 
	 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
Let us confine ourselves to Ahimsa. We have all along 
regarded the spinning wheel, village crafts, etc. as the pillars of 
Ahimsa, and so indeed they are. They must stand. But we have now to 
go a step further. A votary of Ahimsa will of course base upon 
non-violence, if he has not already done so, all his relations with 
his parents, his children, his wife, his servants, his dependants, 
etc. But the real test will come at the time of political or 
communal disturbances or under the menace of thieves and dacoits. 
Mere resolve to lay down one's life under the circumstances is not 
enough. There must be the necessary qualification for making the 
sacrifice. If I am a Hindu, I must fraternize with the Musalmans and 
the rest. In my dealing with them I may not make any distinction 
between my coreligionists and those who might belong to a different 
faith. I would seek opportunities to serve them without any feeling 
of fear or unnaturalness. The word ' fear' can have no place in the 
dictionary of Ahimsa. Having thus qualified himself by his selfless 
service, a votary of pure Ahimsa will be in a position to make a fit 
offering of himself in a communal conflagration. Similarly, to meet 
the menace of thieves and dacoits, he will need to go among, and 
cultivate friendly relations with the communities from which thieves 
and dacoits generally come.
A brilliant example of this kind of work is provided 
by Ravishankar Maharaj. His work among the criminal tribes in 
Gujarat has evoked praise even of the Baroda State authorities. 
There is an almost unlimited field for this kind of work, and it 
does not call for any other talent in one besides pure love. 
Ravishankar Maharaj is an utter stranger to English. Even his 
knowledge of Gujarati is barely sufficient for everyday use. But God 
has blessed him with unlimited neighbourly love. His simplicity 
easily wins all hearts, and is the envy of everybody. Let his 
example provide a cue and inspiration to all those who may be 
similarly engaged in other fields of Satyagraha.
Sevagram,
 16-7-'40
Harijan, 21-7-1940