 
	 GANDHI 
	SEVAGRAM 
		ASHRAM
	GANDHI 
	SEVAGRAM 
		ASHRAM
Written by :  M. K. Gandhi
Compiled and Edited by : Sailesh Kumar Bandopadhyaya
First Edition : 3,000 copies, November 1960
ISBN : 81-7229-223-6
Printed and Published by : Navajivan Mudranalaya, 
Ahemadabad-380014 
India
© Navajivan Trust, 1960
"I see that you have grasped the fundamental difference between 
passive resistance and non-violent resistance. Resistance both 
forms are, but you have to pay a very heavy price when your 
resistance is passive, in the sense of the weakness of the resister. 
Europe mistook the bold and brave .resistance full of wisdom by 
Jesus of Nazareth for passive resistance, as if it was of the weak. 
As I read the New Testament for the first time, I detected no 
passivity, no weakness about Jesus as depicted in the four gospels, 
and the meaning became clearer to me when I read Tolstoy's 
Harmony of the Gospels and his other kindred writings. Has not 
the West paid heavily in regarding Jesus as a Passive Resister? 
Christendom has been responsible for the wars which put to shame 
even those described in the Old Testament and other records, 
historical or semi-historical. I know that I speak under correction 
for I can but claim very superficial knowledge of history—modern or 
ancient.
"Coming to my personal experience, whilst we undoubtedly got 
through passive resistance our political freedom, over which lovers 
of peace like you and your good husband of the West are 
enthusiastic, we are daily paying the heavy price for the 
unconscious mistake we made or better still, I made in mistaking 
passive resistance for non-violent resistance. Had I not made the 
mistake, we would have been spared the humiliating spectacle of weak 
brother killing his weak brother thoughtlessly and inhumanly.
"I am only hoping and praying and I want all the friends here and in 
other parts of the world to hope and pray with me that this 
blood-bath will soon end and out of that, perhaps, inevitable 
butchery, will rise a new and robust India—not warlike, basely 
imitating the West in all its hideousness, but a new India learning 
the best that the West has to give and becoming the hope not only of 
Asia and Africa, but the whole of the aching world.
"I must confess that this is hoping against hope, for, we are today 
swearing by the military and all that naked physical force implies. 
Our statesmen have for over two generations declaimed against the 
heavy expenditure on armaments under the British regime, but now 
that freedom from political serfdom has come, our military 
expenditure has increased and still threatens to increase and of 
this we are proud! There is not a voice raised against it in our 
legislative chambers. In spite, however, the hope lingers in me and 
many others that India shall survive this death dance and occupy the 
moral height that should belong to her after the training, however 
imperfect, in non-violence for an unbroken period of thirty-two 
years since 1915." 
New Delhi, 
29-11-'47
Harijan, 
7-12-1947