Friday, December 2

"His Principle of Peace Was Bogus" - Godse

Was fascinated by this interview. Wanted to share with you all.

Gopal Godse, co-conspirator in Gandhi's assassination and brother of the assassin, looks back in anger and without regret

Fifty-two years ago, on Jan. 30, 1948, Mohandas Gandhi was shot dead by Nathuram Godse, a Hindu extremist. Godse believed that the Mahatma, or great soul, was responsible for the 1947 partition of India and the creation of Pakistan. Godse and his friend Narayan Apte were hanged. His brother Gopal and two others were sentenced to life imprisonment for their part in the conspiracy. Gopal Godse remained in jail for 18 years and now, at 80, lives with his wife in a small apartment in Pune. He is still proud of his role in the murder. Although Godse is largely ignored in India and rarely talks to journalists, he agreed to speak with TIME Delhi correspondent Meenakshi Ganguly.

TIME:
What happened in January 1948?
Godse: On Jan. 20, Madanlal Pahwa exploded a bomb at Gandhi's prayer meeting in Delhi. It was 50 m away from Gandhi. [The other conspirators] all ran away from the place. Madanlal was caught there. Then there was a tension in our minds that we had to finish the task before the police caught us. Then Nathuram [Gopal's brother] took it on himself to do the thing. We only wanted destiny to help us -- meaning we should not be caught on the spot before he acted.

TIME: Why did you want to kill Gandhi?
Godse:
Gandhi was a hypocrite. Even after the massacre of the Hindus by the Muslims, he was happy. The more the massacres of the Hindus, the taller his flag of secularism.

TIME:
Did you ever see Gandhi?
Godse:
Yes.

TIME:
Did you attend his meetings?
Godse:
Yes.

TIME:
Can you explain how he created his mass following?
Godse:
The credit goes to him for maneuvering the media. He captured the press. That was essential. How Gandhi walked, when he smiled, how he waved -- all these minor details that the people did not require were imposed upon them to create an atmosphere around Gandhi. And the more ignorant the masses, the more popular was Gandhi. So they always tried to keep the masses ignorant.

TIME:
But surely it takes more than good publicity to create a Gandhi?
Godse:
There is another thing. Generally in the Indian masses, people are attracted toward saintism. Gandhi was shrewd to use his saintdom for politics. After his death the government used him. The government knew that he was an enemy of Hindus, but they wanted to show that he was a staunch Hindu. So the first act they did was to put "Hey Ram" into Gandhi's dead mouth.

TIME:
You mean that he did not say "Hey Ram" as he died?
Godse:
No, he did not say it. You see, it was an automatic pistol. It had a magazine for nine bullets but there were actually seven at that time. And once you pull the trigger, within a second, all the seven bullets had passed. When these bullets pass through crucial points like the heart, consciousness is finished. You have no strength.

When Nathuram saw Gandhi was coming, he took out the pistol and folded his hands with the pistol inside it. There was one girl very close to Gandhi. He feared that he would hurt the girl. So he went forward and with his left hand pushed her aside and shot. It happened within one second. You see, there was a film and some Kingsley fellow had acted as Gandhi. Someone asked me whether Gandhi said, "Hey Ram." I said Kingsley did say it. But Gandhi did not. Because that was not a drama.

TIME:
Many people think Gandhi deserved to be nominated TIME's Person of the Century. [He was one of two runners-up, after Albert Einstein.]
Godse:
I name him the most cruel person for Hindus in India. The most cruel person! That is how I term him.

TIME:
Is that why Gandhi had to die?
Godse:
Yes. For months he was advising Hindus that they must never be angry with the Muslims. What sort of ahimsa (non-violence) is this? His principle of peace was bogus. In any free country, a person like him would be shot dead officially because he was encouraging the Muslims to kill Hindus.

TIME:
But his philosophy was of turning the other cheek. He felt one person had to stop the cycle of violence...
Godse:
The world does not work that way.

TIME:
Is there anything that you admire about Gandhi?
Godse:
Firstly, the mass awakening that Gandhi did. In our school days Gandhi was our idol. Secondly, he removed the fear of prison. He said it is different to go into prison for a theft and different to go in for satyagraha (civil disobedience). As youngsters, we had our enthusiasm, but we needed some channel. We took Gandhi to be our channel. We don't repent for that.

TIME:
Did you not admire his principles of non-violence?
Godse:
Non-violence is not a principle at all. He did not follow it. In politics you cannot follow non-violence. You cannot follow honesty. Every moment, you have to give a lie. Every moment you have to take a bullet in hand and kill someone. Why was he proved to be a hypocrite? Because he was in politics with his so-called principles. Is his non-violence followed anywhere? Not in the least. Nowhere.

TIME:
What was the most difficult thing about killing Gandhi?
Godse:
The greatest hurdle before us was not that of giving up our lives or going to the gallows. It was that we would be condemned both by the government and by the public. Because the public had been kept in the dark about what harm Gandhi had done to the nation. How he had fooled them!


TIME:
Did the people condemn you?
Godse: Yes. People in general did. Because they had been kept ignorant.

6 Comments:

Blogger Camphor said...

"They were the real prophets, with fire in their bellies and spit foaming from their mouths. What are you - you who doubt even yourself?" (paraphrased from Carpe Jugulum, Terry Pratchett)

I'll say this for Godse - he believed in something, and he wasn't afraid to act for it... and I admire him for that. Although I am not fascinated by him.

6:13 PM  
Blogger Incognito said...

Camphor :It was fascinating to hear the other side of the story. Just that.

Just ran a search for 'Carpe Jugulum' - What novel is it about?

9:29 PM  
Blogger Camphor said...

Carpe Jugulum is a Discworld novel by Terry Pratchett.
(Statutory warning: You're entering fan territory.)
Terry Pratchett has written 23 (at last count) books about this world that is shaped like a disc, has a tiny sun orbitting it, has it's single polar icecap and the sea that fall over the Rim. IT rests on the shoulder of four giant elephants (Which I always imagined were white) and which in turn stand upon the braod back of a Giant Turle (sex unknown) which is swimming through space to a point only it knows. Teh Gods, definately, do not have a clue, being too busy playing to know things like that.

As you can imagine, magical things happen on this world. Carpe Jugulum is a latin phrase that means seize the throat. It's about a bunch of 'mordernised' vampyres who decide to take over the world as they have grown "smart".

It is halarious, esp the footnotes to explain various thigs. The entire discword series will make you die laughing, if you are the type that like HP or Hitch hiker's guide to the galazy or magic and all that.

If you are about to begin now, go for "Mort". Mort is the assistant to Death.
Equal Rites
Pyramids
The Colour of Magic
Small Gods
also ROCK.

I think I'm going to blog about this. :)

9:18 PM  
Blogger Incognito said...

Camphor : Thats quite a start. I like the part you said about "smart vampires". Will definitely look into it. Thanks for the tip. Look forward to reading..

Ms. Invisible : 'Tu as raison.' You're rite.

9:40 PM  
Blogger navin said...

Its called extremism, believing in something and not to be afraid to act on it in general is good( if you dont want to kill someone). As much as you can admire these extremists, you need to know that they are not right either.
For this reason I don't like Gandhi or Godse, you can do what you believe in, don't expect the world to follow you. There are 1000s who died because of Gandhi, and there are 1000s who died because of extremists like Godse..Independence if won through an official war would look different. No wonder Bose could not accomplish it because of people like Gandhi and Godse.

2:53 AM  
Blogger Incognito said...

Navin :
Us, we had been celeberating Gandhi as Father of Nation all our lives. And that I had taken for granted about the virtues and views about Gandhi. Never questioned it. Though only recently for the past few years, have I started looking back on minutes, that I missed.
I had infact wanted to write about this. We(Indians & Pakistanis) know that Jinnah and Gandhi were there. We have all got our own versions in our respective history books. If such was the case, now atleast we all are on to our own trails, with noone to lead us. I definitely dont detest Pakistan. Neither do I want anybody killed because of this. But still we had war going on in 1947. We have war going in 2005.
"Hindu" (Newspaper) prints older articles under the title 'This Day, That Age'- The front page and this page, sometimes hold the same news, the same fight and about the same war.. making one feel, we havent progressed one bit.

You had very aptly put about Bose. Never thought about it that way.

Probably if Bose had taken over, probably we would have been left with more fury to fight against our odds against our very own govt.

6:45 PM  

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