAMA Giving Up the Ship? CUBA A Big Battle for a Little Boy ENVIRONMENT Greenhouse Effects WORKSHEET: Current Events in Review Answers |
He was no ordinary leader. There are those who believe he was divinely inspired, and it is difficult not to believe with them. He dared to exhort nonviolence in a time when the violence of Hiroshima and Nagasaki had exploded on us; he exhorted morality when science, technology and the capitalist order had made it redundant; he replaced self-interest with group interest without minimizing the importance of self. In fact, the interdependence of the social and the personal is at the heart of his philosophy. He seeks the simultaneous and interactive development of the moral person and the moral society. His philosophy of Satyagraha is both a personal and a social struggle to realize the Truth, which he identifies as God, the Absolute Morality. He seeks this Truth, not in isolation, self-centeredly, but with the people. He said, "I want to find God, and because I want to find God, I have to find God along with other people. I don't believe I can find God alone. If I did, I would be running to the Himalayas to find God in some cave there. But since I believe that nobody can find God alone, I have to work with people. I have to take them with me. Alone I can't come to Him." His awakening came on the hilly terrain of the so-called Bambata Rebellion, where as a passionate British patriot, he led his Indian stretcher-bearer corps to serve the Empire, but British brutality against the Zulus roused his soul against violence as nothing had done before. He determined, on that battlefield, to wrest himself of all material attachments and devote himself completely and totally to eliminating violence and serving humanity. The sight of wounded and whipped Zulus, mercilessly abandoned by their British persecutors, so appalled him that he turned full circle from his admiration for all things British to celebrating the indigenous and ethnic. He resuscitated the culture of the colonized and the fullness of Indian resistance against the British; he revived Indian handicrafts and made these into an economic weapon against the colonizer in his call for swadeshiÐthe use of one's own and the boycott of the oppressor's products, which deprive the people of their skills and their capital. A great measure of world poverty today and African poverty in particular is due to the continuing dependence on foreign markets for manufactured goods, which undermines domestic production and dams up domestic skills, apart from piling up unmanageable foreign debts. Gandhi's insistence on self-sufficiency is a basic economic principle that, if followed today, could contribute significantly to alleviating Third World poverty and stimulating development. He stepped down from his comfortable life to join the masses on their level to seek equality with them. "I can't hope to bring about economic equality... I have to reduce myself to the level of the poorest of the poor." Gandhi remains today the only complete critique of advanced industrial society. Others have criticized its totalitarianism but not its productive apparatus. He is not against science and technology, but he places priority on the right to work and opposes mechanization to the extent that it usurps this right. Large-scale machinery, he holds, concentrates wealth in the hands of one man who tyrannizes the rest. He favors the small machine; he seeks to keep the individual in control of his tools, to maintain an interdependent love relation between the two, as a cricketer with his bat or Krishna with his flute. Above all, he seeks to liberate the individual from his alienation to the machine and restore morality to the productive process. Questions TIME EDUCATION PROGRAM -- Teaching With Time |