By: Francis X Clooney, SJ

Last week was Mohandas K. Gandhi’s birthday. And while it is true that his particular programs and positions have faded somewhat with age—Indians do not live in the past and have moved on, for better or worse. And while it is also true that now, as in the past, there are thoughtful Indians of Hindu and other communities who dispute his politics, his compromises, and his personal eccentricities. The question can be asked, why remember him on the day he would have turned 155? I suggest three reasons (which certainly do not form the exhaustive list).

First, Gandhi is still, after all this time, a very interesting thinker who wrote very well (and not just voluminously). Everyone knows about him, but few read him. And if you read him, you will like him less, then you will like him more. Of course, his Autobiography remains a spiritual classic and vividly recounts key personal moments in which he worked out his basic principles of nonviolence and truth seeking (in nonviolence as satyagraha). But there is also his Satyagraha in South Africa, in which he recounts in more thorough detail his efforts to defend the Indian community in South African against biased and oppressive laws, and how his realization of nonviolence and self-purification—by suffering—became such a potent liberative force in India and throughout the world. His commentary on the Bhagavad Gita, while not a scholarly work, is a vivid and lively exposition of detached action, that spiritual indifference that, as in the spirituality of Ignatius Loyola, opens the way for free and liberative action in the world. And there is the less well known but still powerful 1910 treatise, Hind Swaraj, his “manifesto” setting forth the principles that he thought had to underlie a truthful and effective Indian independence movement.

Real history, he says there, is primarily a story of nonviolent-resistance living, but unfortunately the history books mistakenly count as history the wars of rulers, their weaponry and violence. If we change our perspective, we can see that nonviolence works most of the time for most people—and can change the world if we start thinking for ourselves, take our lives into our own hands, and resist the thoughtless flow of ordinary, somewhat violent life.

Second, core issues that occupied him so powerfully have not gone away. Examples abound where Gandhi might well matter. Jonathan Chait of The New Republic wrote a provocative piece, “Why Don’t Palestinians Adopt Nonviolence?” which, in light of today’s remembrance of Gandhi’s birthday, seems a useful prompt—despite skepticism—to ask again if Gandhi (not mentioned by Chait) was in fact offering, the better part of a century ago, a more practical path of nonviolence—one that fails today not because it is impractical in politics but because communities have not found ways to inculcate among their members the necessary detachment and spiritual discipline. Or, the fact that the Allahabad High Court issued a decision on the hotly contested issue of the Babri Masjid (mosque) in Ayodhya in North India. There, in 1992, by an act that led to terrible communal violence, a Hindu group tore down the mosque claimed to have been built on the site of an ancient temple marking the place of Lord Rama’s birth. The court decided to divide the site three ways, among one Muslim and two Hindu communities. Only in January of this year did a Hindu temple open on the site of the mosque, an event received with mixed feelings by people of so many faith traditions.

But while this may be a wise and thoughtful solution to a very difficult situation, it seems to me that Gandhi would have imagined a different dynamic: not several communities contesting the site, so as to demand it for their own, but rather each community—Hindu or Muslim—insisting that the other take the entire site. Neither community needs the site, and both would be better off with a bit more detachment in the matter. Gandhi himself did not cling tightly to Hindu identity, even as he refused conversion to Christianity or other religions; rather, he sought a spiritual/moral ground that would make communication possible even as established communities protected their vested interests.

Or, closer to home, the push and pull that took place over an Islamic Center in lower Manhattan. It was surely vexed and depressing enough that there were at least calls for the consideration of a Gandhian solution—some public act of solidarity with Muslims by Christians and Jews in the area—perhaps for instance a Jewish-Christian declaration that unless the Center can be opened, the nearby churches and synagogues will close in solidarity until minds are changed. (Would Gandhi have suggested this? I invite experts on Gandhi to add their views.)

Third, he is a saint, and we should honor the saints. Our Catholic observance of saints’ birth and death anniversaries need not be entirely limited to Catholic saints. Without undue harm to anyone’s theological sensitivities, we might very well join other Christian communities in adding figures like Gandhi to our calendar, mentioning him at Mass, and praying in his memory for peace and nonviolence. We can do this because, from a moderate Catholic perspective, he is obviously a figure radiant with the grace of God, grace that loses nothing of its splendor because it radiates in the life, work, and personality of this man who deeply respected Jesus yet chose not to become a Christian. Recall what Dorothy Day wrote in The Catholic Worker when Gandhi was assassinated by a Hindu extremist in January 1948:

“Greater love than this no man hath—that a man lay down his life for his friends.” There is no public figure who has more conformed his life to the life of Jesus Christ than Gandhi, there is no man who has carried about him more consistently the aura of divinized humanity, who has added his sacrifice to the sacrifice of Christ, whose life has had a more fitting end than that of Gandhi. “A prophet is not without honor save in his own country . . . he came into his own and his own did not receive him.”

The folly of Gandhi’s life, the failure of Gandhi’s life—it is the folly and failure of the Cross. The failure of the supernatural in the world. The failure of those who would teach love and non-violence in a world which has apostatized, which accepts no absolutes, has no standards other than utilitarian, is devoid of hope, persecutes the prophets, murders the saints, exhibits God to the people—torn, bleeding, dead. . .

It was because he went the full way, because he adhered to an Absolute, because he insisted that there be no hatred, that Hindu and Moslem live together in peace—it was for these things he was murdered. It was because he believed in a Revolution that went beyond the social and ended in personal regeneration, because it was pacifist that he has now attained to that failure that leads to ultimate glory.

Truly he is one of those who has added his own sufferings to those of Christ, whose sacrifice and martyrdom will forever be offered to the Eternal Father as compensating for those things lacking in the Passion of Christ. In him we have a new intercessor with Christ; a modern Francis, a pacifist martyr. Think too of these words when we mark Francis of Assisi’s feast Monday, October 4.

This article is an edited version of an essay that first appeared in Father Clooney’s book, Learning Interreligiously: In the Text, in the World. Fortress Press, 2018. Edited and republished with permission.