LIFESTYLE
Independent historian Jad Adams’ critical and irreverent biography of the great man explores his various experiments with celibacy, chastity, brahmacharya and sexuality.
The Reverend Joseph Doke, a Baptist minister, wrote the first adulatory biography of Gandhi in 1909 when his subject was forty.
Fifteen years later, in 1924, Romain Rolland called his biography Mahatma Gandhi: The Man Who Became One With The Universal Being. Jad Adams’s biography is far more critical and irreverent, exploring, among other things, the great man’s various experiments with celibacy, chastity, brahmacharya, and sexuality. Predictably, Gandhi admirers are not happy.
Adams, an independent historian and broadcaster, has written biographies of a number of world figures, particularly political radicals and nationalists. He claims that while his biography does deal with Gandhi’s sexuality, this is only a part of a larger attempt to understand his entire personality and his political, spiritual, and personal life.
As both a spiritual and political radical, Gandhi embraced different causes at various stages of his life. As a student in London, he was deeply interested in dietary matters and vegetarianism (not sex or politics). As a lawyer in South Africa, he was more interested in attempts to curb his sexuality and set up utopian communities than in his professional work helping Indian merchants and labourers.
As a leader in India in the 1920s and 1930s, he immersed himself in the nationalist movement while continuing to live a disciplined and ascetic life in his ashram along with his followers. Towards the end of his life, he was preoccupied with his sexual innovations and brahmacharya experiments.
As Adams notes, Gandhi’s multifaceted life is the ultimate challenge for a biographer. Not only was Gandhi a complex man, there is also a ‘superabundance’ of surviving contemporary information on him. Gandhi’s collected works run to 100 volumes of books, articles, letters, speeches, and written answers to questioners when he was observing silent days. “My writings should be cremated with my body. What I have done will endure, not what I have said or written,” he said. But no one paid heed to his request, for which subsequent historians are no doubt grateful.
In addition to the practical problems of dealing with this enormous mass of primary material, biographers must also contend with further difficulties. Could a man who subtitled his autobiography ‘The Story Of My Experiments With Truth’ be completely reliable?
As Gandhi explained, “My aim is not to be consistent with my previous statements on a given question, but to be consistent with truth, as it may present itself to me at a given moment. The result has been that I have grown from truth to truth.” Hence the biographer’s dilemma in interpreting Gandhi’s writings about his own life.
The problem of historical interpretation extends to the accounts of first-person witnesses and contemporaries, especially those who were particularly close to Gandhi and who had their own stories to tell, or perhaps to conceal.
Pyarelal, one of Gandhi’s secretaries, and his sister Dr Sushila Nayar (who was Gandhi’s personal physician) knew many details that do not appear in Gandhi’s autobiographies. Pyarelal wrote about Gandhi’s sexual experiments with young women, including with his 19-year-old grandniece Manu, but he glossed over Gandhi’s naked bathing, naked massages, and sleeping with Sushila.
Gandhi’s unusual sex behaviour and idiosyncratic views on celibacy were evidently discussed as damaging his reputation by both those close to him and by other observers. Nehru described Gandhi’s advice to newlyweds to stay celibate for the sake of their souls as “abnormal and unnatural”.
The prime minister of Travancore called Gandhi “a most dangerous, semi-repressed sex maniac”. While much of this was known during his lifetime, it was distorted, suppressed, or ignored for a long time after his death, argues Adams. It is only now that we can arrive at a better understanding of “Gandhi’s excessive self-belief in the power of his own sexuality”.
In reappraising his role in the nationalist movement, Adams writes that “Gandhi had been a declining influence at least since the blunder of the Quit India campaign.” Nevertheless, many of Gandhi’s ideas have stood the test of time. In the first decade of the 21st century, many of his ideas that seemed eccentric a hundred years ago now appear mainstream.
His intolerance of smoking (which he considered worse than drinking alcohol), his attention to diet, his fasting, and his habits of thrift and self-reliance are now regarded as eco-friendly qualities that can save the planet. His resistance to racism, his respect for all religions, his non-violence, his striving for moral excellence and spiritual attainment all strike a modern note. “He was ultimately heroic, the metaphysical warrior,” concludes Adams.
Malini Sood is an editor and writer
Raima Sen mourns Bharat Dev Varma's demise, pens emotional note for 'great father, great husband'
DNA TV Show: Ahead of Maharashtra poll results, MVA, Mahayuti engage in resort politics
Maharashtra: Stage set for assembly poll results; Mahayuti, MVA confident of their victories
All set for vote counting in Jharkhand tomorrow; NDA, JMM-led alliances confident of winning
Watch: Australia star inquires Rishabh Pant about his next IPL team, gets 2-word reply
Shah Rukh Khan’s house Mannat was first offered to his industry rival…, but he refused because...
The Visionary Who Promises a Blue Sky for India: Holger Thorsten Schubart’s G20 Climate Speech
The Surge of High-End Living: Luxury Residential Market to Outpace Other Segments
FeFCon 2024 to be Held in Bangalore: A Premier Event on Fever Management
'That’s wild': Noida man turns cigarette butts into teddy bears in viral video, watch
London Airport evacuates passengers over security threat, thousands stranded
The World’s First Innovative Iron Supplement to Combat Iron Deficiency and Anaemia
Meet grandmother who became fashion icon after trying on her granddaughter’s clothes
IND vs AUS: Rishabh Pant joins Virat Kohli, Rohit Sharma in elite WTC list, becomes 3rd Indian to...
'All scripted drama...': Puneet Superstar allegedly assaulted by influencers in viral video, watch
Actress Ana de Armas caught kissing Cuban President Miguel Díaz-Canel’s son in viral photos
Oreshnik's Shadow: Will Russia's hypersonic missile force west to back down?
‘You’re So Beautiful’: World’s tallest woman meets world’s shortest woman over tea, pics go viral
Delhi-NCR Air Pollution: Consequences of GRAP-4 are drastic, may have adverse effects, says SC
Delhi-NCR Air Pollution: Schools likely to stay closed till..., check city-wise update
Maharashtra: 3 killed, 9 hospitalised after gas leak at fertiliser plant in Sangli
THIS farm is selling a cup of coffee for Rs 28000, but there's a twist, it is...
Chhattisgarh: 10 Maoists killed after encounter with security personnel in Sukma
Mukesh Ambani's SUPERHIT plan for Jio users, offers unlimited 5G access for 1 year for just Rs...
IND vs AUS 1st Test: KL Rahul's dismissal sparks DRS controversy in Perth Test
Dense fog, heavy rain predicted in these states till November 25; check here
Oreshnik Hypersonic Missile: Which nations are within its range?
Bihar teacher, principal reach school in drunken state; know what happened next
'I have faced a lot of...': Arjun Kapoor REVEALS his biggest fear amid break up with Malaika Arora
How millions of Indians may get affected due to US indictment of Gautam Adani in bribery case
Amid divorce rumours with Aishwarya Rai, Abhishek Bachchan says 'missing someone is okay but...'
After Bibles, watches and sneakers, Donald Trump is now selling autographed guitars, price is...
Delhi pollution: Air quality improves to ‘very poor’ category, AQI at...
Vladimir Putin's BIG threat, warns he could strike UK with new ballistic missile if...
Shillong Teer Results TODAY November 22, 2024 Live Updates: Check winning numbers here
Somebody misbehaved with Alia Bhatt on Highway sets then Imtiaz Ali had to...
Zomato CEO Deepinder Goyal reveals twist behind Rs 200000 job fee, closes application window
Days after Ratan Tata's demise, Tata Group's Rs 131000 crore company inks pact with ADB for...