 | Gandhism: Encyclopedia II - Gandhism - In Nehru's India
Gandhism - In Nehru's India
See Also: Sarvodaya
Gandhi was assassinated in 1948 , but his teachings and philosophy would play a major role in India's economic and social development and foreign relations for decades to come.
Sarvodaya is a term meaning 'universal uplift' or 'progress of all'. It was coined by the Gandhian leader Vinoba Bhave to refer to the struggle of post-independence Gandhians to ensure that self-determination and equality reached the masses and the downtrodden. Sarvodaya workers associated with Vinoba, Jaya Prakash Narayan, Dada Dharmadhikari, undertook various projects aimed at encouraging popular self-organisation during the 1950s and 1960s. Many groups descended from these networks continue to function locally in India today.
While the problem of the desperate poverty of tens of millions of landless farmers across the country had to be addressed, Gandhi did not believe that class warfare was inevitable, as Lenin, Mao Zedong and Stalin did. Bhave and other Gandhi disciples organized the Bhoodan campaign encouraging landlords across the country to award land to their farmers. They were encouraged to acknowledge the desperate poverty and mistreatment of these farmers, to accept them as fellow Indians and their brethren. This peaceful land distribution program was frowned upon by supporters of free-market economics, the Communists and socialists alike, but did enjoy notable successes.
The Prime Minister of India, Jawaharlal Nehru was the protege of Gandhi. Nehru was often considered Gandhi's successor as India's political leader, and used this position to push major ideological policies based on Gandhi's principles.
Nehru's foreign policy was staunch anti-colonialism and neutrality in the Cold War. Nehru backed the independence movement in Tanzania and other African nations, as well as the American Civil Rights Movement led by Martin Luther King Jr. and the anti-apartheid struggle of Nelson Mandela and the African National Congress in South Africa. Nehru refused to align with either the United States or the Soviet Union, and helped found the Non Aligned Movement.
Nehru also pushed through major legislation that granted legal rights and freedoms to Indian women, and outlawed untouchability and many different kinds of social discrimination, much to the opposition of the Indian orthodoxy.
Nehru however, is criticized for hypocrisy for some of his decisions which clearly deviated from the purity of Gandhi's teachings. Nehru refused to condemn the USSR's 1956-57 invasion of Hungary to put down an anti-communist, popular revolt. Some of his economic policies took away the right of property and freedoms from the very landowing peasants of Gujarat for whom Gandhi had fought for in the early 1920s. While Gandhi was never a socialist, Nehru was an avowed fan of the creed.
Where many consider Nehru's biggest failing, the 1962 Sino-Indian War, Gandhi is also criticized for inspiring the pacifism that led to the defeat of the Indian Army against a surprise Chinese invasion. Nehru had neglected the defence budget and disallowed the Army to prepare, which caught the soldiers in India's north eastern frontier woefully off-guard with lack of supplies and reinforcements.
Other related archives1964 Civil Rights Act, Adolf Hitler, African, African Americans, African National Congress, Ahimsa, American Civil Rights Movement, An Autobiography, Or The Story Of My Experiments With Truth, Apartheid, Assassination of Mahatma Gandhi, Aung San Suu Kyi, B.R. Ambedkar, Bengal, Benito Mussolini, Bhagavad Gita, Bible, Brahmacharya, Brahman, British Empire, British Isles, Buddhism, Buddhist, Calcutta, Celibacy, Chauri Chaura, Christ, Christian, Christian anarchism, Christianity, Cold War, Dada Dharmadhikari, Dalit, Delhi, Dharma, God, Gujarat, Henry David Thoreau, Hindu, Hinduism, Hindutva, Hungary, India, Indian Army, Indian Independence Movement, Indian National Congress, Islam, Jain, Jainism, Jawaharlal Nehru, Jaya Prakash Narayan, Jew, Johannesburg, Julius Nyerere, Koran, Lech Wałęsa, Lenin, Leo Tolstoy, Mao Zedong, Martin Luther King Jr., Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi, Muhammad, Muhammad Ali Jinnah, Muslim, Myanmar, Narendra Modi, Natal, National League for Democracy, Nazi Germany, Nelson Mandela, Non Aligned Movement, Pakistan, Partition of India, Poland, Praveen Togadia, Pretoria, Prime Minister of India, Punjab, Quit India Movement, Sarvodaya, Satya, Satyagraha, Sermon on the Mount, Sino-Indian War, Solidarity, South Africa, Soviet Union, Stalin, Steve Biko, Tanzania, Tiananmen Square Massacre, Truth, USSR, United States, Vedas, Vinayak Damodar Savarkar, Vinoba Bhave, West Bengal, World War I, ahimsa, apartheid, atheist, brahmacharya, colonialism, dhoti, gender, holocaust, jihad, khadi, kurta, love, lust, neutrality, ontology, pacifism, salvation, satyagraha, sexual orientation, socialism, untouchability, untouchable, vegetarianism
 Adapted from the Wikipedia article "In Nehru's India", under the G.N U Free Docmentation License. Please also see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki |