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{{short description|Self-rule concept and movement in India}}
[[Image:Gandhi_Downing_Street.jpg|thumb|Mahatma Gandhi]]
{{about|the concept popularised by [[Mahatma Gandhi]]|the general usage of the term|Self-governance|other uses|Swaraj (disambiguation)}}
'''Swaraj''' can mean generally [[self-governance]] or "home-rule" but the word usually refers to [[Mahatma Gandhi]]'s concept for [[Indian independence movement|Indian independence]] from foreign domination. Swaraj lays stress on governance not by a hierarchical government, but self governance through individuals and [[community building]]. The focus is on political [[decentralization]].<ref> Parel, Anthony. ''Hind Swaraj and other writings of M. K. Gandhi''. Cambridge University Press. Cambridge, 1997.</ref> Since this is against the political and social systems followed by [[Britain]], Gandhi's concept of Swaraj laid stress on India discarding British political, economic, bureaucratic, legal, military, and educational institutions.<ref>[http://www.swaraj.org/whatisswaraj.htm What is Swaraj?]. Retrieved on [[March 3]], [[2007]].</ref>
{{Use Indian English|date=February 2016}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=August 2024}}
'''Swarāj''' (Svarāja) ''[[wikt:स्व|sva]]'' "self", ''[[wikt:राज|raj]]'' "rule") can mean generally [[self-governance]] or "self-rule". The term was used synonymously with "home-rule" by [[Maharishi]] [[Dayanand Saraswati]] and later on by [[Mohandas Gandhi|Mahatma Gandhi]],<ref>''[[Hind Swaraj or Indian Home Rule]]'', Gandhi, 1909.</ref> but the word usually refers to Gandhi's concept of [[Indian independence movement|Indian independence]] from foreign domination.<ref>[http://www.swaraj.org/whatisswaraj.htm What is Swaraj?]. Retrieved on 12 July 2007.</ref> Swaraj lays stress on governance, not by a hierarchical government, but by self-governance through individuals and [[community building]]. The focus is on political [[decentralisation]].<ref>Parel, Anthony. ''Hind Swaraj and Other Writings of M. K. Gandhi''. Cambridge: [[Cambridge University Press]], 1997.</ref> Since this is against the political and social systems followed by [[UK|Britain]], Gandhi's concept of Swaraj advocated India's discarding British political, economic, bureaucratic, legal, [[military]], and educational institutions.<ref>[http://www.swaraj.org/whatisswaraj.htm What is Swaraj?]. Retrieved on 3 March 2007.</ref> [[S. Satyamurti]], [[Chittaranjan Das]] and [[Motilal Nehru]] were among a contrasting group of Swarajists who laid the foundation for [[parliamentary democracy]] in India.
Although Gandhi's aim of totally implementing the concepts of Swaraj in India was not achieved, the voluntary work organisations which he founded for this purpose did serve as precursors and role models for people's movements, voluntary organisations, and some of the non-governmental organisations that were subsequently launched in various parts of India.<ref name="What Swaraj meant to Gandhi">[http://www.mkgandhi.org/articles/swaraj.htm What Swaraj meant to Gandhi?]. Retrieved on 17 September 2008.</ref> The student movement against oppressive local and central governments, led by [[Jayaprakash Narayan]], Udit Swaraj and the [[Bhoodan movement]], which presaged demands for land reform legislation throughout India, and which ultimately led to India's discarding of the [[Zamindari system]] of [[land tenure]] and social organisation, were also inspired by the ideas of Swaraj.{{fact|date=August 2024}}


==Key concepts==
==Key concepts==
{{Wikisource|Hind Swaraj|Swaraj}}
[[Swami Dayanand Saraswati]], also known as '''Maharshi Dayanand Saraswati''' founder of the [[Arya Samaj]] and a [[Hindu]] reformer, defined ''Swaraj'' as the "administration of self" or "democracy". Swami Dayanand Saraswati, beginning with the premise that God had created people free to perform any work they were inclined to choose, questioned the legitimacy of the [[British Raj|British colonial rule in India]]. In the Swami's view, ''Swaraj'' was the basis for the [[Indian independence movement]]. [[Dadabhai Navroji]] claimed that he had learnt the word ''swaraj'' from the ''[[Satyarth Prakash]]'' of Saraswati.{{cn|date=September 2016}}


Swaraj aims towards a stateless society. According to Mahatma Gandhi, the overall impact of the state on the people is harmful. He called the state a "soulless machine" which, ultimately, does the greatest harm to mankind.<ref>Jesudasan, Ignatius. ''A Gandhian Theology of Liberation''. Gujarat Sahitya Prakash: Ananda India, 1987, pp. 236–237.</ref> The purpose of the state is that it is an instrument for the service of the people. However, Gandhi feared that a state moulded with such an aim would ultimately revoke the rights of the citizens and seize the role of grand protector, and would demand total compliance from them. This would create a paradoxical situation where the citizens would be alienated from the state and at the same time enslaved to it, which, according to Gandhi, was demoralising and dangerous. If Gandhi's close acquaintance with the working of the state apparatus [[Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi in South Africa|in South Africa]] and [[Indian independence movement|in India]] strengthened his suspicion of a centralised, monolithic state, his intimate association with the [[Indian National Congress|Congress]] and its leaders confirmed his fears about the [[Corruption in India|corrupting influence of political power]] and his scepticism about the efficacy of the [[Politics of India|party systems]] of power politics (due to which he resigned from the Congress on more than one occasion only to be persuaded back each time) and his study of the [[British parliamentary system]]s convinced him that [[representative democracy]] was incapable of meting out justice to people.<ref>''Hind Swaraj''. M. K. Gandhi. Chapter V.</ref>
{{wikisource|Hind Swaraj|Swaraj}}


Gandhi thought it necessary to evolve a mechanism to achieve the twin objectives of empowering the people and 'empowering' the state. It was for this that he developed the two pronged strategy of resistance (to the state) and reconstruction (through voluntary and participatory social action).<ref>Sudarshan Kapur, "Gandhi and ''Hindutva''. Two Conflicting Visions of ''Swaraj''", in Anthony J. Parel, editor, ''Gandhi, Freedom, and Self-Rule'' (Lanham: Lexington Books 2000).</ref>
The concept of Swaraj is a kind of [[Social Anarchism]]. It warrants a stateless society as according to Gandhi the overall impact of the state on the people is harmful. He called the state a soulless machine which ultimately does the greatest harm to mankind. <ref>Jesudasan, Ignatius. ''A Gandhian theology of liberation''. Gujarat Sahitya Prakash: Ananda India, 1987, pp 236-237.</ref> Adopting Swaraj meant that implementing a system where the state machinery was virtually nil, and the real power directly resided in the hands of people. Gandhi said, "Power resides in the people, they can use it at any time." <ref>Jesudasan, Ignatius. ''A Gandhian theology of liberation''. Gujarat Sahitya Prakash: Ananda India, 1987, pp 251.</ref> This philosophy filtered down not only till a community or a vilage, but till inside an individual, where he had to learn to be a master of his own [[Self (spirituality)|self]]. Gandhi said, "In such a state (where swaraj is achieved) everyone is his own ruler. He rules himself in such a manner that he is never a hindrance to his neighbour";<ref>Murthy, Srinivas.''Mahatma Gandhi and Leo Tolstoy Letters''. Long Beach Publications: Long Beach, 1987, pp 13.</ref> and also "It is Swaraj when we learn to rule ourselves."<ref>[[M. K. Gandhi]]. ''Hind Swaraj or Indian Home Rule''. Ahmedabad, Gujarat: Navajivan Publishing House, 1938.</ref>


Although the word Swaraj means "self-rule", Gandhi gave it the content of an integral revolution that encompasses all spheres of life: "At the individual level Swaraj is vitally connected with the capacity for dispassionate self-assessment, ceaseless self-purification and growing self-reliance."<ref>M. K. Gandhi, Young India, 28 June 1928, p. 772.</ref> Politically, Swaraj is self-government and not good government (for Gandhi, good government is no substitute for self-government) and it means a continuous effort to be independent of government control, whether it is foreign government or whether it is national. In other words, it is sovereignty of the people based on pure [[moral authority]]. Economically, Swaraj means full economic freedom for the toiling millions. And in its fullest sense, Swaraj is much more than freedom from all restraints, it is self-rule, and could be equated with ''moksha'' or [[salvation]].<ref>M. K. Gandhi, Young India, December 8, 1920, p. 886. See also Young India, August 6, 1925, p. 276 and Harijan, March 25, 1939, p. 64.</ref>
Gandhi explained his vision in 1946: {{quotation|"Independence begins at the bottom... A society must be build in which every village has to be self sustained and capable of managing its own affairs... It will be trained and prepared to perish in the attempt to defend itself against any onslaught from without... This does not exclude dependence on and willing help from neighbours or from the world. It will be a free and voluntary play of mutual forces... In this structure composed of innumerable villages, there will ever widening, never ascending circles. Life will not be a pyramid with the apex sustained by the bottom. But it will be an oceanic circle whose center will be the individual. Therefore the outermost circumference will not wield power to crush the inner circle but will give strength to all within and derive its own strength from it."<ref>Murthy, Srinivas.''Mahatma Gandhi and Leo Tolstoy Letters''. Long Beach Publications: Long Beach, 1987, pp 189.</ref> }}


Adopting Swaraj means implementing a system whereby the state machinery is virtually nil, and the real power directly resides in the hands of people. Gandhi said: "Power resides in the people, they can use it at any time."<ref>Jesudasan, Ignatius. ''A Gandhian Theology of Liberation''. Gujarat Sahitya Prakash: Ananda India, 1987, p. 251.</ref> This philosophy rests inside an individual who has to learn to be master of his own [[Self (spirituality)|self]] and spreads upwards to the level of his community which must be dependent only on itself. Gandhi said: "In such a state (where Swaraj is achieved) everyone is his own ruler. He rules himself in such a manner that he is never a hindrance to his neighbour."<ref>Murthy, Srinivas. ''Mahatma Gandhi and Leo Tolstoy Letters''. Long Beach Publications: Long Beach, 1987, p. 13.</ref> He summarised the core principle like this: "It is Swaraj when we learn to rule ourselves."<ref>[[M. K. Gandhi]]. ''Hind Swaraj or Indian Home Rule''. Ahmedabad, Gujarat: Navajivan Publishing House, 1938.</ref>
Thus, basically a nation is said to have achieved its Swaraj, when its people govern themselves directly, are entirely self sufficient not only as a whole but as individuals as well, and their innate nationhood is identified by themselves and not their government.


Gandhi explained his vision in 1946: {{quote|Independence begins at the bottom... A society must be built in which every village has to be self-sustained and capable of managing its own affairs... It will be trained and prepared to perish in the attempt to defend itself against any onslaught from without... This does not exclude dependence on and willing help from neighbours or from the world. It will be a free and voluntary play of mutual forces... In this structure composed of innumerable villages, there will be ever-widening, never-ascending circles. Growth will not be a pyramid with the apex sustained by the bottom. But it will be an oceanic circle whose center will be the individual. Therefore, the outermost circumference will not wield power to crush the inner circle but will give strength to all within and derive its own strength from it.<ref>Murthy, Srinivas.''Mahatma Gandhi and Leo Tolstoy Letters''. Long Beach Publications: Long Beach, 1987, p. 189.</ref> }}
Gandhi was undaunted by the task of implementing such an [[utopian]] vision in India. He believed that by transforming enough individuals and communities society at large will change. He said, "It may be taunted with the retort that this is all Utopian and, therefore not worth a single thought... Let India live for the true picture, though never realizable in its completeness. We must have a proper picture of what we want before we can have something approaching it."<ref> Parel, Anthony. ''Hind Swaraj and other writings of M. K. Gandhi''. Cambridge University Press. Cambridge, 1997, pp 189.</ref>


Gandhi was undaunted by the task of implementing such a [[utopian]] vision in India. He believed that by transforming enough individuals and communities, society at large would change. He said: "It may be taunted with the retort that this is all Utopian and, therefore not worth a single thought... Let India live for the true picture, though never realised in its completeness. We must have a proper picture of what we want before we can have something approaching it."<ref>Parel, Anthony. ''Hind Swaraj and Other Writings of M. K. Gandhi''. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1997, p. 189.</ref>
==Efforts for implementation==


==After Gandhi==
In 1917, Gandhi asked Indians nationwide to sign a petition demanding Swaraj. This petition was supported by, among others, [[Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel]], [[Vinayak Damodar Savarkar]], [[Maulana Abul Kalam Azad]] and [[Ram Manohar Lohia]]. Critics include [[Muhammad Ali Jinnah]] (who said that only a constitutional struggle could lead to independence; see [[Proposed Indian Round Table Conference 1922]]) and [[Rabindranath Tagore]].
<!-- Image with inadequate rationale removed: [[File:JayaprakashNarayanLakshminarayanLal.jpg|thumb|Jayaprakash Narayan]] -->
After Gandhi's assassination [[Vinoba Bhave]] formed the Sarva Seva Sangh at the national level and Sarvodya Mandals at the regional level to the carry on integrated village service—with the end purpose of achieving the goal of Swaraj. Two major nonviolent movements for socio-economic and political revolution in India: the [[Bhoodan movement]] led by [[Vinoba Bhave]] and the [[Bihar Movement|Total Revolution Movement]] led by [[Jayaprakash Narayan]] were actually formed under the aegis of the ideas of Swaraj.{{fact|date=August 2024}}


Gandhi's model of Swaraj was almost entirely discarded by the [[Government of India|Indian government]]. He had wanted a system of a classless, stateless [[direct democracy]].<ref>Bhattacharyya, Buddhadeva. ''Evolution of the Political Philosophy of Gandhi''. Calcutta Book House: Calcutta, 1969, p. 479.</ref> Yet during the Second Five-Year Plan, the Indian government initiated a hierarchy of local village leaders, called the [[Panchayati raj|Panchayati Raj]], modified in 1992 with the intent to devolve decision-making to the villages.{{fact|date=August 2024}}
In 1919, the [[Navajivan Trust]], a publishing house, was founded by Gandhi to propagate peaceful means for the attainment of Swaraj. The aim in establishing it was to propogate through publications, common Indians about the principles of Swaraj, in their native tongue. The trust is still in existence today and according to its initial promises is totally self reliant having accepted absolutely no donation or grant throughout its existence.<ref>[http://www.navajivantrust.org/ The Navjivan Trust]. Retrieved on [[March 3]] [[2007]].</ref>


Under Nehru India turned to a socialist model of industrial development, became a leader of non-aligned countries (those refusing to side in the Cold War), and formed an alliance with the Soviet Union (although domestically firmly rejecting Marxism–Leninism). For many decades following independence English was spoken by about 2–3% of the population, however, its use began to increase, dramatically in the 1980s. India does continue with appropriated elements of the British common law, and its rail system was built out from that left by Britain. India is a member of the British-organized Commonwealth of Nations. India successfully practices a democracy with regular elections inspired by western countries. Following Gandhi independent India worked to increase the status of women, who became citizens with the franchise and the right to divorce.<ref>Stanley Wolpert, ''A New History of India'' (Oxford University 1977, 7th ed. 2004), pp. 361–373.</ref>
{{wikisource|The_Story_of_My_Experiments_with_Truth/Part_V/The_Birth_of_Khadi|The Khadi Movement}}


==Present day==
Gandhi also decided to popularise the [[spinning wheel]] in India around the same time to make hand-spun cloth out of [[Khadi]]. This was part of an economically inclined plan to make Indians work towards self sufficiency, a key component of Swaraj. Gandhi believed that anything that would help India get out of its grinding poverty would in the end help in attaining Swaraj. This movement called ''The Khadi Movement'' later gained fame by the term ''[[Swadeshi]]''. The spinning wheel or the ''Charkha'' became a symbol of the Indian freedom struggle, and was incorporated into many [[Flag_of_India|flags]].
The [[Aam Aadmi Party]] was founded in late 2012, by [[Arvind Kejriwal]] and some erstwhile activists of [[India Against Corruption]] movement, with the aim of empowering people by applying the concept of Swaraj enunciated by Gandhi, in the present day context by changing the system of governance.<ref>{{cite news |author= |title=With Swaraj in mind, Kejriwal launches Aam Aadmi Party |work=[[The Hindu]] |url=http://www.thehindubusinessline.com/news/politics/with-swaraj-in-mind-kejriwal-launches-aam-aadmi-party/article4130337.ece |access-date=25 November 2018}}</ref>

At the [[Indian National Congress]] annual session in September 1920, delegates supported Swaraj, and in the same year they agreed with [[Khilafat]] leaders to work and fight together for both causes. This can be regarded as the official launching of the Swaraj movement by the Congress. However, over the years, political ideas gained momentum in the Congress and in 1927, [[Jawaharlal Nehru]] had introduced a resolution demanding "complete national independence" called ''[[Purna Swaraj]]'' which was a more politically inclined goal. The [[Kannur district#Payyannur Conference|Payyannur Conference]] in May 1928 passed a resolution requesting the Indian National Congress to adopt “Complete Independence” instead of Swaraj as its goal.<ref>[[Rajmohan Gandhi]]. ''Patel: A Life''. ASIN: B0006EYQ0A, pp 171.</ref> Another political group the [[Swaraj Party]] merged back with the Congress soon after.

==After Gandhi==

It is generally believed that Gandhi's model of Swaraj has not been followed by the [[Government of India|Indian government]]. He had wanted a system of a classless, stateless [[direct democracy]].<ref>Bhattacharyya, Buddhadeva. ''Evolution of the political philosophy of Gandhi''. Calcutta Book House: Calcutta, 1969, pp 479.</ref> For achieving this he wanted to disband the Congress party after independence. He said "Its task is done. The next task is to move into villages and revitalize life there to build a new socio-economic structure from the bottom upwards."<ref>Jesudasan, Ignatius. ''A Gandhian theology of liberation''. Gujarat Sahitya Prakash: Ananda India, 1987, pp 225.</ref> However none of these objectives were achieved when India became independent. India, although a federation, got a strong central government. [[Representative Democracy|Representative democracy]], rather then direct democracy was adopted. The Congress Party was not disbanded. Rather it went on to become one of the frontrunners in running the government of India.


==See also==
==See also==
* [[Aundh Experiment]]
* [[Opposition to the partition of India]]
* [[Sarvodaya]]
* [[Swadeshi movement]]


== References ==
* [[Community development#The history of community development|The history of community development]]
{{reflist|2}}
* [[Anarchism]]
* [[Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi]]
* [[Swadeshi]]
* [[Vinoba Bhave]]
* [[Purna Swaraj]]
* [[Swaraj Party]]
* [[Sri Lanka Independence Struggle]]


==References==
==External links==
* {{oweb|http://www.swaraj.org/}} of The Swaraj Foundation
<references/>
* [https://web.archive.org/web/20150525101152/http://www.sanskritjournal.com/archives/2015/vol1issue4/PartA/Sanskrit-1-3-61.pdf Swaraj: Sanskrit Journal] (PDF)


{{Indian independence movement}}
==External Links==
{{Gandhi}}
* http://www.swaraj.org/
* [http://www.mkgandhi.org/swarajya/coverpage.htm Hind Swaraj(online book)] by Mahatma Gandhi


{{IndiaFreedom}}


[[Category:Indian independence movement]]
[[Category:Indian independence movement]]
[[Category:Mahatma Gandhi]]
[[Category:Philosophical schools and traditions]]
[[Category:Philosophical movements]]
[[Category:Anarchist theory]]
[[Category:Anarchism]]
[[Category:Community building]]
[[Category:Community building]]
[[Category:Gandhism]]

[[id:Swaraj]]

Latest revision as of 19:01, 15 September 2024

Swarāj (Svarāja) sva "self", raj "rule") can mean generally self-governance or "self-rule". The term was used synonymously with "home-rule" by Maharishi Dayanand Saraswati and later on by Mahatma Gandhi,[1] but the word usually refers to Gandhi's concept of Indian independence from foreign domination.[2] Swaraj lays stress on governance, not by a hierarchical government, but by self-governance through individuals and community building. The focus is on political decentralisation.[3] Since this is against the political and social systems followed by Britain, Gandhi's concept of Swaraj advocated India's discarding British political, economic, bureaucratic, legal, military, and educational institutions.[4] S. Satyamurti, Chittaranjan Das and Motilal Nehru were among a contrasting group of Swarajists who laid the foundation for parliamentary democracy in India.

Although Gandhi's aim of totally implementing the concepts of Swaraj in India was not achieved, the voluntary work organisations which he founded for this purpose did serve as precursors and role models for people's movements, voluntary organisations, and some of the non-governmental organisations that were subsequently launched in various parts of India.[5] The student movement against oppressive local and central governments, led by Jayaprakash Narayan, Udit Swaraj and the Bhoodan movement, which presaged demands for land reform legislation throughout India, and which ultimately led to India's discarding of the Zamindari system of land tenure and social organisation, were also inspired by the ideas of Swaraj.[citation needed]

Key concepts

[edit]

Swami Dayanand Saraswati, also known as Maharshi Dayanand Saraswati founder of the Arya Samaj and a Hindu reformer, defined Swaraj as the "administration of self" or "democracy". Swami Dayanand Saraswati, beginning with the premise that God had created people free to perform any work they were inclined to choose, questioned the legitimacy of the British colonial rule in India. In the Swami's view, Swaraj was the basis for the Indian independence movement. Dadabhai Navroji claimed that he had learnt the word swaraj from the Satyarth Prakash of Saraswati.[citation needed]

Swaraj aims towards a stateless society. According to Mahatma Gandhi, the overall impact of the state on the people is harmful. He called the state a "soulless machine" which, ultimately, does the greatest harm to mankind.[6] The purpose of the state is that it is an instrument for the service of the people. However, Gandhi feared that a state moulded with such an aim would ultimately revoke the rights of the citizens and seize the role of grand protector, and would demand total compliance from them. This would create a paradoxical situation where the citizens would be alienated from the state and at the same time enslaved to it, which, according to Gandhi, was demoralising and dangerous. If Gandhi's close acquaintance with the working of the state apparatus in South Africa and in India strengthened his suspicion of a centralised, monolithic state, his intimate association with the Congress and its leaders confirmed his fears about the corrupting influence of political power and his scepticism about the efficacy of the party systems of power politics (due to which he resigned from the Congress on more than one occasion only to be persuaded back each time) and his study of the British parliamentary systems convinced him that representative democracy was incapable of meting out justice to people.[7]

Gandhi thought it necessary to evolve a mechanism to achieve the twin objectives of empowering the people and 'empowering' the state. It was for this that he developed the two pronged strategy of resistance (to the state) and reconstruction (through voluntary and participatory social action).[8]

Although the word Swaraj means "self-rule", Gandhi gave it the content of an integral revolution that encompasses all spheres of life: "At the individual level Swaraj is vitally connected with the capacity for dispassionate self-assessment, ceaseless self-purification and growing self-reliance."[9] Politically, Swaraj is self-government and not good government (for Gandhi, good government is no substitute for self-government) and it means a continuous effort to be independent of government control, whether it is foreign government or whether it is national. In other words, it is sovereignty of the people based on pure moral authority. Economically, Swaraj means full economic freedom for the toiling millions. And in its fullest sense, Swaraj is much more than freedom from all restraints, it is self-rule, and could be equated with moksha or salvation.[10]

Adopting Swaraj means implementing a system whereby the state machinery is virtually nil, and the real power directly resides in the hands of people. Gandhi said: "Power resides in the people, they can use it at any time."[11] This philosophy rests inside an individual who has to learn to be master of his own self and spreads upwards to the level of his community which must be dependent only on itself. Gandhi said: "In such a state (where Swaraj is achieved) everyone is his own ruler. He rules himself in such a manner that he is never a hindrance to his neighbour."[12] He summarised the core principle like this: "It is Swaraj when we learn to rule ourselves."[13]

Gandhi explained his vision in 1946:

Independence begins at the bottom... A society must be built in which every village has to be self-sustained and capable of managing its own affairs... It will be trained and prepared to perish in the attempt to defend itself against any onslaught from without... This does not exclude dependence on and willing help from neighbours or from the world. It will be a free and voluntary play of mutual forces... In this structure composed of innumerable villages, there will be ever-widening, never-ascending circles. Growth will not be a pyramid with the apex sustained by the bottom. But it will be an oceanic circle whose center will be the individual. Therefore, the outermost circumference will not wield power to crush the inner circle but will give strength to all within and derive its own strength from it.[14]

Gandhi was undaunted by the task of implementing such a utopian vision in India. He believed that by transforming enough individuals and communities, society at large would change. He said: "It may be taunted with the retort that this is all Utopian and, therefore not worth a single thought... Let India live for the true picture, though never realised in its completeness. We must have a proper picture of what we want before we can have something approaching it."[15]

After Gandhi

[edit]

After Gandhi's assassination Vinoba Bhave formed the Sarva Seva Sangh at the national level and Sarvodya Mandals at the regional level to the carry on integrated village service—with the end purpose of achieving the goal of Swaraj. Two major nonviolent movements for socio-economic and political revolution in India: the Bhoodan movement led by Vinoba Bhave and the Total Revolution Movement led by Jayaprakash Narayan were actually formed under the aegis of the ideas of Swaraj.[citation needed]

Gandhi's model of Swaraj was almost entirely discarded by the Indian government. He had wanted a system of a classless, stateless direct democracy.[16] Yet during the Second Five-Year Plan, the Indian government initiated a hierarchy of local village leaders, called the Panchayati Raj, modified in 1992 with the intent to devolve decision-making to the villages.[citation needed]

Under Nehru India turned to a socialist model of industrial development, became a leader of non-aligned countries (those refusing to side in the Cold War), and formed an alliance with the Soviet Union (although domestically firmly rejecting Marxism–Leninism). For many decades following independence English was spoken by about 2–3% of the population, however, its use began to increase, dramatically in the 1980s. India does continue with appropriated elements of the British common law, and its rail system was built out from that left by Britain. India is a member of the British-organized Commonwealth of Nations. India successfully practices a democracy with regular elections inspired by western countries. Following Gandhi independent India worked to increase the status of women, who became citizens with the franchise and the right to divorce.[17]

Present day

[edit]

The Aam Aadmi Party was founded in late 2012, by Arvind Kejriwal and some erstwhile activists of India Against Corruption movement, with the aim of empowering people by applying the concept of Swaraj enunciated by Gandhi, in the present day context by changing the system of governance.[18]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Hind Swaraj or Indian Home Rule, Gandhi, 1909.
  2. ^ What is Swaraj?. Retrieved on 12 July 2007.
  3. ^ Parel, Anthony. Hind Swaraj and Other Writings of M. K. Gandhi. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1997.
  4. ^ What is Swaraj?. Retrieved on 3 March 2007.
  5. ^ What Swaraj meant to Gandhi?. Retrieved on 17 September 2008.
  6. ^ Jesudasan, Ignatius. A Gandhian Theology of Liberation. Gujarat Sahitya Prakash: Ananda India, 1987, pp. 236–237.
  7. ^ Hind Swaraj. M. K. Gandhi. Chapter V.
  8. ^ Sudarshan Kapur, "Gandhi and Hindutva. Two Conflicting Visions of Swaraj", in Anthony J. Parel, editor, Gandhi, Freedom, and Self-Rule (Lanham: Lexington Books 2000).
  9. ^ M. K. Gandhi, Young India, 28 June 1928, p. 772.
  10. ^ M. K. Gandhi, Young India, December 8, 1920, p. 886. See also Young India, August 6, 1925, p. 276 and Harijan, March 25, 1939, p. 64.
  11. ^ Jesudasan, Ignatius. A Gandhian Theology of Liberation. Gujarat Sahitya Prakash: Ananda India, 1987, p. 251.
  12. ^ Murthy, Srinivas. Mahatma Gandhi and Leo Tolstoy Letters. Long Beach Publications: Long Beach, 1987, p. 13.
  13. ^ M. K. Gandhi. Hind Swaraj or Indian Home Rule. Ahmedabad, Gujarat: Navajivan Publishing House, 1938.
  14. ^ Murthy, Srinivas.Mahatma Gandhi and Leo Tolstoy Letters. Long Beach Publications: Long Beach, 1987, p. 189.
  15. ^ Parel, Anthony. Hind Swaraj and Other Writings of M. K. Gandhi. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1997, p. 189.
  16. ^ Bhattacharyya, Buddhadeva. Evolution of the Political Philosophy of Gandhi. Calcutta Book House: Calcutta, 1969, p. 479.
  17. ^ Stanley Wolpert, A New History of India (Oxford University 1977, 7th ed. 2004), pp. 361–373.
  18. ^ "With Swaraj in mind, Kejriwal launches Aam Aadmi Party". The Hindu. Retrieved 25 November 2018.
[edit]