GOPLA KRISHNA GHOKALE
Gopal Krishna Gokhale is now a forgotten man even though both
M.K. Gandhi and M.A. Jinnah were inspired by him in the years before they
became mass leaders. Gandhi described Gokhale as his political guru while
Jinnah aspired to be the Muslim Gokhale.
However, the importance of Gokhale goes far beyond his
influence on these two star disciples, who continue to be worshipped as the
fathers of their respective nations. He was the lodestar of a style of liberal
politics that needs a fresh airing in contemporary India.
Gokhale died on 19 February 1915, so this year marks his death
centenary. He was one of a stellar cast of patriots in Pune, at a time when
that city matched Kolkata as a crucible of the new nationalism which emerged
from the ruins of 1857.
The Pune liberals had three principal concerns: political
freedom, social reform and economic development. Everything they did in public
life followed from their quest to advance liberty on these three fronts, and
thus prepare the ground for a resurgent India after centuries of foreign rule,
social oppression and economic stagnation.
The Pune
liberals firmly believed that politics should have intellectual and moral
foundations. Gokhale as well as his guru M.G. Ranade were a perfect embodiment
of that rare combination of head and heart, as is evident in their careful
empirical analysis and policy prescriptions in the Poona Sarvajanik Sabha, the
house journal of the liberals, on everything from indebted farmers to the
spread of education.
Gokhale’s grasp of economics was evident in his famous
budget speeches as a member of the Imperial Legislative Council, when he took
the colonial government to task because its policies were damaging India; no
less a person than John Maynard Keynes praised his mastery of economic logic.
He was also a great lover of mathematics; a textbook on arithmetic that he
wrote was a standard prescription for school children for many years. The
precision of his thinking could perhaps be explained by his love of
mathematics, the most precise of intellectual pursuits. And Gokhale was also a
very popular professor of history.
Such intellectual depth was matched by a compassionate heart. He
attracted young nationalists who wanted to serve the country. Gokhale had no
shortage of critics who
thought, with some justification, that he trusted the good sense of the
colonial government too much. His personal record was also marred by a controversial
apology to the British government. Yet, it is a testimony to his personal
qualities that criticism did not degenerate into personal enmity. His great
political rival Bal Gangadhar Tilak wrote a moving obituary when Gokhale died
at the young age of 49. V.D. Savarkar is said to have stood up in his favour when a group
of revolutionaries in London wanted to assassinate Gokhale. Men
who held views that were antithetical to his could still be impressed by
Gokhale.
The liberal constitutionalism that Gokhale stood for was swept
aside by the rising tide of agitational politics after 1920. Ironically, the
two men who were responsible for this great shift were Gokhale’s disciples,
Gandhi and Jinnah. Politics based on the inner voice, satyagraha and direct
action replaced the reasoned politics of Gokhale, with its rare blend of the
intellectual and moral. The quest to draw more people into the national
movement compromised some of its core values embodied by Gokhale.
That style of street politics has lingered on in India
well after independence. B.R. Ambedkar had warned in 1949 that the continuance
of agitational politics in a constitutional republic would eventually harm the
Indian nation, as would the unthinking devotion to great leaders as well as
persistent social inequality rooted in centuries of caste oppression. His
perspicacious warning was unfortunately ignored.
India right now is perhaps on the cusp of political
change. A young, urban and prosperous class has emerged after three decades of
rapid economic growth. It could provide a base for a new liberal politics.
There are important differences between contemporary India and the country that
Gokhale served with such dedication. But his core beliefs about the importance
of political liberty, social reform and economic progress for all Indians are
still relevant to our times. So is his insistence that means are as important
as ends in politics, and that politics should have strong intellectual
foundations.
Liberal constitutionalism had its high noon when Gokhale
personified its lofty hopes. It was swept away by the rising tide of populism
after the Gandhian takeover of the Congress in 1920. A hundred years later, the
main concerns that Gokhale articulated are still relevant. They can offer fresh
direction to a country that is once again at the crossroads.
Factual Data with respect to GK
Gokhale
- Gopal Krishna Gokhale was born on May 9, 1866 in Kothapur, Maharashtra. He graduated from Elphinstone College, Bombay in 1884 at the age of 18.
- He was Assistant Master in the New English School in Pune.
- One of the founding members of Fergusson College.
- He was also a social reformer.
- Gokhale worked with Mahadev Govind Ranade(Gokhale called him his guru) in Poona Sarvajanik Sabha of which Gokhale became the Secretary.
- Gokhale became Secretary of the Deccan Education Society.
- Political guru of Mahatma Gandhi; one of the pioneers of the Indian national movement; founder of the Servants of India Society.
- Gokhale pleaded for gradual reforms to ultimately attain Swaraj, or self-government, in India. Gokhale was a mentor to Mahatma Gandhi and Jinnah.
- In his autobiography, Gandhi calls Gokhale his mentor and guide
Achievements:
- He delivered a public address on "India under the British Rule", which was highly appreciated.
- Gokhale regularly contributed articles to Bal Gangadhar Tilak's weekly "Mahratta".
- In 1905, Gokhale started a new society called "Servants of India Society".
- Gokhale went to England to voice his concerns relating to the unfair treatment of the Indian people by the British government.
- He founded the "Servants of India Society"-an organization dedicated to the cause of common people.
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