Walking Alone - Gandhi And India’s Partition

Walking Alone - Gandhi And India’s Partition

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Author: Bhashyam Kasturi
Publisher: Vision/Orient paperbacks
Year: 2001
Language: English
Pages: 152
ISBN/UPC (if available): 8170944457

Description

This book explores the political and personal life of Mahatma Gandhi through the traumatic period, 1946-48, which saw the partition and independence of India, and the worst-ever communal holocaust in the subcontinent.

This book unfolds how partition came about even as Gandhi’s strongest convictions were against such a division. The author traces Gandhi’s role within and outside the Congress and describes how the Mahatma was politically sidelined from the very start of the negotiations for the transfer of power. The result was that when the Congress agreed to the partition of Bengal and Punjab in March 1947, it did not even consult the mahatma; he was in the picture, but out of accord with congress policy.

Sensing that his political views counted for less and less, Gandhi accepted the reality of partition-thought he could never personally reconcile to it-the turned his attention to dousing the raging communal fires. Thus, his astonishing Noakhali pilgrimage, and his fasts in Calcutta and Delhi which gained him both unprecedented admiration and ultimately cost him his life.

The overriding impression of the period is that of a man walking alone, holding steadfast to his conscience and convictions as his only true guides in a situation which both saddened and bewildered him. The book also offers some clues to help unravel the enigma of Mahatma Gandhi’s personal life and discusses his fasts and the controversial brahmacharya experiments of his last years.

REVIEWS

Explores how partition came about despite Gandhi’s strong personal commitment to an undivided India.
-The Statesman

A concise and scholarly narrative.
-B R Nanda

Contents

FOREWORD BY B R NANDA

PREFACE

INTRODUCTION

Post-War Background

The Cabinet Mission

Ekla Chalo Re: Noakhali

>From Wavell to Mountbatten

Calcutta, September 1947

Conclusion

Notes

Bibliography

Index